Read The Lost Army of Cambyses Online
Authors: Paul Sussman
Tags: #Thrillers, #Crime, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective
Djoser (ruled
c.
2630–2611 BC). Worshipped as a
god after his death. His tomb has never been
found.
'Imma
Turban.
Isis
Ancient Egyptian goddess. Wife of Osiris and
mother of Horus. Protector of the dead.
Iteru
Ancient Egyptian name for the Nile. Also an ancient unit of measurement, equivalent to
approximately 2 km.
John Soane Museum
Small museum in central
London in the house of architect Sir John Soane
(1753–1837). Diverse collection of objects includ-
ing the coffin of Nineteenth Dynasty pharaoh
Seti I.
Ka'ba
A cube-shaped shrine in Mecca, the holiest
site in the Moslem world. It contains a stone
believed to have been given by the angel Gabriel
to Abraham. All Moslems turn towards it when
praying.
Karkaday
An infusion of hibiscus flowers,
popular throughout Egypt.
Karnak
A vast temple complex just to the north of
Luxor, with buildings spanning almost 2000 years
of Egyptian history.
Khamsin
A strong desert wind.
Khan-al-Khalili
A large bazaar in Cairo, selling
everything from jewellery to
shisha
pipes.
Khutbar
Sermon.
Kufr
Name given to those who do not follow
Islam. Unbelievers.
KV39
Tomb just outside the Valley of the Kings.
Considered by some Egyptologists to be the tomb
of early Eighteenth Dynasty pharaoh Amenhotep
583
I (ruled
c.
1525–1504 BC).
KV55
Mysterious tomb in the Valley of the Kings,
discovered in 1907. Considerable controversy
over who was actually buried there, with some
scholars suggesting Akhenaten, others Smenkhkare.
Late Period
Period of ancient Egyptian history
lasting from 712 BC to 332 BC, when the country
was conquered by Alexander the Great.
Lepsius, Karl Richard
(1810–84). German
Egyptologist. Director of Berlin Museum.
Published a seminal twelve-volume study of the
monuments of Egypt.
Linear A
As yet undeciphered script used in
ancient Crete.
Lydia
Ancient Near Eastern kingdom. In modern
Turkey.
Machimos
Warrior.
Malqata
Site of former palace of Amenhotep
III
on the west bank of the Nile at Luxor.
Mariette, Auguste Ferdinand
(1821–81). French
Egyptologist. Founder of Egyptian Department of
Antiquities and National Museum.
Mastaba
Oblong tomb, made of stone or mud
bricks. From the Arabic word for bench.
Medinet Habu
Village on the west bank of the
Nile at Luxor, and site of the mortuary temple of
Ramesses
III.
Memphis
Capital of the Old Kingdom, an impor-
tant administrative centre throughout ancient
Egyptian history.
Midan Tahrir
The hub of modern Cairo. The
name means 'Liberation Square'.
Mihrab
Niche in a mosque indicating the
direction of Mecca.
584
Minoan
Ancient Bronze Age culture based on
island of Crete.
Mizmar
Musical wind instrument, akin to the
oboe.
Molochia
An Egyptian dish made from stewed
mallow leaves. Rather like spinach.
Mortuary temple
Temple where prayers were
recited and sacrifices offered for the well-being of
the deceased, usually a king.
Moulid
Popular festival or fair, usually in honour of a local saint or holy person.
Muezzin
Mosque official who summons the faith-
ful to prayer five times each day.
Munshid
A devotional singer or chanter.
Necropolis
Literally 'city of the dead'. A burial
ground.
Nefertiti
Great Royal Wife of the pharaoh
Akhenaten. Some scholars believe that on
Akhenaten's death she took the name
Smenkhkare and ruled as a pharaoh in her own
right. Immortalized in the famous 'Nefertiti Bust'
in the Berlin Museum.
Old Kingdom
Ancient Egyptian history is divided
into three Kingdoms – Old, Middle and New –
with Intermediate Periods between them. The Old
Kingdom lasted from
c.
2575 to 2134 BC.
Osiris
Ancient Egyptian god of the underworld.
Ostrakon
Piece of pottery or limestone bearing an
image or text. Effectively the ancient equivalent of
the modern-day doodling pad.
Pectoral
Jewel, usually pylon-shaped, worn on the
chest or breast.
Pendlebury, John Devitt Stringfellow
(1904–41).
Egyptologist. Excavated at Amarna. Shot by
585
Germans on Crete during the Second World War.
Peret One of three seasons into which the ancient
Egyptian year was divided (the others were Akhet
and Shemu). Peret was the season of planting and
growth, and lasted roughly from October to
February.
Persepolis Former capital of ancient Persia. In
modern-day Iran.
Petosiris
The name of a noble family buried at
Tuna el-Gebel. Their tomb is unique in its use of
both Egyptian and Greek styles to portray daily
life in ancient Egypt.
Petrie, William Matthew Flinders
(1853–1942).
Archaeologist and Egyptologist. Worked exten-
sively in Egypt and Palestine.
Pylon
Massive entrance or gateway standing in
front of a temple.
Qurn
High, pyramid-shaped peak overlooking
the Valley of the Kings. Means 'the horn' in
Arabic. Called Dehenet by the ancient Egyptians.
Rais
Foreman or overseer of works.
Ramesses I
First pharaoh of the Nineteenth
Dynasty (although some consider Horemheb to
have been the first). Ruled
c.
1307–1306 BC.
Ramesses II
Third pharaoh of the Nineteenth
Dynasty. Ruled
c.
