Mortuary temple of Hatshepsut

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The mortuary temple of Hatshepsut (Template:Langx) is a mortuary temple built during the reign of Pharaoh Hatshepsut of the Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt.Template:Efn Located opposite the city of Luxor, it is considered to be a masterpiece of ancient architecture.Template:Efn Its three massive terraces rise above the desert floor and into the cliffs of Deir el-Bahari. Hatshepsut's tomb, KV20, lies inside the same massif capped by El Qurn, a pyramid for her mortuary complex. At the edge of the desert, Script error: No such module "convert". east, connected to the complex by a causeway, lies the accompanying valley temple. Across the river Nile, the whole structure points towards the monumental Eighth Pylon, Hatshepsut's most recognizable addition to the Temple of Karnak and the site from which the procession of the Beautiful Festival of the Valley departed. Its axes identify the temple's twin functions: its central east-west axis served to receive the barque of Amun-Re at the climax of the festival, while its north-south axis represented the life cycle of the pharaoh from coronation to rebirth.

The terraced temple was constructed between Hatshepsut's seventh and twentieth regnal years, during which building plans were repeatedly modified. In its design, it was heavily influenced by the adjacent Temple of Mentuhotep II of the Eleventh Dynasty built six centuries earlier.Template:Efn In the arrangement of its chambers and sanctuaries, though, the temple is wholly unique. The central axis, customarily reserved for the mortuary complex, is occupied instead by the sanctuary of the barque of Amun-Re, with the mortuary cult being displaced south to form the auxiliary axis with the solar cult complex to the north. Separated from the main sanctuary are shrines to Hathor and Anubis, which lie on the middle terrace. The porticoes that front the terrace here host the most notable reliefs of the temple; those of the expedition to the Land of Punt and the divine birth of Hatshepsut, the backbone of her case to rightfully occupy the throne as a member of the royal family and as godly progeny. Below, the lowest terrace leads to the causeway and the valley temple.

The state of the temple has suffered over time. Two decades after Hatshepsut's death, under the direction of Thutmose III, references to her rule were erased, usurped, or obliterated. The campaign was intense but brief, quelled after two years when Amenhotep II was enthroned. The reasons behind the proscription remain a mystery. A personal grudge appears unlikely as Thutmose III had waited twenty years to act. Perhaps the concept of a female king was anathema to ancient Egyptian society, or a dynastic dispute between the Ahmosid and Thutmosid lineages needed resolving. In the Amarna Period, the temple was incurred upon again when Akhenaten ordered the images of Egyptian gods, particularly those of Amun, to be erased. These damages were repaired subsequently under Tutankhamun, Horemheb and Ramesses II. An earthquake in the Third Intermediate Period caused further harm. During the Ptolemaic period, the sanctuary of Amun was restructured, and a new portico was built at its entrance. A Coptic monastery of Saint Phoibammon was built between the 6th and 8th centuries AD, and images of Christ were painted over original reliefs. The latest graffito left is dated to c.Template:TrimScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters"..

The temple resurfaces in the records of the modern era in 1737 with Richard Pococke, a British traveller, who visited the site. Several visitations followed though serious excavation was not conducted until the 1850s and 60s under Auguste Mariette. The temple was fully excavated between 1893 and 1906 during an expedition of the Egypt Exploration Fund (EEF) directed by Édouard Naville. Further efforts were carried out by Herbert E. Winlock and the Metropolitan Museum of Art (MMA) from 1911 to 1936, and by Émile Baraize and the Egyptian Antiquities Service (now the Supreme Council of Antiquities (SCA)) from 1925 to 1952. Since 1961, the Polish Centre of Mediterranean Archaeology (PCMA) has carried out extensive consolidation and restoration works throughout the temple, and it was opened to the public in March 2023.

Design

A massive limestone temple towered over by cliffs of great height
The temple of Hatshepsut at Deir el-Bahari
Diagram displaying the locations of key features.
Temple plan: 1) entrance gate; 2) lower terrace; 3) lower porticoes; 4) ramps; 5) middle terrace; 6) middle porticoes; 7) north portico; 8) Hathor shrine; 9) Anubis shrine; 10) upper terrace; 11) festival courtyard; 12) Amun shrine; 13) solar cult court; and 14) mortuary cult complex.

