Unearthing Egypt's Greatest Temple
Discovering the grandeur of the monument built 3,400 years ago
- By Andrew Lawler
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2007, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
Today's most insidious threat is the slow rising of groundwater. In the past, the Nile flooded annually, replenishing fields along the river before retreating to within its banks. (Some scholars, though not Sourouzian, believe Amenhotep III's temple was designed to allow the holy Nile floodwaters to wash through the gates and plazas.) Since the Aswan High Dam was completed in 1970, the Nile waters no longer surge over its banks (and the river is two miles from the temple site), but sugar cane farmers irrigate year-round, turning the desert into soggy soil. The water carries salts that eat away at stone, particularly more porous varieties such as limestone and sandstone.
On a spring morning, the huge field, bordered by sugar cane and the road to the Valley of the Kings, resembles a busy construction site. At the spot where a pylon once stood behind the Colossi of Memnon, researchers sit under tarps, patiently sorting and photographing fragments from one of two smaller colossi that fell in antiquity. The head of one of them alone weighs 25 tons, and nearly 200 workers and a winch were required to pull the broken statue out of the mud. Sourouzian hopes to re-erect those statues—each torso weighs 450 tons—once the ground dries and a secure foundation can be built.
Nearby, an alabaster statue of a crocodile and two more statues of Amenhotep III, also in alabaster, wait to be cleaned. Remains of massive sandstone columns are in rows of three and four. The columns formed the edges of the great peristyle hall, or sun court, and once stood on crude blocks and gravel. "Obviously, they were cutting corners here and there," says Theodore Gayer-Anderson, a British archaeologist on the team. "They weren't the ideal builders." The stubs of the columns are fragile, and to coax out salt, which is corrosive, Gayer-Anderson coats them in a poultice of deionized water, cellulose powder and mineral powder. Each wrapping must be changed every two days. "It's impossible to eliminate the salt," he says. "But you can cleanse the skin to a stable level."
A few yards away, a seven-ton torso of Amenhotep III dangles below an iron tepee, as workers prepare to marry it to a base covered in protective scaffolding. The statue's head was found a century ago and is now in the British Museum. The museum has promised to send a cast of the head to be placed on the torso next spring. An Egyptian foreman barks at the workers as the torso is raised into place, while a Spanish archaeologist paces across some beams. "I'm not nervous—that wouldn't help," he announces.
This is the first of five 25-foot-high statues of Amenhotep III that the team intends to re-erect. The statues once stood between the columns. On the north side of the peristyle hall, the statues are made from quartzite from near today's Cairo and they wear the chair-shaped crown of lower Egypt (that is, northern Egypt, which lies downstream along the Nile). On the south side, the images are made from Aswan's red granite and wear the white conical headpiece of upper Egypt. In addition to the statues of the pharaoh, which were in fragments, an alabaster hippopotamus surfaced, minus head and tail, along with six standing statues of Sekhmet, beautifully preserved, each holding a papyrus bundle in one hand and an ankh—the symbol of life—in the other.
The excavation is only in its initial phases and could take two decades or more. To the west of the peristyle hall was a hypostyle hall, a vast interior space that once had a roof supported by massive columns. It no doubt holds more statues and artifacts. "You would need years and millions of dollars to excavate," says Sourouzian, looking with a touch of longing over the bare ground. "What's more urgent is to save the statues, preserve the last remains of the temple and present it with dignity."
Andrew Lawler has written about Alexandria, Petra and a newfound tomb in the Valley of the Kings for Smithsonian.
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Comments (1)
I have twice visited this site and always wondered about the huge statues sitting out in a field alone. I always hoped that more reconstruction efforts would be taken to restore them to their former glory. And now, to read that a temple complex is being excavated...well, it's wonderful! What is the current status of the work? Where can I find more?
Posted by Joseph W Armistead on July 26,2008 | 01:57 PM
I have twice visited and stood transfixed in front of the great Colossi of Memnon on the West bank of Luxor and have seen the great activity going on behind them where the excavations are in progress. I was always so keen to know WHAT was being found and thanks to the wonderful article by Andrew Lawler, I now feel more informed. I hope you will keep us posted in the future about further fabulous discoveries. I love the statues of the elegant feline goddess, Sekhmet which I saw in Karnak at at the Luxor museum - imagine having 730 of them to protect you! I hope that plenty of money to continue the excavations in the future will be available for Miss Sourouzian and her team. Saxon - Johannesburg, Republic of South Africa
Posted by Saxon de Kock on January 6,2008 | 02:57 AM
Would greatly appreciate any e-mails relevant to the current status of this excavation. Thank You.
Posted by Rod on December 31,2007 | 04:42 AM
YeaH!!!!they say shes a god but they see them there in the dirty mud...
Posted by dave villaflor on December 1,2007 | 07:01 PM