1290–1224 BC. One of ancient
Egypt's greatest pharaohs.
Ramesses III
Twentieth Dynasty pharaoh. Ruled
c.
1194–1163 BC. His mortuary temple at Medinet
Habu is one of the most beautiful monuments in
Egypt.
Ramesses
VIII
Twentieth Dynasty pharaoh. Ruled
c.
1136–1131 BC.
Ramesseum Mortuary temple of Ramesses II, on
586
the west bank of the Nile at Luxor.
Ramessid
Umbrella title given to the period of the
Nineteenth and Twentieth dynasties.
Ra
(or
Re)
Ancient Egyptian sun god.
Re-Harakhty
Ancient Egyptian god combining
the attributes of Ra and Horus. State god of the
New Kingdom. Usually depicted as a man with
the head of a falcon.
Rek'ah
Prayer cycle.
Rekhmire
Vizier of Tuthmosis III (ruled
c.
1479–1425 BC) and Amenhotep
II
(ruled
c.
1427–1401 BC).
Rohlfs, Gerhard
(1831–96). German explorer.
Travelled extensively in the western desert,
making a landmark crossing of the Great Sand
Sea in 1874.
Rosellini, Niccolo Francesco Ippolito Baldessare
(1800–43). Italian Egyptologist. Founder of
Egyptology in Italy.
Saidee
Native of Upper Egypt.
Saqqara
Necropolis of the ancient Egyptian
capital at Memphis. A vast desert burial ground
covering almost seven square kilometres, and
including the Step Pyramid of Djoser, Egypt's first
true pyramid.
Scarab
A dung beetle. Considered sacred in
ancient Egypt.
Serapeum
A series of vast underground galleries
at Saqqara where the Apis Bull – a sacred cult
animal of the ancient Egyptians – was buried.
Seth
Egyptian deity, brother and murderer of
Osiris, associated with deserts, war and chaos.
Represented by an unidentified animal.
Seti I
Nineteenth Dynasty pharaoh, father of
587
Ramesses II. Ruled
c.
1306–1290 BC.
Shabti
Small mummiform figure, usually of wood
or faience, placed in a tomb in order to perform
tasks for the deceased in the afterlife.
Sharia
Islamic law.
Shepseskaf
Final pharaoh of the Fourth Dynasty.
Ruled
c.
2472–2467 BC.
Shisha
pipe
A water pipe. Found in cafes and private homes throughout Egypt.
Siga
A board game, also known as Tab-es-Siga.
Similar to draughts. Thought to derive from the
ancient Egyptian board game Senet.
Smenkhkare
Eighteenth Dynasty pharaoh, ruled
c.
1335–1333 BC. Some scholars have suggested
that Smenkhkare was actually Nefertiti, who
ruled as a pharaoh in her own right following the
death of her husband Akhenaten.
Snofru
First king of the Fourth Dynasty. Ruled
c.
2575–2551 BC.
Stele
Upright block of stone or wood carrying
images and inscriptions.
Sura
A chapter of the Koran, the holy book of
Islam. Each of the 114
suras
is divided into a
number of
ayat,
or sections.
Susa
Former capital of the Persian empire. In
modern Iran.
Teftish
Office.
Termous
Type of bean.
Thebes
Name given by the Greeks to ancient
Waset, modern Luxor.
Thoth
Ancient Egyptian god of writing and
counting. Usually depicted with a human body
and the head of an ibis.
Touria
Hoe.
588
Tuna el-Gebel
Ancient site in Middle Egypt, near
the town of Mallawi.
Tuthmosis II
Eighteenth Dynasty pharaoh. Ruled
c.
1492–1479 BC.
Ummah
The Moslem community.
Waset
Ancient Egyptian name for modern Luxor.
Yuya and Tjuyu
A noble couple, lived in the four-
teenth century BC. Great-grandparents of
Tutankhamun. Their tomb in the Valley of the
Kings – KV46 – was found in 1905. Until the dis-
covery of Tutankhamun in 1922, it was
considered one of the greatest finds in the history
of Egyptian archaeology.
Zamalek
District of Cairo. Occupies the northern
part of Gezira Island.
Zikr
A group of devout Moslems, usually belong-
ing to one of the mystic Sufi brotherhoods, who
perform a trance-inducing devotional dance.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Numerous people helped in the writing of this
book, which would never have made it out of my
head, let alone into the bookshops, without their
advice, assistance and support.
Special thanks to my wonderful agent, Laura
Susijn, who believed in me when many others
didn't, and to my editor, Simon Taylor, a master of
the art of painless revision.
Nicholas Reeves, Ian Shaw and Stephen Quirke
provided crucial advice on aspects of ancient
Egyptian history and language, and I owe them a
huge debt of gratitude, as well as an apology for
the many liberties I have taken with the inform-
ation they provided.
Stephen Ulph and James Freeman filled in the
numerous gaps in my knowledge of, respectively,
modern Arabic and ancient Greek. Thanks to
them, and also to Andrew 'Splodge' Rogerson and
Tom Blackmore for their invaluable comments on
the manuscript.
591
Of all the many friends who buoyed me up with
words of encouragement, four in particular
deserve mention: John Bannon, Nigel Topping,
Xan Brooks and Bromley Roberts.
Finally, two special acknowledgements. First, to
my aunt Joan, who first planted a love of ancient
Egypt in my mind, and subsequently nurtured it
through many joyous afternoons in the British
Museum.
Secondly, and most importantly, to all my many
friends in the Arab Republic of Egypt, who have
shown me such unfailing warmth, kindness and
generosity.