Ancient Canine Lovers of Canary Islands the Kyneseii & Pet-Worshipping Egyptians of Cynopolis Both Embalmed Their Dogs

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Herodotus wrote that the Kyneseii lived on an island past the Mediterranean (in the eastern Atlantic), the Canary Islands, where the ancestors of the step-pyramid-building Guanches worshipped dogs and mummified them (“man’s best friend”) for the afterlife when the mummified humans with their beloved dogs ostensibly would come alive. On the upper Nile of ancient Egypt was the city of Cynopolis where too the dog (Anubis) was worshipped, the favorite pet dogs there mummified too. Quite interestingly, the Hebrew word for dog is kelev meaning a like-heart, once again “man’s best friend” and suggesting that Hebrew played into the languages of the ancient Canary Islanders (probably Canaanites) and of the ancient Egyptians (progeny of Ham’s son Misr) of Gebtos (Coptos) named for Ham.