Page:A History of Art in Ancient Egypt Vol 2.djvu/460

 424 Index. Gautier, Theophile, i. 136; ii. 174. Ga7uasi, ii. 249. Gazelle, in the bas-reliefs, ii. 218. Gebel-Ahmar, i. 104. Gebel-Barkal, 1. 218, 407. Gebel-Silsilis, i. 105, 403; bas-relief at, ii. 246. Gerhard, i. XV., XVIII. Gherf-Hossein, hemispeos, i. 407; ii. 138. Gircheh, i. 421. Glass, its manufacture represented at Beni-Hassan, ii. 375 ; glass-ena melled statuettes, 376. Globe, winged, ii. 151, 152. Goat, in the bas-reliefs, ii. 219. Gods, age of the Egyptian, i. 321. Goethe, i. 121, 153. Goose, in the bas-reliefs, ii. 219. Gorge, the Egyptian, ii. 149. Gournah, temple of, i. 267, 268, 391 ; ii. 140. Gournet-el-Mourrai, ii. 21. Grseco-Buddhic art, i. LIII. Grasco-Scythians, i. XV. Granaries, ii. 37. Granite-chambers, Karnak, ii. 52. Graphic processes, ii. i. Grebaut, M., i. 52. Group, unknown in its proper sense in Egyptian art, ii. 278. Gifglie, ii. 169. Guillaume, Edouard, i. 42. H Hamilton, W. J., i. X., XXVII. Hamy, M., ii. 377. Hapi-Toufi, i. 144. Zraraw-^/-A'^<5'i^a^ (" the false pyramid "), i. 215. Hare, the, in the bas-reliefs, ii. 218. Harmachis, i. 237, 389. Harm-Habi, i. 178. Ha-ro-bes, ii. 289. Hatasu, Queen, i. 105 ; her obelisks at Karnak, 122, 265, 268; height of her obelisk, 343; Dayr-el-Bahari, the cenotaph of H., 425 ; height of her obelisk from more recent measurement, ii. 171; her favourite architect, 178; her bas-reliefs at Dayr-el-Bahari, 245. Hathor, i. 58, 69. Hecuba (Euripides), quoted, i. 130. Hegel, i. XXXIII. Height of principal buildings in the world, i. 225. Helbig, M. W., i. XV. Heliopolis; its walls, ii. 41 ; its obelisk, Hemispeos, i. 253. Heracleopolis, i. 17. Hermopolis, i. 15. Herodotus ; Egypt a present from the Nile, i. 2 ; Amasis, 33 ; religious observances, 44 ; Isis and Osiris the only gods whom all the Egyptians worshipped, 68 ; temples in Delta, 93 ; Scythians, 145 ; Pyramids, 191, 202, 219; P. in Lake Moeris, 226, 229 ; do. of the Labyrinth, 227 ; construction of the Great Pyramid, 233 ; tomb of Apries, 306 ; Cam- byses' treatment of the body of Amasis, 309 ; obelisks of Sesostris, 347 ; Rhampsinite and Asychis, id. ; propylons and Apis pavilion of Psemethek L, tb.; monolithic chapel of Amasis, 428 ; avXr] built by Psemethek for Apis, 429 ; Labyrinth, ii. 25 ; level of towns raised artificially, 27 ; flat roofs, 36; XevKov Tet;i(os of Thebes, 40 ; monolithic chapels in the Delta, 75 ; Egyptian beans, 125. Hesiod, i. 133. Heuzey, i. XVII., 130. Hippopotamus, the, in the bas-reliefs, ii. 218. Hittorf, i. XIV. 121. Hobs (a god), ii. 281. Homer; quoted, i. 129, 130; "Hundred- gated Thebes," ii. 40. Horeau, his plan of the hemispeos of Gherf-Hossein, i. 408. Hor-em-khou, i. 321. Hor-Khom, inscription, i. 157. Hor-Schesou, i. 196. Horse, introduced into Egypt about the time of the shepherd invasion, ii. 250 ; his characteristic features in Egyptian art, id. Horus, i. 63, 69; ii. 273, 383; do. a private individual, 270. Hosi, panels from the tomb of, ii. 189. Hoskins, his plans of the temple of Soleb, i. 384-5. House, the Egyptian, ii. 26 ; its situa- tion, 27 ; foundation, id. ; restoration based upon a plan found by Rosel- hni, 33 ; models of houses, 34 ; materials and arrangement, id.