Summary of your 'study carrel' ============================== This is a summary of your Distant Reader 'study carrel'. The Distant Reader harvested & cached your content into a collection/corpus. It then applied sets of natural language processing and text mining against the collection. The results of this process was reduced to a database file -- a 'study carrel'. The study carrel can then be queried, thus bringing light specific characteristics for your collection. These characteristics can help you summarize the collection as well as enumerate things you might want to investigate more closely. This report is a terse narrative report, and when processing is complete you will be linked to a more complete narrative report. Eric Lease Morgan Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 10 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 78749 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 71 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 8 Egypt 7 illustration 7 Gudin 7 Faucher 5 egyptian 5 Syria 5 Drawn 5 Babylon 5 Asia 4 Tigris 4 Thebes 4 Theban 4 Pharaoh 4 Nile 4 King 4 III 4 Euphrates 4 Boudier 3 king 3 Memphis 3 Judah 3 Delta 3 B.C. 3 Assyria 3 Assur 3 Amon 2 man 2 Tyre 2 Tiglath 2 Thûtmosis 2 Susa 2 Sargon 2 Ramses 2 Orontes 2 Nineveh 2 Medes 2 Lord 2 Jerusalem 2 Jahveh 2 Israel 2 Herodotus 2 Greeks 2 God 2 Egyptians 2 Assyrians 2 Amenôthes 1 volume 1 time 1 spanish 1 semitic Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1942 king 1797 time 1402 name 1382 year 1054 illustration 1047 country 966 man 918 city 896 place 863 day 847 people 803 son 797 town 797 part 687 temple 687 god 673 hand 569 side 538 army 526 dynasty 515 war 503 reign 497 land 495 way 492 prince 482 century 476 tribe 453 power 453 head 442 mountain 432 state 432 order 431 wall 427 water 426 foot 421 period 419 priest 418 campaign 416 father 409 inscription 407 work 407 life 406 empire 395 body 389 number 388 death 387 province 386 river 376 troop 375 fact Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 3022 _ 2623 � 1085 Egypt 524 Gudin 513 Faucher 469 Babylon 449 god 440 Assyria 433 Syria 419 Nile 411 III 411 Assur 391 King 378 B.C. 377 Egyptians 376 II 346 Pharaoh 343 Euphrates 339 Asia 322 I. 302 . 301 Thebes 299 Ramses 284 Israel 271 Judah 260 Herodotus 255 thou 249 Amon 248 Nineveh 227 Boudier 224 Delta 220 el 219 Amenôthes 215 Assyrians 209 Tigris 207 Pharaohs 205 s 205 Thûtmosis 203 Lord 201 Theban 200 Tiglath 196 David 193 Greeks 188 Râ 188 Memphis 184 Cortés 180 Sargon 180 God 178 Osiris 178 Jahveh Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 5537 it 5536 he 3887 they 2973 them 2613 him 1418 we 928 i 907 himself 720 themselves 600 us 530 she 334 her 325 itself 261 me 139 thee 131 you 78 herself 53 one 22 s 22 myself 17 thyself 12 theirs 10 ye 10 xi 8 ourselves 8 mine 8 his 7 iv 4 ours 4 ii 3 thy 1 yourself 1 xi.--they 1 vii.--i 1 thou 1 them,--she 1 shumu 1 homage,--they 1 ce Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 22968 be 10798 have 1558 take 1389 make 1288 do 1047 give 920 find 823 come 796 draw 704 bring 656 become 653 know 585 see 577 follow 556 seem 532 show 532 call 524 say 508 place 480 leave 473 appear 459 carry 458 form 453 bear 442 represent 433 remain 432 mention 415 go 415 fall 398 set 385 pass 370 lead 359 send 345 accord 343 reach 341 receive 337 hold 318 lie 311 rise 307 succeed 299 build 298 begin 289 break 284 occupy 281 possess 276 think 276 offer 274 put 274 keep 266 stand Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3147 not 1157 other 1143 first 1140 more 1082 so 1049 only 1046 as 969 up 932 great 802 long 783 out 750 most 735 still 731 even 716 same 666 own 647 such 627 then 624 now 613 egyptian 612 well 574 far 560 however 552 thus 547 ancient 528 also 515 very 505 many 480 there 471 soon 439 down 431 probably 426 several 423 assyrian 414 new 396 good 