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AKHMIM , or EIt11m1Im1, a See also: town of Upper See also: Egypt, on the right See also: bank of the See also: Nile, 67 m. by See also: river S. of See also: Assiut, and 4 M. above Suhag, on the opposite See also: side of the river, whence there is railway communication with Cairo and See also: Assuan
.
It is the largest town on the See also: east side of the Nile in Upper Egypt, having a population in 1907 of 23,795, of whom about a third were See also: Copts
.
Akhmim has several mosques and two Coptic churches, maintains a weekly market, and manufactures See also: cotton goods, notably the blue shirts and check shawls with See also: silk fringes worn by the poorer classes of Egypt
.
Outside the walls are the scanty ruins of two See also: ancient temples
.
In Abulfeda's days (13th century A.D.) a very imposing See also: temple still stood here
.
Akhmim was the See also: Egyptian Apu or Khen-See also: min, in Coptic Shmin, known to the Greeks as Chemmis or Panopolis, capital of the 9th or Chemmite See also: nome of Upper Egypt
.
The ithyphallic Min (See also: Pan) was here worshipped as " the strong Horns." See also: Herodotus mentions the temple dedicated to " See also: Perseus " and asserts that Chemmis was remark-able for the celebration of See also: games in honour of that See also: hero, after the manner of the Greeks, at which prizes were given; as a See also: matter of fact some representations are known of Nubians and See also: people of Puoni (Somalic See also: coast) clambering up poles before the See also: god Min
.
Min was especially a god of the See also: desert routes on the east of Egypt, and the trading tribes are likely to have gathered to his festivals for business and pleasure, at See also: Coptos (which was really near to Neapolis, Kena) even more than at Akhmim
.
Herodotus perhaps confused Coptos with Chemmis
.
See also: Strabo mentions See also: linen-See also: weaving as an ancient industry of Panopolis, and it is not altogether a coincidence that the cemetery of Akhmim is one of the chief See also: sources of the beautiful textiles of See also: Roman and Coptic age that are brought from Egypt
.
Monasteries abounded in this neighbourhood from a very early date; Shenout (Sinuthius), the fiery apostle and See also: prophet of the Coptic See also: national See also: church, was a
See also: monk of Atrepe (now Suhag), and led the populace to the destruction of the
See also: pagan edifices
.
He died in 451; some years earlier See also: Nestorius, the ex-patriarch, had succumbed perhaps to his persecution and to old age, in the neighbourhood of Akhmim
.
See also: Nonnus, the See also: Greek poet, was See also: born at Panopolis at the end of the 4th century
.
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