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The account which I received of this Hercules makes him one of the
twelve gods. Of the other Hercules, with whom the Greeks are
familiar, I could hear nothing in any part of Egypt. That the
Greeks, however (those I mean who gave the son of Amphitryon that
name), took the name from the Egyptians, and not the Egyptians from
the Greeks, is I think clearly proved, among other arguments, by
the fact that both the parents of Hercules, Amphitryon as well as
Alcmena, were of Egyptian origin. Again, the Egyptians disclaim
all knowledge of the names of Neptune and the Dioscuri, and do not
include them in the number of their gods; but had they adopted the name
of any god from the Greeks, these would have been the likeliest to
obtain notice, since the Egyptians, as I am well convinced,
practised navigation at that time, and the Greeks also were some of
them mariners, so that they would have been more likely to know the
names of these gods than that of Hercules. But the Egyptian
Hercules is one of their ancient gods. Seventeen thousand years
before the reign of Amasis, the twelve gods were, they affirm,
produced from the eight: and of these twelve, Hercules is one.
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