Dendera
Dotted
about the landscape of modern Egypt are many ancient temples
from the Mediterranean coast all the way to the southern border
with the Sudan, most located in the Nile Valley but scattered
elsewhere as well. Some of these temples are famous and stand
out from the others, such the Temples of Luxor and Karnak,
Philae, Kom Ombo, Esna, Edfu and others. Among these most
important temples may also be counted Dendera, which provides
examples of a particularly rich variety of later temple features.
Dendera is located about 60 kilometers north of Luxor on the
west bank of the Nile River opposite the provincial modern
town of Qena.
Ancient
Egyptian Iunet or Tantere, known to the Greeks as Tentyris,
was the capital of the 6th nome of Upper Egypt and a town
of some importance. Today, we know it as Dendera, though the
population of the town has, since antiquity, moved to Qena
across the Nile on the east bank. Now, the ancient temple
lies isolated on the desert edge.
Along with the temple itself, there is also a necropolis
that includes tombs of the Early Dynastic Period, but the
most important phase that has been identified was the end
of the Old Kingdom and the 1st Intermediate Period. The provinces
were virtually autonomous at that time and, although Dendera
was not a leading political force in Upper Egypt, its notables
built a number of mastabas of some size, though only one has
any decoration apart from stelae and false doors. On the west
end of the site are brick-vaulted catacombs of Late Period
animal burials, primarily birds and dogs, while cow burials
have been found at various points in the necropolis. Of course,
this was a significant site for the Hathor cult, whose forms
ded a cincluow.
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Suggested Layout of the Temple
Proper
1. Large Hypostyle Hall
2. Second, Small Hypostyle Hall
3. Laboratory
4. Storage Magazine
5. Offering Entry
6. Treasury
7. Exit to Well
8. Access to Stairwell
9. Offering Hall
10. Hall of the Ennead
11. Great Seat (central Shrine)/Main Sanctuary
12. Shrine of the Nome of Dendera
13. Shrine of Isis
14. Shrine of Sokar
15. Shrine of Harsomtus
16. Shrine of Hathor's Sistrum
17. Shrine of Gods of Lower Egypt
18. Shrine of Heathor
19. Shrine of the Throne of Re
20: Shrine of Re
21. Shrine of Menat Collar
22. Shrine of Ihy
23. The Pure Place
24. Court of the First Feast
25. Passage
26. Staircase to Roof
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The
main temple complex is oriented, as usual, toward the Nile,
which here flows east-west, so that the temple faces north.
However, to the ancient Egyptians, this was symbolically east,
since the temple faces the Nile.
The main temple area is fronted by several Roman
Period kiosks. After those, the monumental gateway of Domitian
and Trajan is set in a massive mud-brick enclosure wall that
surrounded the complex, and leads to an open area. Although
the site lacks a colonnade and the two pylons which ought
to precede the inner temple, an unfinished inner enclosure
wall of stone surrounds a courtyard with side entrances which
open before the large hypostyle hall added in the 1st century
AD by the emperor Tiberius.
However, prior to the temple proper is the Roman
Period birth house of Dendera on the west, perhaps built by
Nero, though more probably by Trajan. Although the dedication
inscriptions refer to Trajan, Nero is depicted in the main
hypostyle hall of the of the Hathor temple, offering the model
of a birth house. This is the latest preserved temple of its
type.
The
new sanctuary was well designed and followed Ptolemaic models.
In order to match the level of the Hathor temple, the new
building was erected on a high platform. A temporary access
staircase led up at the side of the platform. The roofing
slabs were not positioned, as usual, beneath the level of
the cavetto molding around the buildings top, but would have
probably been hidden by a parapet wall. The core building
contains a sequence of three rooms. Two corridors that isolate
the large sanctuary are notable. These passages are too narrow
to be used and must have been added for symbolic and optical
effect. The rear wall of the sanctuary is dominated by an
enormous false door that is framed by a double cavetto molding
on slender columns and topped by an uraeus frieze. A cult
niche high up in the wall corresponds to the location of the
statue niche in the sanctuary of the main temple.
