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Later Additions to the Temple of Karnak April 19, 2008

Posted by dodo in : Africa, Air Tickets, Beach Resorts, China, Egypt, Library, Lodges, Malaysia, Museum, South Africa, Thailand, The Nile, Travel Clinic , add a comment

This is a singular monument, perhaps unique among all those preserved in Egypt. Its general orientation is not east-west like the Amon sanctuary, but north-south. It is in rectangular form, divided into two parts that go along the entire length of the structure. The western part includes a colonnaded room whose minor axis is aligned with the axis of the sanctuary of Amon ; north of this room there are three chapels. The eastern section is subdivided into three parts: the southern part includes a colonnaded room surrounded by smaller rooms; the central part consists basically of three rooms aligned on their axis but oriented east-west; finally, the northern part includes a series of rooms that culminated to the north in a solar sanctuary (the same kind as we have seen in Hatshepsut’s funerary temple at Deir el-Bahri). (more…)

Egypt Temple of Karnak April 17, 2008

Posted by dodo in : Air Tickets, Cairo, Credit Card, Egypt , 5comments

In fact, Karnak is not a temple; it is a complex of temples. Today’s visitor arrives there easily from Luxor, only a couple of miles away. We have already referred to Luxor as the modern town that grew up where Thebes was; in reality the true ancient center, the heart of the New Kingdom’s political and religious life, must have been Karnak. The first impression one has when crossing the threshold of the first pylon (there are many pylons at Karnak), and finding himself amid the ruins of what was the greatest ancient Egyptian sanctuary, is that he will not be able to make any sense out of it. Even the Giza pyramids, although mysterious looking, have an internal logic; they are closed up in themselves and one intuitively experiences them, even when we don’t understand them. Karnak does not offer this possibility. Walking along the courtyards, rooms, columns, obelisks, statues, and miles of hieroglyphic inscriptions, the visitor soon loses any capacity to link one element or monument with another. Therefore one must return to Karnak again and again. Even then, as we have warned, he must avoid searching among the monuments with aesthetic or rational criteria — in short, modern, Western standards. And we have also said that the true temple of Amon was always the sanctuary that formed the central nucleus. All the various additions made over the course of centuries have their own value per se; they are separate nuclei whose presence is independently justified by ceremonial needs, by new ideological lines, or by new links between the various divinities. (more…)

Tuthmosis III’s New Policies and Karnak April 14, 2008

Posted by dodo in : Art Gallery, Cairo, Egypt, Memorial, Museum , add a comment

On the contrary, the three rooms preceded by the hall formed the same pattern as the Twelfth Dynasty temple. In this way, Tuthmosis III reaffirmed the traditional relationship with Amon. Looking at the new temple from south to north, we see that the colonnaded hall forms a pavilion in which the royal jubilee took place. The eastern part of the temple — with the rooms of Sokaris (the funerary god) and of Amon, as well as the solar rooms — symbolically represented the fate of the king, who rises to the sun from the world of the dead. Osiris the king becomes Horus, but only through the mediation of Amon. (more…)

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