Page:A History of Art in Ancient Egypt Vol 2.djvu/459

 Index. 423 Ueveria, his belief that he had found a portrait of a shepherd king, ii. 177. Diocletian, i. 55. Diodorus Siculus ; his assertion that the first man was born in Egypt, i. 4; Pyramids, 191; height of Great Pyramid, 225 ; plateau on its sum- mit, 226; Pyramid of the Laby- rinth, 227 ; Tomb of Osymandias (Ramesseum), 266, 375 : tombs in the Bab-el-Molouk, 279 : ttuXcov, 341 ; Moeris (Amenemhat III.), 347 ; labyrinth, ii. 25 ; population of Egypt, 26 ; extent of Thebes, 30 ; the epithet £Ka-o/LA7n,vo?, 40. Diorite, statue of Chephren in, ii. 221 ; the influence of such a material upon style, 303-305: Djezzar Pacha, ii. 20. Dog, the, in the bas-reliefs, ii. 219. Doors, ii. 156. Dordogne, i. XLII., ii. 78. "Double," the, i. 128, 135. Doum (palm), ii. 50. Drah-abou-l'Neggah, i. 217, 253, 291, 315- Droinos, i. 336, Duck, the, in the bas-reliefs, ii. 219. Ebers, Georg. ; extent of the Mem- phite necropolis, i. 165 ; cenotaph in the temple of Abydos, 264 ; his opinion upon that temple, id. ; his discovery of a tomb at Thebes, 279 ; his opinion upon the Ramesseum, 381 ; the funerary character of the temple at Abydos, 391'; his conjec- tures upon Dayr-el-Bahari, 426; pa- vilion of Rameses III. not a palace, ii. 16; pyramid of the labyrinth, 25 ; origin of the quadrangular pier, 90; uses of papyrus, 126; his opinion upon the columns in the Bubastite court, .Karnak, 146 ; pro- pylons of Karnak and Denderah, 157 ; his belief in the persistence of the Hyksos type, 237. Edfou, i. 351, 353; peripteral temple, 396 ; foundations of temple at, ii. 69. Egger, ii. 126. Eilithyia, i. 157; ii. 400; temple of Amenophis III. at, id. Elephantine; peripteral temple at, i. 396 ; quarries at, ii. 75, 149. Empires, classification of the Egyptian, i. 17. Enamels, ii. 375. Encaustic painting known to the Egyptians, ii. 336. Entef, i. 38, 156, 217. Epochs of Egyptian history, i. 18. Era, Eg}-pt without one, i. 20. Erectheum, i. LVII. Erment, ii. 66. Esneh, i. 351. Ethiopia ; its civilization an offshoot from that of Egypt, i. 20; its pyra- mids, 217; its temples, 404; Ethi- opian supremacy in Egypt, ii. 265; Ethiopians in pictures, 348. Etruria, i. XLII., 131, 162. Euripides quoted, i. 130. " Evandale, Lord," i. 136. Faienxe, i. 146 ; ii. 369. Fayoum, the pyramids in the, L 226; statues discovered in the, ii. 233. Fellowes, Sir Charles, L X., XXVII. Feraig, speos of, i. 406. Fergusson, James, ii. 8. Festus, i. XXII. Fetishism, i. 47-9, 56-8. Ficus Syconiorus, ii. 54. Figure, the, ii. 341 ; colouied reliefs in the mastabas, 341 ; Beni-Hassan, 341 ; Thebes, 344; mandore player at Abd-el-Gournah, 347 ; harpers in Bruce's tomb, 348 ; Prisoners, 348 ; winged figure, 349 : difterent races distinguished, 350. Flamingo, the, in the bas-reliefs, ii. 219. Flandrin, i. IX. "Foundations," for the service of a tomb, i. 144-6. Fox, the, in the bas-reliefs, ii. 218. Friedrichs, Carl, i. W. Funeral feasts, i 143. Funerary figures, i. 145-147. Gailhabaud, M., ii. 36. Gartasse, i. 433. Gau, i. 353, 421.