Abu Simbel - Temples of Rameses the Great and Nefertari
Abu Simbel was carved
into a cliff on the banks of Nile as a grand display of the power and
territory of Rameses the Great.
Anyone coming down the Nile from Nubia would
sail beside it. It's grandeur was meant to intimidate and awe.
It was a reminder that those who passed beneath the giant
statues were under the
governance of the Pharaoh and subject to his majesty.
The Temple of Rameses features the famous seated
statues of Rameses the Great.

In 1964, the Egyptian Government completed building a hydroelectric dam above Aswan to provide power and to control
the flood cycle of the Nile. This dam would create Lake Nasser and
submerge many historic sites. Abu Simbel was one of those
sites.
The Temple of Nefertari features standing
statues of Nefertari and Rameses the Great.

UNESCO, created a
fund to save the most important of the sites, Abu Simbel was one. As a result,
the temples of Rameses the Great and Nefertaril and the cliff in which
they were carved, were carefully cut apart
and reassembled like a giant puzzle on a higher site.

It was one
of the greatest engineering feats of historical conservation ever
achieved, and a fitting tribute to Ramesses the Great, one of Egypt's
most enduring historical figures.
http://i-cias.com/egypt/abu_simbel03.htm
shows a picture of the statues being reconstructed at the new site.
A description of the process of the
reconstruction is detailed in the article of Dr. Zahi A. Hawass in the
Egypt Air Magazine.
http://www.egyptair.com.eg/docs/publicity/story_2_april2001.htm
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