THE TEMPLE OF MENTUHETEP And THE TEMPLE OF THUTMES III - EGYPTOLOGY MAGAZINE
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THE TEMPLE OF MENTUHETEP And THE TEMPLE OF THUTMES III

 THE TEMPLE OF NEBHEPETRA-MENTUHETEP

THE TEMPLE OF NEBHEPETRA-MENTUHETEP


About five hundred years before Senenmut began planning the construction of Hatshepsut's temple at Dayr al-Bahari, another architect was working on combined temple and burial place for the Dynasty 11 ruler Nebhepetra-Mentuhetep. His monument lies only a few meters south of Hatshepsut's and was excavated by several British and American missions between 1859 and 1931 and extensively studied by a German mission in the 1970s. Like Hatshepsut's temple, Mentuhetep's building was reached by a long avenue, lined with statues, two of which are still standing in place, and a ramp that leads up to a low terrace. -229- south sides of the building. Colonnades on either side of the ramp and on the terrace above continue around to the north and Unlike Hatshepsut's temple, Mentuhetep's is small.
It was topped by a mastaba or by a mound (but probably not by a pyramid, as was once thought). And unlike Hatshepsut's temple, Mentuhetep's was used both as a temple dedicated the king and to Hathor, and as the royal burial- place. Behind the mastaba or mound atop the temple, a large columned courtyard has eighty octagonal pillars. In the floor is the entrance to a 150 meter-long corridor leading westward to his burial chamber cut deep in the limestone cliffs. Mentuheteps monument is closed to visitors today but a good view can be had from the open court in front of it that once was filled with trees, flowers, and statuary. There is a depression in the courtyard into which Howard Carter's horse is said to have fallen. At its base, a corridor leads to a chamber under the temple in which excavators found an unusual red, black, and white statue of Mentuhetep (now in the Cairo Museum).

THE TEMPLE OF THUTMES III 


This badly-destroyed temple was not discovered until the 1960s. It had suffered from frequent rock falls from the hills above, and lay buried beneath rubble for nearly three millennia. It lies above and behind the temples of Hatshepsut and Mentuhetep and shares design features with both. Pilgrims eoming to pay homage to the goddess Hathor wrote numerous graffiti on its walls. The area is closed to tourists, and for structural reasons probably will remain closed. But one hopes that the collection of stunningly beautiful carved and painted relief blocks recovered in Polish and Egyptian excavations and now stored at Dayr al- Bahari will one day be put on display. A few of these blocks, together with pieces from Mentuhetep's temple, can be seen in the Luxor Museum of Ancient Art.




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