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Medinet Habu is the site of the
Mortuary Temple for Ramesses III. It was a fortified
site, and its walls enclosed the older Temple to Amun
built by Hatshepsut and the Mortuary Temple of Divine
Adortrices of Amun. The walls also enclosed a palace
annex to the temple. It is thought that Ramesses III
lived in the palace,and that his mortuary temple was
built prior to his death. The Temple of Divine
Adortrices of Amun was used to worship the various
deceased daughters of Pharaohs who assumed this religious
office.
The Temple to Amun
was the site of the annual pilgrimage of the Karnak
Barque of Amun which was carried in procession from
Karnak, to the Temple of Luxor, and then across the Nile
to this temple. |
Amun of Luxor
(Luxor Temple) traveled to and from the Temple of Amun at
Medinet Habu every ten days, presumably coinciding with
the beginning of each "decan" marked by the
star charts. There was a canal and a boat landing to
facilitate these processions.
It is recorded
that Ramesses III met his death in the upper rooms of the
gate. It is speculated that he was murdered in a palace
plot.
The temple itself
is typical, with three courts. The first is the most
public and profane, with higher levels of purification
being required for entry to the second and the highest
purification required for entry to the third.
There is still
color on the murals on the walls of the first and second
court. The Temple was appropriated by various groups over
the centuries as it was fortified. Many of the murals
were covered with whitewash or plaster, thus preserving
them.
Who Was Ramesses III?
Ramesses III was
the last great pharaoh of Egypt. A king of the 20th
Dynasty, he came to the throne of Egypt shortly after the
fall of King Priam at Troy. (Ramesses II was a pharaoh of
the 19th Dynasty.)
During his reign,
the Lybians invaded twice in an attempt to settle their
people in the lush Nile Valley. He repulsed the majority,
however, remnants remained to assimilate and play a part
in the future dynastic succession of Egypt.
He was also called
upon to repulse the "sea peoples", a loose
federation of pirates from the islands of the
Mediterranean. Although he won these battles, the
invasions by these people foreshadowed the land invasions
of other tribes which shifted into Palestine and other
Egyptian hegemonies in the area now known as the Middle
East.
After Ramesses
III, the Egyptian empire began to shrink. Where it had at
one time stretched throughout the Middle East, it began
to retreat back to the Nile Valley.
The Mortuary
Temple at Medinet Habu documents these great battles of
Ramesses III in its reliefs.
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