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MANETHO (Mav40cov in an inscription of See also: Egyptian See also: priest and annalist, was a native of Sebennytus in the See also: Delta
.
The name which he bears has a See also: good Egyptian appearance, and has been found on a contemporary See also: papyrus probably referring to the See also: man himself
.
The evidence of Plutarch and other indications connect him with the reigns of See also: Ptolemy I. and II
.
His most important See also: work was an Egyptian See also: history in See also: Greek, for which he translated the native records
.
It is now only known by some fragments of narrative in See also: Josephus's See also: treatise Against See also: Apion, and by tables of dynasties and See also: kings with lengths of reigns, divided into three books, in the See also: works of Christian chronographers
.
The earliest and best of the latter is See also: Julius See also: Africanus, besides whom See also: Eusebius and
some falsifying apologists offer the same materials; the chief text is that preserved in the Chronographia of Georgius See also: Syncellus
.
It is difficult to See also: judge the value of the See also: original from these ex-tracts: it is clear from the different versions of the lists that they have been corrupted
.
Manetho's work was probably based on native lists like that of the See also: Turin Papyrus of Kings: even his division into dynasties may have been derived from such
.
The fragments of narrative give a very confused idea of Egyptian history in the See also: time of the See also: Hyksos and the XVIIIth Dynasty
.
The royal lists, too, are crowded with errors of detail, both in the names and See also: order of the kings, and in the lengths attributed to the reigns
.
The brief notes attached to some of the names may be derived from Manetho's narrative, but they are chiefly references to kings mentioned by See also: Herodotus or to marvels that were supposed to have occurred: they certainly possess little See also: historical value
.
A puzzling annotation to the name of Bocchoris, " in whose time a lamb spake 990 years," has been well explained by Krall's See also: reading of a demotic See also: story written in the twenty-third See also: year of See also: Augustus
.
According to this a lamb prophesied that after Bocchoris's reign See also: Egypt should be in the hands of the oppressor goo years; in Africanus's See also: day it was necessary to lengthen the See also: period in order to keep up the See also: spirits of the patriots after the stated See also: term had expired
.
This is evidently not from the pure text of Manetho
.
Notwithstanding all their defects, the fragments of Manetho have provided the accepted scheme of Egyptian dynastieys and have been of See also: great service to scholars ever since the first months of Champollion's decipherment
.
See C
.
See also: Muller, Fragmenta historicorum graecorum, ii
.
511–616; A
.
Wiedemann, Aegyptische Geschichte (
See also: Gotha, 1884), pp
.
121 et sqq
.
; J
.
Krall in Festgaben fur Biidinger (See also: Innsbruck, 1898); Grenfell and See also: Hunt, El Hibeh Papyri, i
.
223; also the section on chronology in EGYPT, and generally books on Egyptian history and chronology
.
(F
.
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