An Account Of Egypt By Herodotus














































 -  Hence the Egyptians make the image of Zeus with the face of a
ram; and the Ammonians do so also - Page 35
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Hence The Egyptians Make The Image Of Zeus With The Face Of A Ram; And The Ammonians Do So Also After Their Example, Being Settlers Both From The Egyptians And From The Ethiopians, And Using A Language Which Is A Medley Of Both Tongues:

And in my opinion it is from this god that the Egyptians call Zeus /Amun/.

The Thebans then do not sacrifice rams but hold them sacred for this reason; on one day however in the year, on the feast of Zeus, they cut up in the same manner and flay one single ram and cover with its skin the image of Zeus, and then they bring up to it another image of Heracles. This done, all who are in the temple beat themselves in lamentation for the ram, and then they bury it in a sacred tomb.

About Heracles I heard the account given that he was of the number of the twelve gods; but of the other Heracles whom the Hellenes know I was not able to hear in any part of Egypt: and moreover to prove that the Egyptians did not take the name of Heracles from the Hellenes, but rather the Hellenes from the Egyptians, - that is to say those of the Hellenes who gave the name Heracles to the son of Amphitryon, - of that, I say, besides many other evidences there is chiefly this, namely that the parents of this Heracles, Amphitryon and Alcmene, were both of Egypt by descent, and also that the Egyptians say that they do not know the names either of Poseidon or of the Dioscuroi, nor have these been accepted by them as gods among the other gods; whereas if they had received from the Hellenes the name of any divinity, they would naturally have preserved the memory of these most of all, assuming that in those times as now some of the Hellenes were wont to make voyages and were seafaring folk, as I suppose and as my judgment compels me to think; so that the Egyptians would have learnt the names of these gods even more than that of Heracles.

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