Hatshepsut renewed the act of monument building from her accession to the throne.Template:Sfn She focussed her activities on the city of Thebes and the god Amun, by whom she legitimized her reign.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn To the Temple of Karnak, the preeminent residence of Amun,Template:Sfn she contributed the Eighth Pylon – a pair of Script error: No such module "convert". tall obelisks –, offering chapels, a shrine with another obelisk pair, and statues of herself.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Facing Karnak from across the river Nile, she built a mortuary temple against the cliffs of Deir el-Bahari.Template:Sfn The pinnacle of her architectural contributions,Template:Sfn it is considered to be among the great architectural wonders of the ancient world.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

At its far eastern end, lay a valley temple followed by a Script error: No such module "convert". long, Script error: No such module "convert". wide causeway, which also hosted a barque station at its midpoint, that led to the entrance gate of the mortuary temple.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Here, three massive terraces rose above the desert floorTemplate:Sfn and led into the Djeser-Djeseru or "Holy of Holies".Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Nearly the entire temple was built of limestone, with some red granite and sandstone.Template:Sfn A single architrave was built of violet sandstone, purportedly sourced from Mentuhotep II's temple.Template:Sfn This temple, built centuries earlier and found immediately south of Hatshepsut's, served as an inspiration for her design.Template:Sfn On its main axis and at the end of temple, lay the temple's main cult site, a shrine to Amun-Re, which received his barque each year during the Beautiful Festival of the Valley in May.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn In the south were the offering halls of Thutmose I and Hatshepsut and to the north was the solar cult court.Template:Sfn Outside, two further shrines were built for Hathor and Anubis, respectively.Template:Sfn In total, the temple comprised five cult sites.Template:Sfn

The identity of the architect behind the project remains unclear. It is possible that Senenmut, the Overseer of Works, or Hapuseneb, the High Priest, were responsible. It is also likely that Hatshepsut provided input to the project.Template:Sfn Throughout its construction, the temple plan underwent several revisions between the seventh and twentieth years of Hatshepsut's reign.Template:Sfn A clear example of these modifications is in the Hathor shrine, whose expansions included, among other things, a conversion from a single to dual hypostyle halls.Template:Sfn Its design was directly inspired by Mentuhotep II's adjoining temple immediately south,Template:Sfn although its manner of arrangement is unique.Template:Sfn For example, while the central shrine of Mentuhotep II's temple was dedicated to his mortuary cult, Hatshepsut instead elevated the shrine of Amun to greater prominence.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn However, her mortuary cult was otherwise afforded the most voluminous chamber in the temple, harkening back to the offering halls of the pyramid age.Template:Sfn There are parallels between the temple's architectural style and contemporaneous Minoan architecture, which has raised the possibility of an international style spreading across the Mediterranean in this period.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Hatshepsut may also be of partly Cretan descent.Template:Sfn Overall, the temple is representative of New Kingdom funerary architecture, which served to laud the pharaoh and to honour gods relevant to the afterlife.Template:Sfn

Architecture

Terraces

Artwork bearing the image of sailing ships with goods onboard rowed along by dozens of men
Hatshepsut's expedition to Punt

The opening feature of the temple is the three terraces fronted by a portico leading up to the temple proper and arrived at by a Script error: No such module "convert". long causeway that led from the valley temple.Template:Sfn Each elevated terrace was accessed by a ramp which bifurcated the porticoes.Template:Sfn

The lower terrace measures Script error: No such module "convert". deep by Script error: No such module "convert". wide and was enclosed by a wall with a single Script error: No such module "convert". wide entrance gate at the centre of its east side. This terrace featured two Persea (Mimusops schimperi) trees, two T-shaped basins that held papyri and flowers, and two recumbent lion statues on the ramp balustrade.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Script error: No such module "convert". wide porticoes of the lower terrace contain 22 columns each, arranged in two rows,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn and feature relief scenes on their walls.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The south portico's reliefs depict the transportation of two obelisks from Elephantine to the Temple of Karnak in Thebes, where Hatshepsut is presenting the obelisks and the temple to the god Amun-Re. They also depict Dedwen, Lord of NubiaTemplate:Sfn and the 'Foundation Ritual'.Template:Sfn The north portico's reliefs depict Hatshepsut as a sphinx crushing her enemies, along with images of fishing and hunting, and offerings to the gods.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The outer ends of the porticoes hosted Script error: No such module "convert". tall Osiride statues.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

