of Oriental monarchs. The country abounded in
elephants. The soldiers were employed as beaters,
and the king and his court succeeded in killing one
hundred and twenty head of big game, whose tusks were
added to the spoils. These numbers indicate how
the extinction of such animals in these parts was
brought about. Beyond these regions, again, the
sheikhs of the Lamnaniu came to meet the Pharaoh.
They were a poor people, and had but little to offer,
but among their gifts were some birds of a species
unknown to the Egyptians, and two geese, with which,
however, His Majesty deigned to be satisfied.*
* The campaign of the year XXXI. It is mentioned in the Annals of Thulmosis III., 11. 17-27; the reference to the elephant-hunt occurs only in the Inscription of Amenemhabi, 11. 22, 23; an allusion to the defeat of the kings of Mitanni is found in a mutilated inscription from the tomb of Manakhpirrisonbu. It was probably on his return from this campaign that Thutmosis caused the great list to be engraved which, while it includes a certain number of names assigned to places beyond the Euphrates, ought necessarily to contain the cities of the Mitanni.
END OF VOL. IV.