394 certain 392 once 376 few 376 almost 371 high 367 last 365 whole 353 therefore 350 royal 346 together 346 little 337 much 337 early 323 never Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 212 most 192 least 105 good 65 early 49 eld 48 high 47 Most 46 great 42 near 34 late 25 old 23 slight 23 low 21 large 20 fine 14 strong 14 small 12 wealthy 12 short 12 rich 9 young 8 brave 7 manif 7 furth 6 noble 6 easy 5 poor 5 long 5 farth 5 await 4 wise 4 simple 4 hard 3 may 3 hot 3 heavy 3 dark 3 common 3 bad 2 topmost 2 sweet 2 say 2 open 2 lofty 2 light 2 handsome 2 foremost 2 fair 2 dire 2 clear Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 538 most 32 least 20 well 2 near 1 worst 1 latest 1 fast Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.org 1 www.fadedpage.com Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/31413/31413-h/31413-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/31413/31413-h.zip 1 http://www.fadedpage.com Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 10 days gone by 8 _ see _ 4 name is unknown 4 names are not 3 god is not 3 god was not 3 king did not 3 name is not 3 people did not 3 � does not 2 city was still 2 country had often 2 dynasty did not 2 dynasty was not 2 egypt had already 2 egypt had never 2 egypt was not 2 egypt was thus 2 king had � 2 king was not 2 kings did not 2 kings had not 2 kings were not 2 men went about 2 name is _ 2 name was first 2 name was subsequently 2 names are unknown 2 people gave way 2 people were accustomed 2 place is not 2 princes did not 2 war carried on 2 years did not 2 � be not 2 � do not 2 � is here 2 � was probably 1 * being well 1 * brought in 1 * drew largely 1 * had largely 1 * had not 1 * see josh 1 * was chief 1 * was never 1 * was widely 1 * went forth 1 _ am not 1 _ are better Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 cities took no part 1 * had no time 1 army had not as 1 cities were not all 1 countries were not more 1 country was no doubt 1 dynasty had not yet 1 dynasty was not long 1 dynasty was not probably 1 egypt made no further 1 god had not yet 1 god is not easy 1 god is not surprising 1 god was not always 1 king did not immediately 1 king had no choice 1 king made no great 1 king was not exactly 1 kings did not merely 1 kings had no difficulty 1 kings was not more 1 kings were not content 1 kings were not so 1 man was not white 1 name is not semitic 1 names are not always 1 names do not so 1 parts had not everywhere 1 people had no cause 1 people had no faith 1 place is no more 1 places are not yet 1 princes were no less 1 reign was no less 1 side were not successful 1 temple became no more 1 time being no object 1 town had no supply 1 town had no walls 1 town was not less 1 war had no attractions 1 wars do not continually 1 year was not so 1 � be not afraid 1 � do not everlastingly 1 � leaves no doubt A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 31413 author = Anderson, Robert E. (Robert Edward), M.A., F.A.S. title = The Story of Extinct Civilizations of the West date = keywords = America; Asia; Atlantic; Aztecs; Balboa; Columbus; Cortés; Cuba; Emperor; Europe; Greenland; Indians; King; Mexicans; Mexico; Montezuma; New; Peru; Spain; Spaniards; Tezcuco; World; Yucatan; spanish summary = In the towns, which contained large stone houses, and country generally, capital--afterward called Mexico from the name of their war-god. Cortés the history of the Aztecs becomes part of that of the Mexicans. on the table-land of Mexico two great races or nations, as has already near the coast, at the place where Cortés and his Spanish soldiers were the same time some Tlascalans told Cortés that a great sacrifice, mostly to that of Cortés pointing out the Valley of Mexico to his Spanish Cortés, with a great present of gold and robes of the most precious Wishing to visit the great Mexican temple, Cortés, with