- Qasr Ibrim
Qasr Ibrim ( _ar. قصر ابريم) is an archeological site in
Lower Nubia . It was originally a major city perched on a cliff above theNile , but the flooding ofLake Nasser after the construction of theAswan High Dam transformed it into an island and flooded its outskirts. Qasr Ibrim is the only major archaeological site in Lower Nubia to have survived the Nile floods. Both prior to and after the Nile floods, it has remained a major site for archaeological investigations.Qasr Ibrim's history
Human habitation at the site dates from the Late Kingdom, but it reached its greatest prominence in the Middle Ages when it was the home of the
Eparch ofNobatia . Qasr Ibrim is the source of the largest collection ofOld Nubian documents ever found, including the records of the Eparch. The site was inhabited until the 1840s. Today the island is closed to all but archaeologists.This important site derives its name from the nearby village of Ibrim, on the east bank of the Nile. Wasr Ibrim is also notable for its fortress of Qasr Ibrim ("The Catle of Ibrim") which certainly stood on older pharaonic foundations. [John Baines and Jaromír Málek, Atlas of Ancient Egypt, Facts on File Publications New York, 1982. p.183] Partly built "in Roman times under the prefecture of Gaius Petronius during Augustus' reign," it was originally a pharaonic site with material from the New Kingdom and later periods of Egyptian history being found here. [Rosalie David, Discovering Ancient Egypt, Facts on File, 1993. p.106] This is established by reused and isolated monuments from this older period: the earliest record is a dated Year 8 stela of
Amenhotep I while "a temple structure ofTaharqa (with a painting showing the king offering to a god)" is also known here. [Bains & Málek, op. cit., p.183] The stela was found in a now ruined Christian Byzantine cathedral now at Qasr Ibrim where it had been reused in one of the church's crypts and is now located in the British Museum. [ [http://www.touregypt.net/featurestories/qasribrim.htm Qasr Ibrim in Ancient Nubia] ] In the west slope of the fortress hill, there existed several "rock-cut memorial chapels dedicated by various Viceroys of Kush to New Kingdom rulers and various deities." [David, op. cit., p.106] During the salvage operations carried out when the Aswan dam was being constructed, "their reliefs were cut away and removed to the vicinity ofNew Wadi es-Sebua . [Baines & Málek, op. cit., p.183] A large rock stela ofSeti I with his serving viceroy of Kush Amenemope which used to be [located] south Of the fortress of Qasr Ibrim were transferred to the neighbourhood ofNew Kalabsha atAswan . [Baines & Málek, op. cit., p.183] The site was visited by early travellors and was first excavated by David Randall-MacIver and C. Leonard Woolley for the Eckley B. Coxe Expedition for theUniversity of Pennsylvania in 1911. [David., op. cit., pp.106-107]References
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