Its scenes depict Trajan, Augustus' later successor,
making offerings to Hathor, and are among the finest to be
found in Egypt. It was the ritual location where Hathor gave
birth to the young Ihy or Harsomtus, two alternative youthful
deities who stand for the youthful phase of creator gods in
general. There are also, of course, figures of the god Bes,
a patron of childbirth, carved on the abaci above the column
capitals. The reliefs on the exterior walls are superbly preserved,
and portray the divine birth and childhood of the infant Horus,
whose rites legitimize the divine descent of the king.
The
birth house was surrounded by an ambulatory. The composite
capitals of the columns carry high pillars with Bes figures.
The frontal ambulatory extended by the addition of three columns
into a kind of kiosk, with the front corners formed by L-shaped
pillars. The kiosk had a timbered roof that somehow must have
connected to the stone structure of the birth house. This
merging of the ambulatory with a kiosk is a novelty. At older
birth houses, a court was attached as a separate structure.
The Roman Birth House (mammisi) was built when the
earlier structure, begun by Nectanebo I and decorated in the
Ptolemaic Period, was cut through by the foundation of the
unfinished first court of the main temple of Hathor. Only
a false door at the eastern exterior wall of the main temple
of Hathor reminds one of the original sanctuary. Originally,
this birth house measured about 17 by 20 meters and consisted
of a triple shrine opening to a transverse hall. It was built
mainly of brick but received an interior stone casing. Within
this older structure, the walls of the wide hall depict the
Ptolemaic kings offering to Hathor. A scene on the north wall
shows the creator god Khnum fashioning the child, Ihy, with
Hekat the goddess of childbirth seen in her image as a frog.
Both
birth houses are now accessible. They differ considerably
in plan and decoration.
Between the new and old birth houses are the remains
of a Christian basilica that can be dated to the 5th century
AD. It is an excellent example representative of early Coptic
church architecture.
South of the earlier birth house is a mud-brick "sanatorium..
This sanatorium is the only one of its type known in association
with an ancient Egyptian temple. Here, visitors could bathe
in the sacred waters or spend the night in order to have a
healing dream of the goddess. It had benches around its sides
where the sick rested while waiting for cures affected by
the priests. An inscription on a statue base found in this
location suggests that water was poured over magical texts
on the statues, causing it to become holy and to cure all
sorts of diseases and illnesses. Basins used to collect the
holy water can still be seen at the western end.
To
the west of the sanatorium, a small chapel of Nebhepetre'
Mentuhotep dating to the 11th Dynasty was recovered from the
site and has been re-erected in the Cairo Museum. The building,
which has secondary inscriptions of Merneptah, was as much
for the cult of the king as for the goddess, and was probably
ancillary to the lost main temple of its time.
The main temple at Dendera is the grandest and most
elaborately decorated of its period. It is also one of the
most important temple sites of Egypt, providing examples of
a rich variety of later temple features. It is also one of
the best preserved temples of this period, surviving despite
the destruction of the temples of Hathor's consort Horus and
their child Ihy or Harsomtus which originally stood close
by.
The massive foundations probably contain many blocks
from the earlier structure it replaced. Early texts refer
to a temple at Dendera which was rebuilt during the Old Kingdom,
and several New Kingdom monarchs, including Tuthmosis III,
Amenhotep III and Ramesses II and III are known to have embellished
the structure. However, while fragments of earlier periods
have been found on the site, there have been no earlier buildings
unearthed. Pepi I and Tuthmosis III in particular were recalled
in the new temple's inscriptions.
The
temple of Hathor was constructed over a period, we believe,
of thirty-four years, between 54 and 20 BC. When Ptolemy XII
died in 51 BC, the temple was, after four years of building
activity, still in its early stages, although it did contain
some underground crypts. It seems that the remainder of the
temple was build during the twenty-one year reign of his successor,
Queen Cleopatra VII. At the time of her death in 30 BC, the
decoration work had just begun (on the outer rear wall).
