Explore Egypt through the Luxor Temple
Posted By seovine on June 22, 2011
What best attracts the people to Luxor, Egypt are the captivating features and fascinating story the areas contains. Amenophis III constructed most of the Luxor Temple, now 260 m (850 ft), in a religious structure that dates back to the era of Queen Hathshepsut.
The Luxor Temple Colonnades
One of the glories of the ancient Egyptian 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 reliefs depicting various phases of the Festival of Opet, completed and decorated during the reigns of Tutankhamun and Horemheb.
A magnificent courtyard follows; it is lined with a double row of columns, and bordered to the south by the hypostyle hall, which itself contains 32 gigantic columns. From here, people enter the inner part of the attraction where there is a series of four antechambers and ancillary rooms, as well as the Sanctuary of the Sacred Barque, situated in the innermost room. Alexander the Great was responsible for the restoration of the chapel .
There is much significance to the rituals that happens in the Luxor Temple , and their religious symbolism 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.
The ancient Egyptian 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 the legitimacy of the pharaoh’s power, which was universal and not restricted to any individual pharaoh.
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.
Courtyard of Ramsees II
The courtyard of Ramses II, is surrounded by a peristyle of 74 papyrus columns arranged in a double row and adorned with 16 statues of the pharaoh, and incorporates a three-part chapel on the northern side, also dedicated to the Theban triad and dating to Hatshepsut’s reign.
The Obelisks
Also in existence since the time of Ramses II are the two humongous obelisks that before 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.
Removed from the Luxor temple in 1836 by the French was the western obelisk which was more than 21 m (70 ft) tall and weighing 210 tons, 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.
The Abu El Haggag Mosque
On the eastern side of the Luxor Temple Ramses II 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.Local, at present, still use the Abu El Haggag Mosque as a sacred place for prayer .
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