Sect. IV.]
THE SHEPHERD-DYNASTIES.
163
T
I
is differently written from the synonymous pre-
nomen of Beon. This part is dated in the forty-
second year of the reign of Amenemha III., about
which time it is probable that the Twelfth Dynasty
concluded. Snufre is called the ruler of several foreign
lands. I cannot doubt that this Snufre was a King of
the Sixteenth Dynasty. This important tablet, there-
fore, plainly points oat the contemporaneousness, in
part, of three Dynasties, the Twelfth, the Sixteenth,
and another Dynasty, which is either the Ninth or the
Fourteenth.
I have already mentioned my opinion that the King
whose prenomen reads " Ma-tu-ra"1 and Ra-sebak-nufre2
£1
©
I
wTere probably co-regents of Amenemha III. I now
return to the consideration of the history of the Shep-
herds in Egypt.
The whole duration of the Shepherd-Dynasties can-
not easily be determined, and the variations between
Africanus and Eusebius and Josephus make it impos-
sible to decide what Manetho wrote on this subject
This will appear from the following table, which con-
tains what Africanus and Eusebius and Josephus say
respecting the length of the Fifteenth, Sixteenth, and
m 2
THE SHEPHERD-DYNASTIES.
163
T
I
is differently written from the synonymous pre-
nomen of Beon. This part is dated in the forty-
second year of the reign of Amenemha III., about
which time it is probable that the Twelfth Dynasty
concluded. Snufre is called the ruler of several foreign
lands. I cannot doubt that this Snufre was a King of
the Sixteenth Dynasty. This important tablet, there-
fore, plainly points oat the contemporaneousness, in
part, of three Dynasties, the Twelfth, the Sixteenth,
and another Dynasty, which is either the Ninth or the
Fourteenth.
I have already mentioned my opinion that the King
whose prenomen reads " Ma-tu-ra"1 and Ra-sebak-nufre2
£1
©
I
wTere probably co-regents of Amenemha III. I now
return to the consideration of the history of the Shep-
herds in Egypt.
The whole duration of the Shepherd-Dynasties can-
not easily be determined, and the variations between
Africanus and Eusebius and Josephus make it impos-
sible to decide what Manetho wrote on this subject
This will appear from the following table, which con-
tains what Africanus and Eusebius and Josephus say
respecting the length of the Fifteenth, Sixteenth, and
m 2