The temple plan is classical Egyptian, completely
enclosed by a 35 by 59 meter wall standing 12.5 meters high.
However, unlike those of earlier temples, the facade of the
hypostyle hall that fronts the main temple is constructed
as a low screen with inter-columnar walls exposing the hall's
ceiling and the Hathor style sistrum capitals of its 24 columns.
According to a dedication inscription on the cornice thickness
above the entrance, this part of the temple was built under
Tiberius between 34 and 35 AD. The structure measures 26.03
by 43 meters and is 17.2 meters high. It has an 8 meter long
architrave that spans the central intercolumniation. Above,
a towering cavetto, built from one course, and the massive
volume of the corner tori cast heavy shadows and articulate
the edges of the facade.
A
sistrum is an ancient Egyptian musical instrument closely
associated with Hathor. Each column bears a four-sided capital,
which occupies about one third of the column height, carved
with the face of the cow-eared goddess, though every one of
the faces was vandalized in antiquity (probably during the
early Christian Period. The shafts are profusely decorated
with scenes, and their straight bases stand on flat plinths.
The paint, which was still preserved in the 19th century,
was dominated by the blue of Hathor's wig.
Nevertheless,
the ceiling of this hall retains much of its original color.
It is decorated as a complex and carefully aligned symbolic
chart of the heavens, including signs of the zodiac (introduced
by the Romans) and images of the sky goddess Nut who swallowed
the sun disc each evening in order to give birth to it once
again at dawn. The outer hypostyle hall was decorated by emperors
ranging from Augustus to Nero. Note that at the center of
the south outside wall was a relief of a sistrum that was
gilded, both to show its importance and to evoke Hathor, the
"gold of the gods".
Since tradition rule that the processional approach
should gradually descend from the inside to the outside, the
builders had to lower the floor of the central nave of the
hypostyle hall to obtain the required progression of floor
levels.
A doorway aligned to the central axis of the temple
leads from the large hypostyle hall into an inner hall with
six Hathor columns that is known as the hall of appearances.
It was here that the statue of the goddess "appeared" from
her sanctuary for religious ceremonies and processions. The
front wall of this hall was actually the facade of the original
temple. Lighting within the hall is provided through small,
square apertures. The chamber has columns in two rows of three.
They also have Hathor heads. The bases and the lower parts
of the drums are made of granite, while the upper parts are
of sandstone. Scenes on the walls of this hall depict the
king participating in the foundation ceremonies for the construction
of the temple, and on either side doors open into three chambers
which were used as preparation areas for various aspects of
the daily ritual. For example, one room was probably used
as a laboratory for preparation of ointments. An opening through
the outer eastern wall allowed offering goods to be brought
into this area, and a parallel passage from one of the western
chambers led to a well.
The
rear part of the temple was built first, probably in the early
1st century BC. The earliest king named is Ptolemy XII Auletes,
but mostly the cartouches are blank, probably because of dynastic
struggles in the mid 1st century. This inner core included
an offering hall, in which sacrifices were dedicated, and
a "hall of the ennead" (also known as the "hall of the cycle
of the gods), where statues of other deities assembled with
Hathor before a procession began.
These are followed by a 5.7 by 11.22 meter barque
shrine which once enclosed the four barques of Hathor, Horus
of Edfu, Harsomtus and Isis, which apparently were not enclosed
by wooden shrines.
After
this small chamber there is the sanctuary of the goddess herself.
It is embellished by a splendid, temple-like facade topped
by a cavetto with an uraeus frieze. Inside the sanctuary was
an expensively decorated wooden naos that held the gilded,
two meter high seated cult image of Hathor. The naos stood
in a niche of the rear wall, and it is not known how the niche,
three meters above the pavement, could be reached. To either
side of the this inner sanctuary, the king is depicted offering
a copper mirror, one of Hathor's sacred emblems, to the goddess.
