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The temple of Luxor seen from the south
Modern Luxor is a populous town on the right bank of
the River Nile, where ancient Thebes, the city described by
Homer as ‘Thebes of the hundred gates', once stood.
The name Luxor comes from the Arabic word el-Uqsur,
the plural of el-Qasr, meaning encampment or fortification,
with reference to the two military camps built there in
Roman times.
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Luxor dazzles visitors from four corners of the world
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Thebes, which the Ancient Egyptians called Waset,
extended over the area between modern Karnak and Luxor. In
this vast city (at its height it had more than are million
inhabitants), at one time capital of an empire that extended
from the Euphrates to Upper Nubia, the god Amun was
worshipped, and the heart of the Amun cult lay in the great
temple of Karnak.

Aerial view of Luxor city
Once a year, on the occasion of the Festival of Opet,
in the second and third month of the flood season, a solemn
procession would transport the sacred barque of the god from
the temple of Karnak to the temple of Luxor, called
Ipet-resit, or ‘Private Chambers to the South (of Amun)’.
The temple of Luxor, some 260 m (850 ft) long today,
was built by Amenophis III on the foundations of a previous
religious structure, dating from the time of Queen
Hatshepsut.

An Obelisk stans evident to
Pharaonic civilization |

Avenue of Rams, representing Amon,
symbol of fertility |
The queen had also ordered the construction of six
kiosks, at the stopping points of the sacred barque of Amun,
along the original Eighteenth-Dynasty dromos, the sacred
avenue that connected the temple of Luxor with the temple of
Karnak.
From the Eighteenth Dynasty on, the effigies of the
sacred barges of Amun, Mut and Khonsu were sailed to the
temple of Luxor along the course of the Nile. At the
Festival of Opet, Amun of Karnak paid a visit to Amun of
Luxor, also known as Amun-em-ipet, meaning
‘Amun-Who-Is-In-His-Harem’, revitalizing the Amun of Luxor.

Avenue of Rams, depicting symbol of
growth
One of the glories of the temple of Luxor is a
majestic colonnade dating to the reign of Amenophis III,
with 14 columns with papyrus-shaped capitals standing 18 m
(60 ft) tall (and almost 10 m (33 ft) in circumference).
The colonnade is enclosed on both sides by a masonry
curtain wall, with relieves depicting various phases of the
Festival of Opet, completed and decorated during the reigns
of Tutankhamun and Horemheb.

Luxor city, overlooking the
eternal River Nile |
A magnificent courtyard followed, lined with a double
row of columns, and bordered to the south by the hypostyle
hall. From here, the visitor passes on to the inner section
of the temple where there is a series of four antechambers
and ancillary rooms, and the sanctuary of the sacred barque,
situated in the innermost room. The chapel was rebuilt by
Alexander the Great.
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The pink granite oblesik in front
of
the eastern side of the pylon
of the the temple of Luxor
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The temple was enlarged by Ramesses II, who built the
first pylon, decorated with relives depicting the battle of
Qadesh in Syria (1274 BC), the first courtyard and, on the
interior of the temple, a triple sanctuary for the barges of
Amun, Mut and Khonsu – the Theban triad.
The courtyard of Ramesses II, surrounded by a
peristyle of 74 papyrus columns arranged in a double row and
adorned with 16 statues of the pharaoh, incorporates a
three-part chapel on the northern side, also dedicated to
the Theban triad and dating to Hatshepsut’s reign; on the
eastern side of the courtyard a Byzantine church was built
in the sixth century AD, and on top of that, during the
reign of the Ayyubid sultans (thirteenth century AD), the
mosque of Abu El-Haggag was built, which is still used
today.
The great colonnade of the temple of
Luxor
Also dating to the reign of Ramesses II are two large
obelisks that once stood before the first pylon (a word
derived from the Greek meaning ‘gateway’) and which were
given to France by the ruler of Egypt, Mohammad Ali, in
1819.
The western obelisk, more than 21 m (70 ft) tall and
weighing 210 tons, was removed by the French in 1836 and
erected in Paris in the Place de la Concorde. All claims to
ownership over the second obelisk, which remained in its
position in Egypt, were renounced by France in 1980.
Aerial view of the temple of
Luxor
and the avenue of sphinxes that connected the temples
of Luxor and Karnak |
The ceremonies that took place in the temple of Luxor
were of great importance and their religious symbolism was
complex. During the Festival of Opet, the feast of the royal
jubilee, the divine rebirth of the pharaoh, son of Amun, was
celebrated, reaffirming in this way his power.
In the dim light of the ‘hall of divine birth’, Amun,
who on this occasion took the form of the pharaoh, would
meet the queen. Thoth, the ibis-headed god would announce to
her an imminent birth.
Amun would then order Khnum, the ‘Divine Potter’, to
shape a baby boy on his potter’s wheel, and his ka, or
‘spirit double’, which would represent the child’s divine
and immortal spirit. The queen, assisted by Hathor, Isis and
Nephthys, would give birth to the divine son, offspring of
pharaoh and gods, recognized by his father Amun.
To Amun, the divine son would make offerings of
incense and fresh bowers, receiving in exchange his divine
nature, his youth and the promise of long life. He would
then be crowned as the legitimate sovereign of the Two
Lands. The pharaoh, thus regenerated and reconfirmed in his
royal position, could ensure the prosperity of his people
for another year.
The temple of Luxor also served as a shrine for the
worship of the divine and immortal portion of the pharaoh,
the royal ka, symbol of legitimacy of the pharaoh’s power,
which was universal and not restricted to any individual
pharaoh.
This concept lasted for over seventeen centuries,
which explains why Alexander the Great – whose legitimacy as
the sovereign of Egypt depended on his being recognized as
the son of Amun – chose to rebuild the sanctuary of the
god’s Barque.
According to Theban cosmogony, the temple of Luxor
was also a recreation of the temple of Heliopolis, the site
of collective name for the eight primordial deities, who
were engendered by the creator of the earth, the serpent
Irta, also known as Kematef, who in turn created the world.
According to myth, Kematef and the Ogdoad, once their
mission was accomplished, were buried in a mythical tomb at
Medinet Habu where, throughout the New Kingdom, Amun of
Luxor would pay a visit every ten days in the ‘Feast of the
Tenth Day’.
During the reign of Ramesses II, the procession did
not enter the temple through the main entrance of the first
courtyard, but through the western gate, overlooking the
Nile, the eastern gate being reserved for the populace at
large. The main entrance to the temple was used during the
annual festival of Amun-Min-Kematef, which celebrated Amun
in his capacity as the god of fertility.
During the era of Nectanebo I the dorms linking Luxor
to Karnak was adorned with hundreds of human-headed
sphinxes, still visible in part. Under Roman rule,
specifically during the reign of Emperor Diocletian, around
AD 300, the southernmost part of the temple was dedicated to
the emperor cult and the temple itself was incorporated into
the castrum of the Roman garrison stationed in Luxor.
Excavations in the temple area, almost buried by sand
and by houses of the residents of the village of Luxor, were
begun in 1885 by Gaston Maspero, who restored the complex to
its current state.
In terms of purity of structural design and the
elegance of its columns, the temple is one of the most
remarkable architectural achievements of the New kingdom.
One of the most important finds of recent years was
made here, in the courtyard of Amenophis III. A cache of
magnificent statues was found, of which the finest, of red
quartzite, depicted the pharaoh himself.
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