Title | Picturesque Palestine, Sinai, and Egypt, Vol. 2 |
Creator (LCNAF) |
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Publisher | D. Appleton and Company |
Date | 1883 |
Description | Index: Phoenicia and Lebanon / by the Rev. H. W. Jessup -- The Phoenician plain / by the Rev. Canon Tristram -- Acre, the key of Palestine, Mount Carmel and the river Kishon, Maritime cities and plains of Palestine / by Miss M. E. Rogers -- Lydda and Ramleh, Philistia / By Lt. Col. Warren -- The south country of Judaea / by the Rev. Canon Tristram -- The southern borderland and Dead Sea / by Professor Palmer -- Mount Hor and the cliffs of Edom, The convent of St. Catherine / by Miss M. E. Rogers -- Sinai / by the Rev. C. P. Clarke -- The land of Goshen, Cairo, Memphis, Thebes, Edfu and Philae / by S. Lane-Poole. |
Subject.Geographic (TGN) |
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Genre (AAT) |
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Language | English |
Type (DCMI) |
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Original Item Location | DS107 .W73 v.2 |
Original Item URL | http://library.uh.edu/record=b1703789~S11 |
Digital Collection | Exotic Impressions: Views of Foreign Lands |
Digital Collection URL | http://digital.lib.uh.edu/collection/exotic |
Repository | Kenneth Franzheim II Rare Books Room, William R. Jenkins Architecture and Art Library, University of Houston Libraries |
Repository URL | http://info.lib.uh.edu/about/campus-libraries-collections/william-r-jenkins-architecture-art-library |
Use and Reproduction | No Copyright - United States |
Identifier | exotic_201304_015 |
Title | Page 409 |
Format (IMT) |
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File Name | exotic_201304_015_436.jpg |
Transcript | MEMPHIS. 409 -that at the left in our steel engraving of the Three Pyramids of P, K , during the inundation. A large body of engineers and mmers i\[2 7 " ~* Pyramid (as the Third was called from its beautif, 1 ■ ^P ^ * *e Red beautiful granite casing), and with their united . ami I THE SPHINX. Called by the Arabs " Father of Terrors." It faces the east, and is hewn out of the natural rock. continuous efforts achieved the removal of one or two stones a day. The blocks fell down u ith a tremendous shock, and buried themselves in the sand, whence the) were extricated with immense toil and then were laboriously broken up. At the end of eight months the treasury |