The middle terrace measures Script error: No such module "convert". deep by Script error: No such module "convert". wide fronted by porticoes on the west and partially on the north sides.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The west porticoes contain 22 columns arranged in two rows while the north portico contains 15 columns in a single row.Template:Sfn The reliefs of the west porticoes of this terrace are the most notable from the mortuary temple. The southwest portico depicts the expedition to the Land of Punt and the transportation of exotic goods to Thebes. The northwest portico reliefs narrate the divine birth of Hatshepsut to Thutmose I, represented as Amun-Re, and Ahmose. Thus legitimizing her rule through royal lineage and godly progeny.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn This is the oldest known scene of its type.Template:Sfn Construction of the north portico and its four or five chapels was abandoned before completion, and consequently, it was left blank.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The terrace also likely featured sphinxes set up along the path to the next ramp,Template:Sfn whose balustrade was adorned by falcons resting upon coiled cobras.Template:Sfn In the southwest and northwest corner of the terrace are the shrines to Hathor and Ra, respectively.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn

The upper terrace opens to 26 columns each fronted by a Script error: No such module "convert". tall Osiride statue of Hatshepsut.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn They are split in the centre by a granite gate through which the festival courtyard was entered.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn This division is represented geographically, too, as the southern colossi carry the Hedjet of Upper Egypt, while the northern colossi bear the Pschent of Lower Egypt.Template:Sfn The portico here completes the narrative of the preceding porticoes with the coronation of Hatshepsut as king of Upper and Lower Egypt.Template:Sfn The courtyard is surrounded by pillars, two rows deep on the north, east and south sides, and three rows deep on the west side.Template:Sfn Eight smaller and ten larger niches were cut into the west wall, these are presumed to have contained kneeling and standing statues of Pharaoh Hatshepsut.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The remaining walls are carved with reliefs: the Beautiful Festival of the Valley on the north, the Festival of Opet on the east, and the coronation rituals on the south.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Three cult sites branch off from the courtyard.Template:Sfn The sanctuary of Amun lies west on the main axis, to the north was the solar cult court, and to the south is a chapel dedicated to the mortuary cults of Hatshepsut and Thutmose I.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Hathor shrine

At the south end of the middle terrace is a shrine dedicated to the goddess Hathor.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn The shrine is separated from the temple and is accessed by a ramp from the lower terrace, although an alternative entrance existed at the upper terrace.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn The ramp opens to a portico adorned with four columns carrying Hathor capitals.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The walls of the entrance contain scenes of Hathor being fed by Hatshepsut.Template:Sfn Inside are two hypostyle halls, the first containing 12 columnsTemplate:Sfn and the second containing 16.Template:Sfn Beyond this is a vestibule containing two columns and a double sanctuary.Template:Sfn Reliefs on the walls of the shrine depict Hathor with Hatshepsut, the goddess Weret-hekhau presenting the pharaoh with a Menat necklace, and Senenmut.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Hathor holds special significance in Thebes, representing the hills of Deir el-Bahari, and also to Hatshepsut, who presented herself as a reincarnation of the goddess.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Hathor is also associated with Punt, which is the subject of reliefs in the proximate portico.Template:Sfn

Anubis shrine

At the north end of the middle terrace is a shrine dedicated to the god Anubis.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn This shrine is smaller than its counterpart to Hathor in the south.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn It comprises a hypostyle hall adorned with 12 columns arranged into three rows of four, followed by a sequence of two rooms terminating at a small niche.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Images presented on the walls are of offerings and cult activity, with a relief showing Anubis escorting Hatshepsut to the shrine.Template:Sfn The name of Anubis was used to designate the heir to the throne, which the Egyptologist Ann Macy Roth associates with the reliefs depicting Hatshepsut's divine birth.Template:Sfn

Amun shrine

Hall with a vaulted ceiling, all covered in painted artwork, and a pair of stone statues
Barque hall of the shrine to Amun