About the central sanctuary on its sides and rear
are located eleven chapels dedicated to the other deities
who were associated with Hathor's chief attributes, the sacred
sistrum and the menat necklace.
Within the temple the most distinctive parts are
the fourteen crypts, of which eleven were decorated. They
far surpass those of other temples. The inclusion of secretly
accessed crypts in temples can be traced back to the 18th
Dynasty. By the Late Period crypts were included in the architectural
design of most temples.
These are suites of rooms on three (and sometimes
even four) stories, set in the thickness of the outside wall,
and beneath the floors of the chambers in the rear part of
the temple. The elongated, narrow chambers and passages are
arranged one above the other, with the lowermost laid deep
within the temple foundations. Access was gained through trapdoors
in the pavement and behind hidden sliding wall blocks. Unlike
other crypts, those at Dendera are decorated in relief. The
decorations in these chambers conforms to the temple's axis.
The most important reliefs, among which sistra are prominent,
were on the axis itself. Apparently, these rooms were decorated
before the roof blocks were set.
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Depiction within
the crypts |
François Daumas described the easternmost of the
five crypts along the southern end, telling us that:
"In the last room, one sees, carefully carved on
the Southern wall, a falcon with detailed feathers, preceded
by a snake emerging from a lotus blossom within a boat. Whereas
the whole of the temple is constructed of sandstone, to facilitate
a relief of fine quality there was placed in the wall, at
the level of the figures, a block of limestone suitable for
very detailed work, and of this the artist took full and perfect
advantage. These reliefs are cosmological representations.
The snake that comes out of the lotus is equated with the
shining deity Harsamtawy (Ihy) as he appears for the first
time out of the primordial sea. He is again represented near
the bottom of the crypt in the form of two snakes also coming
forth, but this time wrapped in lotuses like protective envelopes.
Sometimes those that were on the Mesktet-barque collaborated
with Horus; other times the Mandjet-barque with its crew helped
to reveal the god: Djed raises his body, a supreme manner
of worship, attendant of the god's prestigious ka. The statuettes
appear to have been used for the New Year celebration and
the festival of Harsamtawy. It is likely that on these solemn
occasions these objects were transported to the vault [i.e.
the room above the crypt]."
Their
main use of these crypts was for keeping cult equipment, archives
and magical emblems for the temple's protection, though the
most important object kept in the crypts was a statue of the
ba of Hathor.
Also within the wall thickness are the staircases,
which lead up to and return from the roof which, because of
the unequal ceiling heights of the rooms below, was built
into terraces. The huge roofing slabs must at one time have
been covered with thinner paving stones. Their surface was
slightly inclined and had channels to guide rainwater from
the roof.
On
the roof in the southwest corner is a kiosk, in which the
ritual of the goddess's union with the sun disk was performed.
It has four Hathor columns on each side. Sockets in its architraves
suggest a barrel-shaped timber roof with a double hull and
segmented pediment, though for its purpose it must have had
roof windows to let in the sun's rays. In the floor of the
chapel one may also note the light well for the Horus chapel
below, on the main floor.
The ba of Hathor would have been taken from its hiding
place to the roof of the temple for the significant New year's
festival celebrated where it would have spent the night prior
to beholding the rising sun in a symbolic union with the solar
disc.
François Daumas tells us that:
"But most prestigious of the statues was that of
the ba of Hathor. According to the texts written on the walls,
we know that the kiosk consisted of a gold base surmounted
by a gold roof supported by four gold posts, covered on all
four sides by linen curtains hung from copper rods. Inside
was placed the gold statuette representing a bird with a human
head capped with a horned disc. This was Hathor, Lady of Dendara,
residing in her house... It was certainly this statuette that
was carried in the kiosk on the evening of the New Year."
