- Luxor Temple
Luxor Temple is a large
Ancient Egypt ian temple complex located on the east bank of the River Nile in the city today known asLuxor (ancient Thebes) and was founded in 1400 BC.Known in the
Egyptian language as "ipet resyt", or "the southern harem", the temple was dedicated to theTheban Triad ofAmun ,Mut , andChons and was built during theNew Kingdom , the focus of the annualOpet Festival , in which a cult statue of Amun was paraded down the Nile from nearby Karnak Temple "(ipet-isut)" to stay there for a while, with his consort Mut, in a celebration of fertility – whence its name.Description
Access to the temple is from the north, where a causeway lined by
sphinxes once led all the way to Ipet Sut in modern Al-Karnak . This road was a later addition, dating from the time ofNectanebo I in the 30th Dynasty.The temple properly begins with the 24
meter (79 ft) high First Pylon, built byRamesses II . The pylon was decorated with scenes of Ramesses's military triumphs (particularly theBattle of Kadesh ); later pharaohs, particularly those of theNubia n 25th dynasty, also recorded their victories there. This main entrance to the temple complex was originally flanked by six colossalstatues of Ramesses – four standing, and two seated – but only two (both seated) have survived. Modern visitors can also see a 25 metre (82 ft) tall pinkgranite obelisk : it is one of a matching pair. The other was taken toParis in 1835 where it now stands in the centre of thePlace de la Concorde .The pylon gateway leads into a peristyle courtyard, also built by Ramesses II. This area, and the pylon, were built at an oblique angle to the rest of the temple, presumably to accommodate the three pre-existing
barque shrines located in the northwest corner. It is atop thecolumn s of this courtyard that the Abu Haggagmosque was built: on the eastern side, a doorway leads surrealistically out into thin air some 8 metres (26 ft) above the ground.After the peristyle courtyard comes the processional colonnade built by
Amenhotep III – a 100 metre (328 ft) corridor lined by 14papyrus -capital columns.Friezes on the wall describe the stages in the Opet Festival, from sacrifices at Karnak at the top left, through Ammon's arrival at Luxor at the end of that wall, and concluding with his return on the opposite side. The decorations were put in place byTutankhamun : the boy pharaoh is depicted, but his names have been replaced with those ofHoremheb .Beyond the colonnade is a peristyle courtyard, which also dates back to Amenhotep's original construction. The best preserved columns are on the eastern side, where some traces of original colour can be seen. The southern side of this courtyard is made up of a 32-column hypostyle court that leads into the inner sanctums of the temple.
These begin with a dark
antechamber . Of particular interest here are the Romanstucco es that can still be seen atop the Egyptian carvings below; in Roman times this area served as a chapel, where local Christians were offered a final opportunity to renounce their faith and embrace the state religion. Moving further in stands a Barque Shrine for use by Amun, built by Alexander, with the final area being the private quarters of the gods and the Birth Shrine of Amenhotep III (his divine origin is depicted in careful, touching detail on the walls).A cache of 26 New Kingdom statues was found under the floor in the inner sanctum area in 1989 – hidden away by pious priests, presumably, at some moment of internal upheaval or invasion. These splendid pieces are now on display at the nearby
Luxor Museum .In Popular Culture
The temple appears in:
* The 1977James Bond film, "The Spy who Loved Me"
* The 1978Agatha Christie film, "Death on the Nile"Gallery
Luxor_Temple,_from_the_east_bank_of_the_NileImage:Avenue_towards_Karnak.jpg|Hundreds_of_sphinxes_once_lined_the_road_to_nearby_KarnakImage:Sphinx_1.jpg|A_well_preserved_sphinxImage:Egypt.LuxorTemple.05.jpg|The_massive_First_PylonImage:Luxor_Temple_Obelisk.jpg|The_red_granite_obeliskImage:Luxor_temple_2.jpg|The_central_corridor_of_the_templeImage:Egypt.LuxorTemple.04.jpg|Islamic_mosque_over_pharaonic_templeImage:Luxor_Temple_Sitting_Colossus.jpg|Sitting_Ramesses_II_Colossus_inside_Luxor_TempleImage:Closeup_Ramesses_II_Colossus.jpg|Closeup_of_the_same_ColossusImage:Egypt.LuxorTemple.01.jpg|AmenhotepExternal links
*Johnson, N. B.: " [http://lasur.epfl.ch/revue/A&C%20Vol%204%20No.3/JOHNSON.pdf Temple Architecture as Construction of Consciousness...] ", Arch. & Comport. / Arch. Behav., Vol. 4, no. 3, pp. 229–249 (1988), p. 233f.
* [http://www.touregypt.net/featurestories/luxortemple.htm Luxor Temple of Thebes]
* [http://www.truthbeknown.com/luxor.html] The Nativity Scene in the Temple of Luxorcoord|25|42|0|N|32|38|21|E|display=title""'
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