Situated at the back of the temple, on its central axis, is the climactic point of the temple, the sanctuary of Amun, to whom Hatshepsut had dedicated the temple as 'a garden for my father Amun'.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Inside, the first chamber was a chapel which hosted the barque of Amun and a skylight that allowed light to flood onto the statue of Amun.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The lintel of the red granite entrance depicts two Amuns seated upon a throne with backs together and kings kneeling in submission before them, a symbol of his supreme status in the sanctuary.Template:Sfn Inside the hall are scenes of offerings presented by Hatshepsut and Thutmose I, accompanied by Ahmose and Princesses Neferure and Nefrubity,Template:Sfn four Osiride statues of Hatshepsut in the corners,Template:Sfn and six statues of Amun occupying the niches of the hall.Template:Sfn In the tympanum, cartouches containing Hatshepsut's name are flanked and apotropaically guarded by those of Amun-Re.Template:Sfn This chamber was the endpoint of the annual Beautiful Festival of the Valley.Template:Sfn

The second chamber contained a cult image of Amun,Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn and was flanked either side by a chapel.Template:Sfn The north chapel was carved with reliefs depicting the gods of the Heliopolitan Ennead and the south chapel with the corresponding Theban Ennead. The enthroned gods each carried a was-sceptre and an ankh. Presiding over the delegations, Atum and Montu occupied the end walls.Template:Sfn The third chamber contained a statue around which the 'Daily Ritual' was also performed. It was originally believed to have been constructed a millennium after the original temple, under Ptolemy VIII Euergetes, named 'the Ptolemaic Sanctuary'. The discovery of reliefs depicting Hatshepsut evidence the construction during her reign instead.Template:Sfn The Egyptologist Dieter Arnold speculates that it might have hosted a granite false door.Template:Sfn

Solar cult court

Massive limestone altar and staircase
Altar of the solar cult complex

The solar cult is accessed from the courtyard through a vestibule occupied by three columns on the north side of the upper terrace courtyard.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The doorjamb of the entrance is embellished with the figures of Hatshepsut, Ra-Horakhty (Horus) and Amun.Template:Sfn The reliefs in the vestibule contain images of Thutmose I and Thutmose III.Template:Sfn The vestibule opens to the main court, which hosts a grand altar open to the sky and accessed from a staircase in the court's west.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn There are two niches present in the court in the south and west wall. The former shows Ra-Horakhty presenting an ankh to Hatshepsut, and the latter contains a relief of Hatshepsut as a priest of her cult.Template:Sfn Attached to the court was a chapelTemplate:Efn which contained representations of Hatshepsut's family.Template:Sfn In these, Thutmose I and his mother, Seniseneb, are depicted giving offerings to Anubis, while Hatshepsut and Ahmose are depicted giving offerings to Amun-Re.Template:Sfn

Mortuary cult complex

Situated in the south of the courtyard was the mortuary cult complex.Template:Sfn Accessed through a vestibule adorned with three columns are two offering halls oriented on an east–west axis.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The northern hall is dedicated to Thutmose I; the southern hall is dedicated to Hatshepsut.Template:Sfn Hatshepsut's offering-hall emulated those found in the mortuary temples of the Old and Middle Kingdom pyramid complexes. It measured Script error: No such module "convert". deep by Script error: No such module "convert". wide and had a vaulted ceiling Script error: No such module "convert". high.Template:Sfn Consequently, it was the largest chamber in the entire temple.Template:Sfn Thutmose I's offering-hall was decidedly smaller, measuring Script error: No such module "convert". deep by Script error: No such module "convert". wide.Template:Sfn Both halls contained red granite false doors, scenes of animal-sacrifice, offerings and offering-bearers, priests performing rituals, and the owner of the chapel seated before a table receiving those offerings.Template:Sfn Scenes from the offering-hall are direct copies of those present in the Pyramid of Pepi II, from the end of the Sixth Dynasty.Template:Sfn

