10 Pendlebury, «Summary report on the excavations at Tell el-«Amarnah 1935–1936», JEA 22 (1936), p. 198.
11 Ibid.
12 See Pendlebury, pp. 197—8.
13 Aldred, p. 174.
14 Pendlebury, p. 198.
15 Aldred, p. 180.
16 See, for example, Reeves, Akhenaten; Egypt's False Prophet, pp. 75–78.
17 Assmann, p. 26.
18 See Pausanias, Description of Greece, 1,42.
19 Aldred, p. 164.
20 Mahdy, Tutankhamun: The Life and Death of a Boy King p. 175.
21 Manetho, trans. Whiston, I, 26.
22 Aldred, p. 164.
23 Manetho, trans. Whiston, I, 26.
24 Manetho, trans. Waddell, fr. 54,1. 232.
25 Ibid., fr. 50, 1. 96, from Josephus, Contra Apionem, who gives the reign of Orus as 36 years 5 months; fr. 51, from Theophilus, Ad Autolyc. iii. 19, who gives 36 years 5 months; fr. 52, from Syncellus, according to Africanus, who gives 37 years; fr. 53 (a), from Syncellus, according to Eusebius, who gives 36 years (38 years in another copy); 53 (b) Armenian version of Eusebius, which gives 28 years.
26 Ibid., fr. 50, 1. 96, from Josephus, Contra Apionem, who gives the reign ofAmenophisas 30 years 10 months; fr. 51, from Theophilus, Ad Autolyc. iii. 19, who gives 30 years 10 months; fr. 52, from Syncellus, according to Africanus, who gives 31 years; fr. 53 (a), from Syncellus, according to Eusebius, who gives 31 years; 53 (b) Armenian version of Eusebius, which gives 31 years.
27 Ibid., fr. 50,1. 96, from Josephus, Contra Apionem, who gives the names of 18 kingsof the Eighteenth Dynasty; fr. 51, from Theophilus, Ad Autolyc. iii. 19, who gives 18 kings; fr. 52, from Syncellus, according to Africanus, who gives 16 kings; fr. 53 (a), from Syncellus, according to Eusebius, who gives 14 kings (but Syncellus elsewhere says he leaves out two kings); 53 (b) Armenian version of Eusebius, which gives 14 kings.
28 Ibid., fr. 52, from Syncellus, according to Africanus; fr. 53 (a), from Syncellus, according to Eusebius; fr. 53 (b), Armenian version of Eusebius: «This is the king who was reputed to be Memnon, a speaking stone».
29 Manetho, trans. Waddell, fr. 50,1. 96, from Josephus, Contra Apionem, who gives thereign of Acencheres as 12 years 1 month; fr. 51, from Theophilus, Ad Autolyc. iii. 19, who gives the reign of Acencheres as 12 years 1 month; fr. 52, from Syncellus, according to Africanus, who gives the reign of Acherres as 12 years; fr. 53 (a), fromSyncellus, according to Eusebius, who gives the reign of Achencherses as 12 years; 53 (b), Armenian version of Eusebius, which gives the reign of Achencheres as 16 years.
30 Ibid., fr. 50, from Josephus, Contra Apionem; fr. 51, from Theophilus, Ad Autolyc. iii. 19.
31 Ibid., fr. 50, from Josephus Contra Apionem; fr. 51, from Theophilus, Ad Autolyc. iii. 19.
32 Ibid., fr. 52, from Syncellus, according to Africanus.
33 Ibid., fr. 53 (a), from Syncellus, according to Eusebius; fr. 53 (b), Armenian version of Eusebius.
34 Ibid., fr. 50,1. 96, from Josephus, Contra Apionem, who gives the reign of Ramessesas 1 year 4 months; fr. 51, from Theophilus, Ad Autolyc, iii. 19, who gives him 1 year 4 months; fr. 52, from Syncellus, according to Africanus, who gives him 1 year; fr. 53 (a), from Syncellus, according to Eusebius, who gives him 68 years; 53 (b), Armenian version of Eusebius, which gives him 68 years.
35 Ibid., fr. 50, 1. 96, from Josephus, Contra Apionem, who gives the reign of Harmals as 4 years 1 month; fr. 51, from Theophilus, Ad Autolyc, iii. 19, who gives the reign of Harmais as 4 years 1 month; fr. 52, from Syncellus, according to Africanus, who gives the reign of Armesis as 5 years; fr. 53 (a), from Syncellus, according to Eusebius, who gives the reign of «Armais, also called Danaus» as 5 years; 53 (b), Armenian version of Eusebius, which gives the reign of Armais, also called Danaus» as 5 years.
36 Ibid., fr. 53 (a), from Syncellus, according to Eusebius.
37 Ibid., fr. 53 (b), Armenian version of Eusebius.
38 Ibid., fr. 53 (a), Syncellus's additional note to Eusebius's text.
39 See Manetho, trans. Waddell, fr. 52, from Africanus.
40 For a full resume of these different Graeco-Egyptian and Graeco-Roman Exodus accounts, see Redford, 1986, pp. 282—96.
41 See, for instance, Lysimachos, Aegyptiaca, from Josephus, Contra Apionem, trans. Waddell, I, 34.
42 Ibid.
43 Ibid.
44 Ibid., I, 35.
45 Cheremon, quoted in ibid., I, 33.
46 Ibid.
47 Pompeius Trogus, quoted in Assmann, p. 36.
48 Bower, Scotichronicon, I, 9.
49 Ibid.
50 Ibid., I, 12.
51 Ibid., I, 14.
52 Ibid., I, 15.
53 Ibid., I, 18.
54 Ibid.
55 For the descendants of Scota colonising the Irish DilRiata, see Lebor Gabala Erenn: The book of the taking of Ireland, Bk. 5, VIII, 384-6. Bk. 5, VIII, 387.
56 For Scota going to Scotland see the «Pleading of Baldred Biset», 1301, as referenced in the Intro, to Bower, p. xx.
57 For Scota going straight to Ireland see «Instructions», 1301, as referenced in the Intro, to Bower, p. xx.
58 For Scota going first to Ireland and then on to Scotland see Chron. Piets-Scots, 106— 16 and SEHI, 609—10, as referenced in the Intro, to Bower, p. xix. Here Scota is the wife of Neius or Niulus, a Greek, the son of a certain Lacedaemonian Aeneas, a prince of the Choriscii.
59 See the «Pleading of Baldred Biset», f 301, as referenced in the Intro, to Bower, p. xx.
60 Nennius, Historia Brittonum, 15.
61 Bower, I, 10.
62 See Evans, Kingdom of the Ark.
63 Moran, The Amama Letters, EA35, 11–15.
64 Aldred, p. 283.
65 Ibid.
66 Goetze, «The Plague Prayers of Mursilis» in Pritchard (ed.), Ancient Near Eastern Textsre lating to the Old Testament, KUB, xiv, 8; KUB, xxiv, 3, pp. 394—6.
67 Ibid. KUB, xiv, 8, p. 394.
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