MENES, born at This, a town of Thebais in Upper Egypt, was the founder of the Egyptian empire. He had three sons, viz. Athotis, who ruled after him at This and Thebes; Curudes, who, in Lower Egypt founded the kingdom of Heliopolis, which afterward was the kingdom of Diospolis; and Necherophes, who reigned at Memphis. It is thought this Menes reigned 117 years after the birth of Phaleg, son of Heber, which was the very year of the dispersion of the people throughout the whole earth. In building Memphis, he stopped the Nile near it, by the invention of a
MENE-
Menestrier causeway 100 furlongs broad, and caused it to run thro' the mountains.
Menonites MENESTRIER (John Baptist le), a native of Dijon, and one of the most learned and curious French antiquaries of his time, wrote, 1. A treatise on the medals, money, and ancient monuments of the Roman empresses, in folio. 2. The most famous medals of the ancient Roman emperors and empresses, in quarto. He died in 1634, aged 70.