With the many temples and tombs around Luxor, we were being particularly selective, so 1) we don't get dizzy 2) get the most return for our investment on entrance tickets. Medinet Habu.Temple was selected for its particularly good state of preservation.
Medinet Habu Temple is really the Mortuary Temple of Ramesses III, built during 12th century BCE.The temple complex still has the complete wall around it, many bas-relief scenes of battles, including one naval battle, and hunting, and columns with original paint work.
Attached to the temple is the remains of the Ramesses III's part-time royal palace, though hardly anything is over a meter tall. After all the tombs and mortuary temples, I was beginning to think that the pharaohs only cared about death not living. I hadn't seen any evidence or reference to palaces until this site, even though it really pales in comparison to the temple.
Medinet Habu is different from other temples. The main entry gate is a 4-side tower and looks like a fortified/castle tower. First below is the temple entrance viewed from the outside - gate at right. Second, the entrance tower viewed from inside the temple.
The first courtyard.
Some reliefs.
Columns.
Our Tuk-Tuk Driver is perhaps a Rolling Stones Fan?
Sun-Ling and John have been traveling the earth since 2008 while blogging, eating vegetarian and vegan, and riding public transportation. We love uphill day hikes, 20th-century architecture, Roman ruins, all bodies of water, local markets, shopping for groceries, aqueducts, miradors, trip planning, blablacar, and more.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Most Recent Post
Uzbekistan: Bukhara
Bukhara was a major city on the Silk Road. It had been the capital of various dynasties. Many of the buildings we see today originated duri...
Most Popular Posts of Last 30 Days
-
Tashkent, Uzbekistan is our entry into Central Asia. The Silk Road had been a destination for us for decades. Besides the usual concerns for...
-
Last week we hauled our canoe and tent over to Merchants Millpond State Park and enjoyed some very fine camping and paddling. One day we p...
-
Khiva is really the first stop on our upstream tour of the Silk Road. An important post on the Silk Road, Khiva was razed and rebuilt many t...
-
From TashKent, we took a flight west to Nukus, located in Karakalpakstan, an autonomous region of Uzbekistan. Nukus itself is a city establi...
-
Bukhara was a major city on the Silk Road. It had been the capital of various dynasties. Many of the buildings we see today originated duri...
-
The day before Easter we took the regional FSE train from Martina Franca to Bari, the 2nd largest city in southern Italy (after Naples) with...
-
We spent some extra time in Tashkent, because we wanted to catch the Persian New Year, Nowruz , in Tashkent, known as Spring Equinox to the ...
No comments:
Post a Comment