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Temple of Khnum (Esna)

Temple of Khnum of Esnan, also known as the Temple of Esna, dedicated to the god Khnum, his consorts Menhit and Nebtule, their son Heka and the goddess Neith, was a remarkable site for its beauty and architectural grandeur. The Temple of Esna shows how important the ancient Egyptians considered their places of worship. All Egyptians who entered the confines of an Egyptian temple had to “observe strict rules of ritual purity.”.

The town of Esna (Iunyt or Ta-senet to the ancient Egyptians and Latopolis to the Greeks) is roughly 50 km south of Luxor (ancient Thebes). It seems that the first temple (or shrine) in Esna was built during the reign of Tutmosis III (during the New Kingdom), but the present temple dates from the Greco-Roman period, when the town of Esna became the capital of the third Nome of Upper Egypt.

Esna Temple plan

The temple of Esna is primarily dedicated to Khnum (a god of the Nile who moulded the “ka” on his potter’s wheel) but was also dedicated to a number of other deities, most notably Neith (the ancient goddess of war and weaving), Heka (the personification of magic), Satet (a goddess of the Nile), and Menhet (the lion goddess who was the wife of Khnum at Esna).

Columns at Esna @Steve Cameron
The temple was built almost nine meters below ground level. Although the hypostyle hall was excavated by Marriett, the rest of the temple is still buried underneath the modern town. As a result, the temple appears to sit in a large pit hollowed out from the town. Although some masonry blocks attesting to the construction during the reign of Tutmosis III have been reused at the site, the oldest complete part of the temple is the back wall of the hypostyle hall which was built during the Ptolemaic period and features depictions of Ptolemy VI Philometer and Ptolemy VIII Euergetes. The rest of the excavated building was built by a series of Roman Emperors from Claudius (41-54 AD) Decius to Decius (249-251 AD). The roof of the hypostyle hall is supported by twenty-four columns with beautifully carved and painted floral capitals in a variety of designs (see below). The columns are decorated with texts describing the religious festival and depict several Roman emperors before the ancient Egyptian gods. For example, one depicts the Emperor Trajan dancing before the goddess Menhet.
On the northern wall of the hall the pharaoh is depicted catching wild birds – symbolically representing him subduing evil spirits. At the east corner there is a strange hymn to Khnum in which the name of the god is written using the hieroglyph of a crocodile. At the opposite corner the hymn is repeated but with the name of the god written with the more traditional ram head. The decorations also include a number of calendars, and the ceiling is decorated with Egyptian astronomical figures on the northern side and Roman zodiacal signs on the southern side.

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