History of Egypt From 330 B.C. To the Present Time, Volume 10 (of 12) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 304 pages of information about History of Egypt From 330 B.C. To the Present Time, Volume 10 (of 12).

History of Egypt From 330 B.C. To the Present Time, Volume 10 (of 12) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 304 pages of information about History of Egypt From 330 B.C. To the Present Time, Volume 10 (of 12).
from the walls, chose that day for the assault, and thus gained the city.  Without further opposition the Egyptians marched onwards.  At last he met Laomedon, took him prisoner, and brought him back to Egypt.  Egyptian sentries now guarded the strongholds of the country; Egyptian ships took the towns along the coast.  A great number of the Jews were transported to Alexandria; they received the rights of citizenship there.

[Illustration:  049.jpg A Theban Belle]

Without altering local conditions, Syria gradually came under the sway of the Egyptian satraps.  Laomedon found means of escaping from Egypt; he fled to Alcetas in Caria, who had just withdrawn himself to the mountainous regions of Pisida, thence to begin the decisive war against Antigonus.

[Illustration:  049b.jpg Prayer to Isis]

     Painted by Alexander Cabanel

In the earlier times of Egyptian history, when navigation was less easy, and when seas separated kingdoms instead of joining them, the Thebaid enjoyed, under the Koptic kings, the trading wealth which followed the stream of its great river, the longest piece of inland navigation then known; but, with the improvement in navigation and ship-building, countries began to feel their strength in the timber of their forests and the number of their harbours; and, as timber and sea-coast were equally unknown in the Thebaid, that country fell as Lower Egypt rose; the wealth which before centred in Thebes was then found in the ports of the Delta, where the barges of the Nile met the ships of the Mediterranean.  What used to be Egypt was an inland kingdom, surrounded by the desert; but Egypt under Ptolemy was country on the sea-coast; and, on the conquest of Phoenicia and Coele-Syria, he was master of the forests of Lebanon and Antilibanus, and stretched his coast from Cyrene to Antioch, a distance of twelve hundred miles.  The wise and mild plans which were laid down by Alexander for the government of Egypt when a province were easily followed by Ptolemy when it became his own kingdom.  The Greek soldiers lived in their garrisons or in Alexandria under the Macedonian laws, while the Egyptian laws were administered by their own priests, who were upheld in all the rights of their order and in their freedom from land-tax.  The temples of Phtah, of Amon-Ra, and the other gods of the country were not only kept open, but were repaired and even built at the cost of the king; the religion of the people, and not that of their rulers, was made the established religion of the state.  On the death of the god Apis, the sacred bull of Memphis, the chief of the animals which were kept and fed at the cost of the several cities, and who had died of old age soon after Ptolemy came to Egypt, he spent the sum of fifty talents, or $42,500, on its funeral; and the priests, who had not forgotten that Cambyses, their former conqueror, had wounded the Apis of his day with his own sword, must have

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History of Egypt From 330 B.C. To the Present Time, Volume 10 (of 12) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.