914 
Girge, tlie capital of Upper Egypt, 358. 
Gizeh, where Memphis formerly flood, 362. 
GnephaCtus king of Egypt, 294. 
Greeks driven from Upper Egypt, 315; their 
prefent ftate in Egypt, 380. 
Guedime, a village near Thebes, 34.8. 
Hafed caliph of Egypt, 319. 
Haken caliph of Tgypt; a remarkable in- 
furreCtion in his reign, 319. 
Heliopolis, the Turks defeated there by the 
French, 3355 a province of Lower Egypt, 
363. 
Heraclius, the Roman emperor ; Egypt fub- 
dued by the Saracens under his reign, 315; 
his death, 356. 
Hermontes and its temple, 348 ; its croco¬ 
diles, 3 56. 
Hermopolis Magna, 359. 
Hieraconpolis, ruins of, 353. 
Hieroglyphics, an enquiry into their nature, 
372, 376. 
Kutchinfon, major-general, fucceeds fir 
Ralph Abercrombie in Egypt, 338 ; takes 
Rofetta,. ibid, takes Rahmanieh and a 
convoy of provisions, &c. 339 5 his inter¬ 
view with the grand-vizier, 340; takes 
Cairo, 341 ; and Alexandria, which puts 
an end to the war, 342 ; reftores the go¬ 
vernment of Egypt, 345. 
J.ffa taken by Bonaparte, and the garrifon 
murdered, 331, 334. 
Ibis, the facred bird, why embalmed, 370. 
Ibrahim Bey, 328 ; attacks the French near 
Cairo, 335 ; now the fecond perfon in the 
government of Egypt, 383. 
Jerufalem taken from the crufaders, by 
Afdal for the caliph of Egypt, 319; reign 
of the Chriftians deftroyed by Saladin, 
322; ceded to the Chriftians, but foon 
loft again, 325. 
Jews, how treated by Ptolomy Philopator, 
301 ; their deliverance, 302; build a 
temple in Egypt, 304 ; again perfecuted, 
305 ; prefent ftate, 380. 
Inarus king of Lybia, made king of Egypt, 
296 ; his death, 297. 
Invincible ftandard taken at the battle of 
Alexandria, 337. 
Jofeph farms the taxes paid by the Jews to 
Egypt, 300. 
Jofephus, his erroneous account of the kings 
of Egypt, 290. 
Jfis, the Egyptian female deity, 370, 372. 
Kalil, fultan of Egypt, 326 j drives the 
Chriftians from Acre, 327. 
Kamel fultan of Egypt, 325. 
Kamfm, or deftroying wind, 384. 
Karnak, a village in Upper Egypt, 348. 
Keneh, in Upper Egypt, 357. 
Kittah, a curious fpring, 358. 
Kleber fucceeds to the command of the 
French army in Egypt on Bonaparte’s 
defertion, 335; makes a treaty, which 
the Englifh break, ibid, gains the battle 
of the Pyramids, 335 j murdered at Cairo, 
. SSG- 
Kurnu, a tillage near Thebes, 349. 
Labyrinth near Arfinoe, 360. 
Laniiffe, French general, killed at the battle 
of Alexandria, 337. 
Latopolis, or Efneh, 352. 
Louis IX. of France, at the head of the 6th 
crufade, 3255 taken prifoner, and ran- 
fomed, 326; undertakes the 7th crufade, 
ibid, his death, ibid. 
Lower Egypt, 290 j its bufferings during Bo¬ 
naparte’s expedition, 343 ; not fo rich in 
curiofrties as Upper Egypt, 346; divided 
into three provinces, 363. 
Lufignan king of Jerufalem, defeated and 
taken prifoner, 322; releafed, and under¬ 
takes the fiege of Acre, 323. 
GENERAL INDEX. 
Luxor, a village near Thebes, 347, 373. 
Lycopolis, or City of Wolves, 289, 359. 
Magas king of Lybia and Cyrene, rebels 
againft Ptolemy Philadelphus, 299. 
Mahadi, his extravagance, 320. 
Mahadie or Aboukir lake, 363. 
Malek Salah, fultan of Egypt, 325. 
Mamalukes firft gain power in Egypt, 326 ; 
Circaftian or Borgite mamalukes, 327 ; 
the heads of them now called beys, 328 j 
firuggle to regain their power, ibid, their 
prefent ftate, arms, &c. 379. 
Manufcript, a very curious one found by 
Denon, 349, 372. 
Mareotis, lake, 364. 
Medinct-abu, near Thebes, 349. 
Memnomium and its ftatues, 350. 
Memphis, 290, 292, 314, 360. 
Mendes king of Egypt, 293. 
Menes the firft king of Egypt, 291. 
Menou fucceeds to the command of the 
French army in Egypt on the murder of 
Kleber, 336 ; joins the reft of the forces 
at Alexandria, ibid, defeated, 337. 
Middle Egypt, 290. 
Mirage, an optical illufton, 386. 
Mreris, a famous lake, 362. 
Moaz, of the African dynafty of the Fati- 
mites, reduces Egypt, 318. 
Mohammed Bey Elfi, 328. 
Moktador, caliph of Egypt, 321. 
Monftanzor caliph of Egypt, 319; a dread¬ 
ful famine in his reign, ibid. 
Morocco founded by Yuffuf, of the African 
dynafty of the Marabuts, 320. 
Moftali caliph of Egypt, 319. 
Mourad Bey, 328 ; defeated by Bonaparte 
near Gizeh, 329 ; and by Defaix near Se- 
dinon, ibid, retreats, 330; totally reduced 
by Defaix, 336; his death and character, 
338 ; his palace at Gizeh, 362. 