Foundation deposits

Before its construction, the 'stretching of the cord', or the 'foundation ritual', was performed.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The ritual is depicted in detail on the south portico of the lower terrace. The ceremony opens before the goddess Seshat; it follows Hatshepsut and her ka scattering besen grains before she offers her temple to Amun-Re. The next scene is lost, preceding the closing scene of the 'Great Offering' to Amun-Re-Kamutef.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn During the ceremony, the consecration of foundation deposits would take place,Template:Sfn a practice that started as early as the Third Dynasty of Egypt at the Pyramid of Djoser.Template:Sfn Sixteen known foundation deposits at Hatshepsut's temple generally outline its perimeter, and a further three at the valley temple.Template:Sfn Broadly, pottery, votives, food and ritual offerings, tools, scarabs, and seal amulets were deposited into the prepared holes.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The titles of Hatshepsut, Thutmose III, and Neferure are incised into some of these items, as are images and names of gods.Template:Sfn

Function

Mortuary complex

A large stone wall with a closed entrance and two rows of two columns preceding it
Entrance to the mortuary cult complex flanked by columns and the coronation ritual

It has been suggested that Hatshepsut's tomb in the Valley of the Kings, KV20, was meant to be an element of the mortuary complex at Deir el-Bahari.Template:Sfn The arrangement of the temple and tomb bear a spatial resemblance to the pyramid complexes of the Old Kingdom,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn which comprised five central elements: valley temple, causeway, mortuary temple, main pyramid, and cult pyramid.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Hatshepsut's temple complex included the valley temple, causeway, and mortuary temple. Her tomb was built into the massif of the same cliffs as the temple, beneath the dominating peak of El Qurn (Script error: No such module "convert". AMSLTemplate:Sfn) that caps her tomb, in a sense, like the pyramid capped the tomb of an Old Kingdom pharaoh.Template:Sfn

Further, her tomb aligns with the offering hall of the mortuary cult complex.Template:Sfn There is another analogous relationship between the mortuary temple and Karnak and that of the pyramids and Heliopolis.Template:Sfn Though KV20 is recognized as the tomb of Hatshepsut, there is a dispute over who commissioned its initial construction. Two competing hypotheses suggest that the tomb was built initially during the reign of either Thutmose I or Thutmose II and that Hatshepsut had the tomb altered later with an additional chamber for her burial.Template:Sfn

The principal function of the temple was to serve the royal mortuary cults of Hatshepsut and Thutmose I.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn To fulfill this purpose, a mortuary cult complex was built where offerings could be made for the kꜣ, or spirit, of the king.Template:Sfn In the Egyptian conception, the deceased relied on the same sustenance as the living. In life, the aspects of the soul, the kꜣ, bꜣ and ꜣḫ, were contained in the vessel of the living body. On death, the body was rendered immobile, and the soul was able to leave it.Template:Sfn In her temple, food and drink were offered before the granite false doors of the offering chapels.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn The mortuary ritual, lists of offerings, and the recipient of the rites were depicted on the east wall of both chapels.Template:Sfn

Beautiful Festival of the Valley

Template:Main article

Relief artwork from the north wall of the Festival Courtyard
A section of the Beautiful Festival of the Valley relief

The sanctuary of Amun was the endpoint of the Beautiful Festival of the Valley, conducted annually, starting at the Temple of Karnak.Template:Sfn This celebration dates to the Middle Kingdom, when it concluded at the temple built by Mentuhotep II.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The procession began at the Eighth Pylon at Karnak led by Hatshepsut and Thutmose III, followed by noblemen and priests bearing Amun's barque, accompanied by musicians, dancers, courtiers, and more priests, and guarded by soldiers.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn A further flotilla of small boats and the great ship Userhat, which carried the barque, were towed.Template:Sfn In Hatshepsut's time, the barque of Amun was a miniaturized copy of a transport barge equipped with three long carrying-poles borne by six priests each.Template:Sfn The figure of a ram's head, sacred to Amun, adorned its prow and stern.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In the centre of its hull, a lavishly ornamented naos was installed and the statue of Amun, presently bejewelled, cloistered within. The barque likely measured Script error: No such module "convert". in length.Template:Sfn The procession crossed the Nile and visited the cemeteries in remembrance before landing at the valley temple to proceed along the Script error: No such module "convert". long causeway to the temple proper.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Halfway up was the barque station, beyond which more than 100 sandstone sphinxes flanked the path up to the terraces.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn This is the oldest attested sphinx avenue, though the practice is thought to date to the Old Kingdom.Template:Sfn The valley temple and barque station were points at which offerings were made and purification rituals conducted.Template:Sfn The procession carried on through the entrance-gate, up the temple's great ramps, and into the sanctuary where the barque and Amun were kept for a night before being returned home to Karnak.Template:Sfn On this day, bounteous offerings of food, meat, drink, and flowers were presented on tables to Amun, with smaller quantities reserved for the king.Template:Sfn On all other days, priests performed the 'Daily Ritual' upon the statues of Amun and Hatshepsut.Template:Sfn

