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Muslak. The captain of the Gades.
Myt-ser'eu. "Kitten." The singing girl employed by the narrator.
Mzee. Probably "Elder." The man who guided Seven Lions' party.
Nehasyu. The dominant tribe in Nubia, whom the narrator often calls the Crocodile People.
Nasakhma. A young Nubian of royal blood.
Neht-nefret. "Tall Sycamore." The singing girl employed by Muslak.
Nekhen. One of the centers of the cult of Horus.
Nine Bows. Egypt's foreign enemies, a traditional phrase.
Nubia. Egypt's principal rival in Africa. At the time of the scroll, Nubia appears to have extended from the first cataract to the sixth. Earlier, its northern border had been at the third, and its rule had extended south into the valley of the Blue Nile.
Nysa. The original Nysa is said to have been a man killed by Dionysus. Some authorities list ten places in Europe, Asia, and Africa called Nysa. See the Foreword.
Osiris. One of the most important Egyptian gods. He was the god of resurrection and the patron of the dead. Isis was his wife, Set his wicked brother. The popular faith of Egypt hinged upon the cult of Osiris.
Parsa. Persia, or the Persian Empire.
Piy. The supervisor at a Nubian gold mine.
Pre. One of the divisions of the Nile, which split as it flowed through the delta.
Punt. A remote part of Africa, probably the coast of Somalia.
Qanju. A Mede dispatched by Prince Achaemenes to explore the Nile south of Egypt.
Ra. One of the most important Egyptian gods, the god of the sun and commander of the sun boat. Each pharaoh was fathered by Ra. He was also called Re and Phra.
Ra'hotep. "Ra Is Content." An Egyptian physician.
Red God. Set, q.v.
Red Land. The desert east and west of Egypt.
Riverland. Egypt. Our word comes from the Latin name for this country, which was taken from Greek; the Greek word originally designated the Nile, not the nation.
Sabra. The wax woman animated by Sahuset and the narrator. sagan. The lieutenant of a governor.
Sahuset. A magician of Me
Sais. A major city of the delta. satrap. The governor of a province of the Persian Empire. scarab. A sacred beetle. An amulet in the shape of this beetle; these were used as seals.
Seven Lions. A king of Nysa.
Sesostris. A pharaoh of the Twelfth Dynasty, better known as Senusret.
Set. Osiris's brother, the god of the south and the desert. Also Seth, Sethi, Sit, et cetera.
Sidon. A Phoenician city at the eastern end of the Mediterranean, north of Tyre.
Tepu. The hippopotamus.
Thoth. The god of wisdom, learning, and the moon. He is most often depicted as an ibis-headed man. Also Thot.
Thotmaktef. Qanju's Egyptian scribe.
Tin Isles. The Scillys and the Cornish coast.
Unguja. Perhaps"Burned." Seven Lions' chief advisor.
Uraeus. The narrator's slave. The sacred cobra.
Uro. One of the narrator's Egyptian soldiers.
Utundu. "Mischief." Cheche's younger son.
Vayu. One of the narrator's Persian soldiers.
Vinjari. "Roamer." Cheche's older son. wadi. A dry watercourse.
Wast. The Egyptian Thebes.
Wawat. Northern Nubia. The Nile Valley between the first and third cataracts.
White Wall. The strongest fortress in Egypt. xu. An evil spirit, a demon. (I have so translated the scroll's daemonium.)
Yam. The Nile Valley between the second and third cataracts, once independent.
Yeb. The Persian name for Abu.