Page:A History of Art in Ancient Egypt Vol 2.djvu/458

 422 Index. to appreciate the importance of Beni- Hassan, 249 ; the valley of the kings, 263 ; Saite cemeteries discovered by him, 301 ; his impressions of Karnak, 365 ; gave its proper name to the Ramesseum, 376 ; carelessness of Egyptian masonry, ii. 65 ; his supposed discovery of the origin of the Doric order, 96 ; distinction made in texts between pylon and propylon, 156; mainly impressed by the grandeur of the Theban remains, 225 ; his fore- cast of the important position now held by Egpytian art, 401. Chardanes, ii. 257. Charmes, Gabriel, i. 235 ; ii. 212, 219; his opinion on the bust of Taia, 242. Cheops, i. 201 ; his pyramid, 201 ; do. 227; stele commemorating his restora- tion of a temple, 319 ; doubts as to its date, id. Chephren, i. 24, 86 ; his statues at Boulak, 89; do. 139; discovery of statues in the temple of the sphinx, 193, 227, 221 ; detailed account of the basalt and diorite statues at Boulak, ii. 221-223. China, i. IV., XLVIIL, LIX. Chinbab, i. 165. Chisel, ii. 303-328, /rt'.wz;//. Chnoumhotep, i. 143. Choephoroe, i. 130. Choubra, ii. 20. Choufou (Cheops), inscribed upon the stones of the Great Pyramid, i. 222. Chounet-esZezib, fortress at Abydos, ii. 41. Christy, i. XXXVIII. Cicero, i. 129. Clemens Alexandrinus, i. 56. Cloisonne Enamels, unknown to the Egyptians in the proper sense, ii. 384. Clusium, i. XXXVII. Cockerell, Prof, i. XI. Colossi, upon pyramids, i. 226 ; trans- port ofC, ii. 72; multiplication of C. under the New Empire, 239, 241. Colours, used by the Egyptian painters, ii. 334, 336, 340. Columns, ii. 85 ; metal C, 88 ; " proto- doric " do. 96 ; polygonal do. 99 ; faggot-shaped do. 99 ; at Medinet- Abou, 102 ; in the Hall at Karnak, id. ; at Philffi, 104 ; comparison be- tween Egyptian and Greek C, 121 ; ordonnance of C, 133 ; spacing, 137 ; no rule governing intercolumniation, Constantinople, ii. 13. Construction, architectural, ii. 55 ; imitation in stone of wooden C., 59 ; huge stones only used where necessary, 65 ; want of foresight in Egyptian C, 70 ; carelessness, id. ; machines used, 72. Conventions in Egyptian art, ii. 291. Copper, ii. 378. Coptic, study of, i. VII. Copts, i. 13. Corinth, i. XV. Corvee, the, i. 25 ; its influence upon Egyptian architecture, 27, 30. Coulanges, M. Fustel de, La cite antique, i. 130. Crane, the, in the bas-relief, ii. 219. Crimaea, i. XV. Crocodile, the, in the bas-reliefs, ii. 218. Crocodilopolis, ii. 234. Crown, the red crown, i. 1 6 ; the white do., 16; the pschent, 16. Cunningham ; his descriptions of the re- mains of Graeco Buddhic art, i. LIII. Curtius, Dr. ; history of Greece, i. III. Grseco Buddhic art, LIII. Curtius, Quintus, ii. 33. "Cutting, the," i- 435- Cyclopean walls, ii. 64. Cylinders, earthenware and soft stone, ii. 291. Cynta, ii. 153 ; do. reversa, ii. 153. Cyprus, i. X., XXVI. ; painted vases, 78, 161. Cv yrus, 1. 79. D Darius, i. IX. Darmesteter, James, i. 69. Dashour, i. 165, 206. Dayr, i. 407. Dayr-el-Bahari, i. 265, 268 ; temple or cenotaph of Hatasu, 421-434. Dayr-el-Medinet, i. 264. Delbet, Jules, i. 42. Delhi, ii. 13. Denderah, i. 326, 351, 434 ; ii. 67, 69 ; pluteus at, 149. Derri, i. 40S. Desjardins, M. E., i. 302. Deus Rediculus, temple of the i. 104,