his cavalry and Cortés from the Mexican capital that the whole city was in a state of reaching the camp of the Spaniards in Mexico, Cortés found that Alvarado In the Spanish conquest of America there are three great generals: id = 17324 author = Maspero, G. (Gaston) title = History of Egypt, Chaldæa, Syria, Babylonia, and Assyria, Volume 4 (of 12) date = keywords = Ahmosis; Asia; Baal; Babylon; Byblos; Chaldæa; Delta; Drawn; Egypt; Euphrates; Faucher; Gen.; Gudin; Hyksôs; III; Jordan; Khammurabi; King; Lebanon; Mediterranean; Nile; Orontes; Pharaoh; Phoenicians; Sea; Syria; Theban; Thebes; Thûtmosis; Tigris; Tyre; egyptian; illustration; semitic; time summary = circle of sovereign states which so closely hemmed in the city of Bel. We may surmise with all probability that the history of Babylon in early In the mean time, the kings of the five towns had concentrated their given by King Apôpi II Âusirrî to a scribe named Atu. Both their name and origin were doubtless well known to the Egyptians, If, in the time of the native Pharaohs, Asiatic tribes had been drawn the times of the Kings possessed concerning the origin of Nineveh and the first Cossæan kings--The peoples of Syria, their towns, Nineveh and the first Cossæan kings--The peoples of Syria, their towns, possess, calls himself _King of the Country of the Sea_, appears for the first time among Syrian places in the list of Syria, like those of Egypt and of the countries watered by the Egyptians of Hâtshopsîtû�s time landed is the present id = 17325 author = Maspero, G. (Gaston) title = History of Egypt, Chaldæa, Syria, Babylonia, and Assyria, Volume 5 (of 12) date = keywords = Amarna; Amenôthes; Amon; Asia; Brugsch; Drawn; Egypt; Faucher; Gudin; Harmhabî; III; Karnak; Khâti; King; Memphis; Mitanni; Naharaim; Nile; Pharaoh; Ramses; Seti; Syria; Tel; Theban; Thebes; Thûtmosis; egyptian; illustration summary = and his peaceful reign--The great building works--The temples of of Amon at Luxor and at Karnak, the tomb of Amenôthes III, the chapel mentioned, in the time of Ramses III., in the list of the [Illustration: 015.jpg A SYRIAN TOWN AND ITS OUTSKIRTS AFTER AN EGYPTIAN ** The daughter of the King of the Khâti, wife of Ramses ** The daughter of the King of the Khâti, wife of Ramses the king for the temple of Amon at Karnak; at the present king, and in a few years a large town had sprung up, which was called King.* The lord of Thebes itself, a certain Ramses, bowed his head to against the countries subject to the great King of Egypt, and should he the great King of Egypt, and the great Prince of the Khâti shall destroy [Illustration: 307.jpg THE ARMY OP RAMSES III. [Illustration: 313.jpg THE CAPTIVE CHIEFS OF RAMSES III. id = 17326 author = Maspero, G. (Gaston) title = History of Egypt, Chaldæa, Syria, Babylonia, and Assyria, Volume 6 (of 12) date = keywords = Amenôthes; Amon; Assur; Assyria; Babylon; Boudier; Chron; David; Drawn; Egypt; Euphrates; Faucher; God; Gudin; Hebrews; III; Israel; Jerusalem; Judah; Lord; Pharaoh; Philistines; Ramses; Sam; Saul; Solomon; Syria; Theban; Thebes; Tiglath; Tigris; egyptian; illustration; king summary = States--The priest-kings of Amon masters of Thebes under the suzerainty [Illustration: 018.jpg PAINTING IN THE FIFTH TOMB OF THE KINGS TO THE �Since the times of the god bodies are created merely to pass away, and continued to be the greatest of kings, Pharaoh�s god held a position when, the line of the Theban kings having come to an end, the Tanites [Illustration: 110.jpg A PHOENICIAN GOD IN HIS EGYPTIAN SHRINE] king appeared on the scene, and lost in a few years all the ground [Illustration: 193.jpg THE KING CROSSING A MOUNTAIN IN HIS CHARIOT] [Illustration: 200.jpg THE KING LETS FLY ARROWS AT A BESIEGED TOWN] great gods, my lords, I, Tiglath-pileser, King of Assyria, son of high places of the field.