We continue on our journey of discovery...
Not far from the El Bagawat necropolis, tucked away in a little side road off the beaten track, our driver Mark indulges us once more by stopping at yet another temple. This is the largest (yet by no means anywhere near as large as we were still to see) -- and best 'preserved' temple in the Kharga Oasis, and is called the Temple of Hibis, probably because it was buried in sand until the excavators dug it out early during the twentieth century, and today it is considered to be one of the finest temples in Egypt that date from the Persian period.
Hibis, from the Egyptian Hebet, means "the plough" and is located just over two kilometers
north of the modern city of Kharga. The town associated with the temple, known as the Town of the Plough, was in ancient times the garrisoned (known as the fortress of Qasr el-Ghuieta) capital of the Oasis, easily covering a square kilometer. It lay in the valley between the foothills of Gebels al-Teir and Nadura. There is very little known about the ancient town, though early excavations did unearth a few houses with vaulted ceilings and fresco paintings.Apparently this temple, as so many others in the region and of this period, was dedicated to the Theban triad, consisting of the gods, Amun, Mut and Khonsu, who's reliefs are in very good condition. The temple, which was excavated and restored by New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art earlier this century, has suffered from a locally rising water table. It has recently been under reparation by the Egyptian Antiquities Service, as the dilapidated board claimed, and was scheduled for removal to another site due to problems with ground water. However, recently Zahi Hawass has decided that the temple can be restored in-situ. There is some scaffolding up and there are beautifully hand cut stone blocks waiting... but judging by the general "very-egyptian' state of neglect and forgottenness, yet another lovely temple has been left in the lap of the gods -- until further notice...
* = Not necessarily in chronological or geographical order
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