The
staircase to the west of the offering hall, which was used
by the priests to ascend to the roof, has ascending figures
of the king and various priests with the shrine of the goddess
carved on its right hand wall. These representations depict
various aspects of the New Year's festival. The stairway to
the east has corresponding scenes of descending figures, and
was used for the procession's return.
There is also a pair of parallel shrines on the roof's
eastern and western sides dedicated to Osiris. They are concealed
in a kind of mezzanine floor. Both of these sanctuaries have
open courts, surrounded by a cavetto. From the rear wall of
the court, three doors lead into two succeeding chambers.
In the inner of the two rooms, Isis and Nephthys
are shown mourning the death of Osiris, who lies on his funerary
bier waiting to be resurrected by magical rituals. Isis is
also depicted, magically impregnated with the seed of her
son Horus as the myth unfolds.
A
corresponding suite on the eastern side of the roof depicts
the lunar festival of Khoiakh in which an 'Osiris bed' was
filled with earth and grain seed as part of an important fertility
rite. The walls of the first room show scenes of the burial
goods of Osiris, including his canopic jars and on the ceiling
Nut is shown with other astronomical figures. On the other
half of the ceiling is a plaster copy of the famous 'Dendera
Zodiac', representing the cospic aspect of the Osiris mysteries.
The original is now in the Louvre in Paris. The inner room
depicts scenes from the Osiris myth, similar to that of the
western suite as well as reliefs of cosmic importance.
Dendera was considered one of Osiris' many tombs,
and the shrines, which have no link with Hathor, were used
to celebrate his death and resurrection. His death may have
been re-enacted at the sacred lake to the west of the temple.
The
roof of the hypostyle hall was reached by another flight of
steps with various gods carved along its wall, and this highest
area of the temple was used in antiquity by pious pilgrims
who awaited signs and miracles from the goddess. There remain
gaming boards carved into the stone blocks that helped these
faithful pass the time during their vigils.
On the rear outside wall of the temple directly behind
the sanctuary, beneath the two lion-headed waterspouts (there
are also three more on each of its side walls) which drained
rainwater from the roof are scenes showing the massive figure
of Cleopatra VII and her son by Julius Caesar, Caesarion,
who became the great queen's co-regent as Ptolemy XV. At the
center of the wall is the large False Door with a gigantic
emblem of Hathor, diminished over the centuries by pilgrims
who scraped at it to obtain a little of the sacred stone at
the point where they could come closest to Hathor herself.
This is the location of the "hearing ear" shrine, which allowed
the goddess to "hear" the prayers of common folk not otherwise
allowed into the main temple.
Immediately
south of the Hathor temple is the temple of Isis, known as
the Iseum, which used foundation blocks from a destroyed Ptolemaic
building and was decorated under Augustus. The east gateway,
also Roman in date, leads to this temple, which is almost
unique in having a dual orientation with the outer rooms or
main part of the structure and hypostyle hall facing east
and the inner ones north toward the temple of Hathor. The
central high relief in the sanctuary, which showed Isis giving
birth, has been mutilated. Within the rear wall of the sanctuary
a statue of Osiris (now destroyed) was supported by the arms
of Isis and Nephthys.
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Further
to the south, at the temple's southwest corner, lies the compound's
sacred lake which provided water for the priests' ablutions.
With flights of stairs descending from each corner, this stone-lined
ceremonial basin is the best preserved of its type in any
Egyptian temple. Today, it is empty of water and tall trees
grow within its walls. Next to the lake is a well with rock-cut
steps leading down to give access to water for daily use in
the temple.
East
of the temple was a part of the town, which the temple texts
mention as having a temple of Horus of Edfu in its midst.
This may be the same as some remains of the Roman Period about
500 meters from the main enclosure. The triads of deities
worshiped at Edfu and at Dendera were similar, consisting
of Horus, Hathor (or Isis), and Ihy or Harsomtus. Hathor of
Dendera and Horus of Edfu met at a sacred "marriage" ceremony,
when she made a progress to the south.