--The kings came and fought;--then fought the the time they were written, the king still possessed his was for a long time translated as king or kingdom of Judah, id = 17327 author = Maspero, G. (Gaston) title = History of Egypt, Chaldæa, Syria, Babylonia, and Assyria, Volume 7 (of 12) date = keywords = Adini; Annals; Assur; Assyria; Assyrians; B.C.; Babylon; Boudier; Bît; Damascus; Drawn; Egypt; Euphrates; Faucher; Gudin; Hamath; III; Israel; Jahveh; Judah; Lake; Mount; Naîri; Nineveh; Orontes; Samaria; Sargon; Shalmaneser; Syria; Tiglath; Tigris; Urartu; Zab; illustration; king summary = the accession of Assur-nazir-pal: the Assyrian army and the progress of Assur-nazir-pal: His campaign of the year 867 in Naîri--The death of basin of the Tigris, and I should place it near Bitlistchaî, where different forms of the word occur many times on In a small town near one of the sources of the Tigris, Assur-nazir-pal [Illustration: 044.jpg THE CAMPAIGNS OF ASSUR-NAZIR-PAL IN MESOPOTAMIA] [Illustration: 050.jpg CAMPAIGNS OF ASSUR-NAZIR-PAL IN SYRIA] time of Assur-nazir-pal, but the inscriptions of the kings [Illustration: 055.jpg THE ASSYRIAN WAR-CHARIOT OF THE NINTH CENTURY rites incumbent on an Assyrian king whenever he stood for the first time [Illustration: 100.jpg SHUA, KING OF GILZAN, BRINGING A WAR-HORSE FULLY [Illustration: 131.jpg JEHU, KING OF ISRAEL, SENDS PRESENTS TO kings of Assyria, from Irba-rammân to Assur-nirâri III.:-[Illustration: 169.jpg TABLE OF THE DYNASTY OF THE KINGS OF ASSYRIA] Assyrian king had �taken the hands of Bel.� Tiglath-pileser accepted id = 17328 author = Maspero, G. (Gaston) title = History of Egypt, Chaldæa, Syria, Babylonia, and Assyria, Volume 8 (of 12) date = keywords = Asia; Assur; Assyria; Assyrians; B.C.; Babylon; Boudier; Cimmerians; Egypt; Elam; Esarhaddon; Euphrates; Faucher; Gudin; Herodotus; Jahveh; Jerusalem; Judah; King; Lord; Medes; Nebuchadrezzar; Necho; Nineveh; Pharaoh; Psammetichus; Sargon; Scythians; Sennacherib; Susa; Syria; Tigris; Tyre; egyptian; greek; illustration summary = taken place during his second reign, in 703 B.C. The magnificent army left by Sargon was at his disposal, and summoning thee, saying, Jerusalem shall not be given into the hand of the King of Assur-bani-pal proclaimed himself King of Assyria, and Shamash-shumukîn, maintained for some years longer, the time seemed at hand when the king, Assur-bani-pal, King of Assyria, the creature of thy hands, the the Assyrian army re-entered Nineveh, Assur-bani-pal placed them on the [Illustration: 228.jpg THE EASTERN WORLD IN THE REIGN OF ASSUR-BANI-PAL] chief fell upon the Assyrians, and that his son Sandakhshatru carried on hostilities some time longer. before Assur-bani-pal, the king whom my hands have created;� the army, Assyrian kings was for a long time doubtful, and Sin-sharishkun was placed before Assur-etililâni; the inverse order declared to be the son of Assur-bani-pal, king of Assyria. on the time of year at which the king had ascended the id = 17329 author = Maspero, G. (Gaston) title = History of Egypt, Chaldæa, Syria, Babylonia, and Assyria, Volume 9 (of 12) date = keywords = Ahura; Artaxerxes; Asia; Athens; B.C.; Babylon; Boudier; Cambyses; Croesus; Cyrus; Darius; Delta; Drawn; Egypt; Faucher; Greece; Greeks; Gudin; Herodotus; Lydia; Medes; Memphis; Minor; Nabonidus; Nile; Ochus; Sardes; Susa; Xerxes; egyptian; illustration; king; persian summary = _The Iranian religions--Cyrus in Lydia and at Babylon: Cambyses in Egypt slain at one time,** the Achæmenian kings killed each day a thousand Their victory placed the Lydian king in a position of great perplexity, The Persian king raised his camp as soon as all fear of an Herodotus did not even admit that the Lydian king took his own life; [Illustration: 078.jpg A PERSIAN KING FIGHTING WITH GREEKS] with the Persians, and gaining time meanwhile to collect a fresh army. instructions: �The