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Psammenitus, son of Amasis, lay encamped at the mouth of the.
Nile, called the Pelusiac, awaiting Cambyses. For Cambyses,
when he went up against Egypt, found Amasis no longer in life: he
had died after ruling Egypt forty and four years, during all which
time no great misfortune had befallen him. When he died, his body was
embalmed, and buried in the tomb which he had himself caused to be made
in the temple. After his son Psammenitus had mounted the throne, a
strange prodigy occurred in Egypt - rain fell at Egyptian Thebes, a
thing which never happened before, and which, to the present time,
has never happened again, as the Thebans themselves testify. In
Upper Egypt it does not usually rain at all; but on this occasion,
rain fell at Thebes in small drops.
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