Daily ritual

Before dawn each morning, a pair of priests visited the temple's well to collect water for transfer to libation vessels. Other priests busied themselves preparing food and drink as offerings to the gods while the head priest, ḥm-nṯr, visited the pr-dwꜣt to be purified and clothed in preparation for the ceremony. The naos containing the cult image of Amun-Re was first purified with incense. At first light, the head priest opened the shrine and prostrated himself before the god, declaring that he had been sent on behalf of the king, while other priests performed recitations. The shrine was purified with water and incense, and a statuette of Maat was presented to the cult image, which was then removed. The statuette was de-clothed, cleared of oil, and placed on a clean sand pile representing benben. Fresh paint was applied to its eyes, anointed with various oils, dressed in new cloth garments, and provided with accessories. Lastly, its face was anointed, and sand was scattered around the chapel before the image was returned to its resting place. By now, the god's breakfast offering was presented to him. A final set of purifications was conducted, and the doors to the shrine closed with the head priest sweeping away his footsteps behind him. The food was also taken away – they were not physically consumed; the god only partook of their essence – to be represented at the chapels of other deities. Each god received essentially the same service. The priests eventually consumed the food in the 'reversion of offerings', wḏb ḫt. More purifying libations were poured, and incense burned at the shrines at noon and in the evening. At other times, hymns were sung, apotropaic rituals performed to protect Amun-Re's barque as it voyaged across the sky, and wax or clay images of enemies destroyed.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Later history

In ancient Egypt

Proscription of Hatshepsut by Thutmose III

Two decades after her death, during Thutmose III's forty-second regnal year, he decided that all evidence of her reign as king of Egypt should be erased. His reasons for proscribing her reign remain unclear. This assault against her reign was, however, short-lived. Two years after it started, when Amenhotep II ascended to the throne, the proscription was abandoned, and much of the erasure was left half-finished.Template:Sfn

There are three hypotheses regarding Thutmose III's motivation. The oldest and most dubious is personal revenge. This hypothesis holds that Hatshepsut usurped the throne as sole ruler, relegating Thutmose III, and consequently, he sought to erase her memory. This explanation is unconvincing as the proscription was delayed by two decades and targeted only against her reign as king.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The second argument is that it was a repudiation of the concept of female kingship. The role of a king was closed to women, and her assumption of the role may have presented ideological problems that were resolved via erasure. This may explain the decision to leave images of her as queen intact.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The third case assesses the possibility of a dynastic dispute between the Ahmosid and Thutmosid lineages. By expunging her rule from the record, Thutmose III may have ensured that his son, Amenhotep II, would ascend the throne.Template:Sfn There is, however, no known Ahmosid pretender.Template:Sfn

Thutmose III employed several methods of erasure at her temple in his campaign. The least damaging was the scratching out of feminine pronouns and suffixes, which otherwise left the text intact. These were commonly used in the Hathor shrine and on the upper terrace. More thorough removal methods included chiselling away, roughening, smoothing, patching, or covering over her image and titles. In other places, her image was replaced with that of an offering table. Occasionally, her image was repurposed for a member of the Thutmosid family. This was most often Thutmose II, although infrequently, her cartouche was replaced with that of Thutmose I or III.Template:Sfn The final and most destructive method was the obliteration of her statuary in the temple. Workers dragged the statues from her temple to one of two designated sites: a quarry – a burrow from which fill material was obtained – and the Hatshepsut Hole. Here, sledgehammers and stone blocks were used to break up the statues, which were then dumped into the chosen repositories.Template:Sfn

Amarna Period to Third Intermediate Period

Relief art depicting two subjects, one of whom has been near totally erased
Erasure of Amun (right figure) by order of Akhenaten