great king commands those Persians who are in Sardes current when Herodotus travelled in Egypt, the king visited the temple ** Herodotus states that in his own time the Persians, like The Persian kings took large advantage of this The Persian king placed great faith in extraordinary military the Persian fleet had made its appearance in good time, and had kept the generals of Darius, but with the great king himself. id = 19400 author = Maspero, G. (Gaston) title = History Of Egypt, Chaldæa, Syria, Babylonia, and Assyria, Volume 1 (of 12) date = keywords = Abydos; Amon; Delta; Denderah; Egypt; Egyptians; Ennead; Faucher; Greeks; Gudin; Gîzeh; Heliopolis; Horus; Hâthor; Isis; Maspero; Memphis; Menés; Museum; Nile; Nûît; Osiris; Pharaohs; Professor; Shû; Sibû; Sit; Theban; Thebes; Thot; god; illustration; man summary = CHAPTER II.--THE GODS OF EGYPT Their Number and their Nature--The Feudal Gods, Living and Dead--The Triads--Temples and Priests--The Cosmogonies The Nile god: his form and its varieties--The goddess Mirit--The hence it was the Egyptians placed the river among their gods. [Illustration: 048.jpg THE NILE GOD. 1 THE NILE GOD: Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, after a statue in [Illustration: 051.jpg NILE GODS FROM THE TEMPLE OF SETI I. _THEIR NUMBER AND NATURE--THE FEUDAL GODS, LIVING AND DEAD--TRIADS---The nature of the gods: the double, the soul, the body, death of men and Most people invested them with human form, and represented the earth-god [Illustration: 116.jpg THE GOOSE-GOD FACING THE CAT-GODDESS, THE LADY OF which the sun revealed himself to men, was a living god, called Râ, as Nile-gods, Khnûmû, Osiris, Harshafitû, were incarnate in the form of a Each nome possessed the mummy and the tomb of its dead god: at Thinis id = 28876 author = Maspero, G. (Gaston) title = History of Egypt, Chaldæa, Syria, Babylonia, and Assyria A Linked Index to the Project Gutenberg Editions date = keywords = CHAPTER; volume summary = CHAPTER I.�THE NILE AND EGYPT CHAPTER II.�THE GODS OF EGYPT CHAPTER III.�THE LEGENDARY HISTORY OF EGYPT Mummy Wrappings from Tomb at Thebes CHAPTER I�THE POLITICAL CONSTITUTION OF EGYPT CHAPTER II�THE TEMPLES AND THE GODS OF CHALDÆA CHAPTER I�THE FIRST CHALDÆAN EMPIRE AND THE HYKSÔS IN EGYPT Painting in Tomb of the Kings Thebes Painting on the Tomb of The Kings CHAPTER II�THE REACTION AGAINST EGYPT Profile of Head Of Mummy (Thebes Tombs) CHAPTER II�THE RISE OF THE ASSYRIAN EMPIRE Painting in the Fifth Tomb of The Kings to The Right Paintings at the End of The Hall Of The Fifth The Tomb CHAPTER II.�THE CHRISTIAN PERIOD IN EGYPT Painting at the Entrance of The Fifth Tomb Painting at the Entrance of The Fifth Tomb CHAPTER I�THE CRUSADERS IN EGYPT CHAPTER II.�THE FRENCH IN EGYPT CHAPTER III.�THE RULE OF MEHEMET ALI CHAPTER V.�THE WATER WAYS OF EGYPT CHAPTER VII�TEMPLES AND TOMBS OF THEBES id = 39509 author = Webb, James Morris title = The Black Man, the Father of Civilization, Proven by Biblical History date = keywords = Bible; Egypt; Egyptians; God; Ham; Negro; man summary = Bible, does not show that God ever turned a man black to disgrace him for The "black man" I boldly assert "was the Father of civilization," born in God honored the black man by allowing some of his Ethiopian blood to flow were descendants of Canaan, a black man who was the son of Ham (Genesis An early Queen of Egypt was a descendant of the Ethiopian or Negro race. Ham, the father of the black man, located in Africa. Egyptian was descended from the black man. the time of Abraham, the Egyptians were a simon pure black race. white rulers of Egypt, and the black men or the Negroes regained Chapters of Exodus), which wrecked the Egyptians'' or black man''s kingdom, So, since it is true that the black man is the father of civilization, it It is impossible for God to forget that the black man and his land (Egypt)