Muftapha Pacha defeated by Bonaparte, 335. 
Mycerinus king of Egypt, 293. 
Nagadi and its ruin, 358. 
Natron lakes, 386. 
Nebuchadnezzar’s victories in Egypt, 295. 
Nechus, or Necho, king of Egypt, 295 
Necropolis, the City of the Dead, 350. 
NeCtanebis king of Egypt, 297 ; fate of 
NeCtanebis II. 298. 
Nelfon, admiral, deftroys the French fleet in 
Aboukir-bay, 331. 
Nephereus king of Egypt, 297. 
Nepherotes, the laft of the Mendefian race, 
297- 
Nicotris, or Nicaule, or Nitocris, 291, 292. 
Nile, river, firft called Egyptus, 293, 367, 
385 ; battle of the, 332. 
Nilometer, 353, 354, 367. 
Nilus king of Egypt, 293. 
Oafes, iflanos, 2S9, 386. 
Octavius (Caefar), his war with Antony and 
Cleopatra, 312; refufes Antony’s chal¬ 
lenge, and withftands Cleopatra’s charms, 
313 ; reduces Egypt to a Roman province, 
314. 
Omar, caliph, undertakes the conqueft of 
Egypt, 314; his clemency to Alexandria, 
315; but orders the library to be de¬ 
ftroyed, 316. 
Ombos, or Com-Ombos, 355. 
Ommiades, 3205 the extent of their empire, 
3 2 . 1 . 
Ofymandias and his monument, 292, 350. 
Ofyris, the Egyptian deity, 370, 372. 
Oxyrinchus, 360. 
Pachas appointed governors of Egypt, 328 ; 
their power declines, ibid. 
Panoplis, or Achmin, 359. 
Paris and Helen, true hiftory of, 293,- 
Paufiris king of Egypt, 297. 
Pelufium, the_key of Egypt, 294, 363. 
Perfians fuhdue Egypt, 296; which fre¬ 
quently revolts, 297; completely fubjcCt- 
ed, 298. 
Phanifa, or Arabja, 363. 
Pharaoh, the common but not exclufive 
name of the kings of Egypt, 290 ; the ten 
Pharaohs mentioned in Scripture, 291. 
Pharos, a famous tower, 298, 365. 
Pheron, or Sefoftris II. 293. 
Phellippeaux, a French officer, 333. 
Philoe, in Upper Egypt, 343 .. 354 - 
Plague, caufes of, 387, 388. 
Pompey, murdered in Egypt, 309 ; his 
(fuppofed) pillar at Alexandria,.365, 378. 
Proteus, or Cetes, king of Egypt, 293. 
Pfammenitus king of Egypt, 29C. 
Pfamnretichus, 294; becomes king of Egypt, 
295, 297. 
Pfammis king of Egypt, 295. 
Ptolemais, 318. 
Ptolemy Alexander, king of Egypt, 306; 
the Second, 307. 
Ptolemy Auletes, 307; his infamous beha¬ 
viour, and death, 308. 
Ptolemy fon of Auletes, confents to the 
murder of Pompey, 309 ; diow-ned, 310. 
Ptolemy Epiphanes, king of Egypt at five 
years of age, 302 5 puts his kingdom un¬ 
der the protection of the Romans, ibid, 
poifoned, 303. 
Ptolemy Euergetes king of Egypt, 300; his 
death, 3or. 
Ptolemy L.rgus, or Soter, the firft king of 
Egypt after the Perfians were expelled, 
298. 
Ptolemy Lathurus king of Egypt, 305; ex¬ 
pelled, but return^, 306 5 his exploits 
againft the Jews, ibid, his death, 307. 
Ptolemy Philadeiphus king of Egypt, 298; 
fends ambaffadors to Rome, 299 j his at¬ 
tention to commerce, ibid. his death and 
character, 300. 
Ptolemy Philometor king of Egypt, 303 3 
his deatlr and character, 304. 
Ptolemy Philopater king of Egypt, 301; his 
death and character, 302. 
Ptolemy Phyfcon, joint king with Philome- 
ter, 303 ; his conduCt before and after his 
brother’s death, 304; dies, 305. 
Pyramids, battle of, 329 ; a defeription of 
them, 360, 361, 377. 
Rahmanieh taken by Gen. Hutchinfon, 339. 
Rhampfinitus king of Egypt, 293. 
Richard I. king of England joins th* cru¬ 
fade, 323 5 takes Acre, Csfarea, and 
Jaffa, 324; makes a truce with Saladin, 
ibid, returns home to die, 325. 
Roize, French general, killed, 337. 
Rofetta taken by Bonaparte, 3295 re-taken 
by Gen. Hutchinfon, 3385 when built, 
363 . 
Sabbaco, a blind king, 294. 
Saccarah, pyramids of, 360. 
Saladin firft diftinguilhes himfelf in Egypt, 
320; his parentage, 321 j fultan of Egypt, 
322 j takes Tiberias and Jerufalem, ibid, 
his clemency, 323 ; repulfed before Tyre, 
ibid, his death and character, 325. 
Selim II. emperor of the Turks, fubdues all 
Syria and Egypt, 327. 
Selim III, is joined by Great Britain for the 
puroofe of driving the French out of Egypt, 
322. 
Sennacherib’s expedition againft the Jews, 
294. 
Sefoftris king of Egypt, 292 ; his victories, 
and death, 293. 
Sethon, king and prieft, 291, 294. 
Shepherd kings, 369, 370. 
Siut, formerly Licopolis, 359. 
Smith, fir Sidney, his early hiftory, 3325 
defends Acre againft Bonaparte, 333. 
Sofinis, 