The temple continued to serve as a worship site following Thutmose III's death. During the Amarna Period, further erasure of the reliefs was inflicted by order of Akhenaten, albeit the target of this persecution were images of the gods, particularly Amun.Template:Sfn Early in his reign, Aten, a solar deity, was elevated to the status of a supreme god.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The persecution of other gods did not begin immediately; instead reform proceeded gradually for several years before culminating in prohibition around his ninth regnal year. The proscription coincides with the ostracization of Horus.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn These images were restored during the reigns of Tutankhamun, Horemheb, and Ramesses II, who also reinscribed several remaining cartouches of Hatshepsut with those of Thutmose III.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The temple was damaged further by an earthquake in the ninth century BC, during the Third Intermediate Period.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn During this time, between the Twenty-First and Twenty-Fifth Dynasties, the temple was used as a burial ground for priests of the cults of Amun and Montu, as well as for members of the royal family.Template:Sfn

Ptolemaic era

Remains of a limestone portico with a metal gate and rope cordening the entrance
Ptolemaic portico of the festival courtyard

During the reign of Ptolemy III Euergetes, a stone chapel was built on the middle terrace for Asklepios, a god of the Greek pantheon.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Later, under Ptolemy VIII Euergetes, the sanctuary of Amun was significantly altered. The cult statue chamber was converted into a chapel for Amenhotep, son of Hapu, the Eighteenth Dynasty architect of Amenhotep III, Imhotep, the Third Dynasty vizier of Djoser, and Hygieia, the Greek goddess of hygiene.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In the barque hall, the two centre niches were filled and the skylight blocked.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The sanctuary entrance was outfitted with a portico carried by six columns.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Beyond ancient Egypt

After the Ptolemaic kingdom, the temple was used as a site of local worship. Between the 6th and 8th centuries AD, a Coptic monastery of Saint Phoibammon was constructed on the temple grounds. Figures of Christ and other saints were painted over the original relief work with the temple. A pilgrim left the latest dated graffito in c.Template:TrimScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters"..Template:Sfn

Archaeological excavations

The earliest modern visitor to the temple was Richard Pococke, an English traveller, in 1737. He was followed by François Jollois and Renée Edouard Devilliers, two members of Napoleon Bonaparte's expedition, in 1798. The earliest archaeological findings were made around 1817 by Giovanni Battista Belzoni and Henry William Beechey, who scavenged the site for artefacts to present to Henry Salt, the British consul. Another visitor to the site, in 1823–1825, Henry Westcar is credited with the earliest printed reference to the name Deir el-Bahari. In the following decades, John Gardner Wilkinson, Jean-François Champollion and Karl Richard Lepsius each visited the site. The earliest significant excavations occurred in the 1850s and 60s under Auguste Mariette. Under his supervision, the remains of the monastery of Saint Phoibammon were destroyed, and the shrines to Hathor and Anubis, as well as the south colonnade of the middle terrace, were revealed. During the Egypt Exploration Fund's (EEF) expedition, under Édouard Naville and his assistant Howard Carter, from 1893–1906, the entire temple was excavated. The seven volumes of Naville's work form a fundamental source of information for the temple. In 1911–1936, the Metropolitan Museum of Art (MMA) funded excavation works under the direction of Herbert E. Winlock. In 1925–1952, a team led by Émile Baraize for the Egyptian Antiquities Service reconstructed significant portions of the temple. Since 1961, the Polish Center of Mediterranean Archeology (PCMA) of Warsaw University in Cairo has been engaged in restoration and consolidation efforts at the site.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

The Polish-Egyptian Archaeological and Conservation Expedition was established by Kazimierz Michałowski after he was approached by the Supreme Council of Antiquities (SCA). The project was initially constrained to reconstructing the third terrace, but since 1967, the mission has included the entire temple. Patryk Chudzik presently directs the project. The site is being gradually opened to tourism. Since 2000, visitors have been open to the festival courtyard, upper terrace, and coronation portico. In 2015, the solar cult court and, in 2017, the sanctuary of Amun were also opened to visitors.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

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See also

Notes

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Citations

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Sources

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Further reading

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External links

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