Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
ARTH201: New Kingdom (c.1550-1070 BCE) and Later Egyptian Temples I. Basic Layout, Symbolism, and Function All later Egyptian temples share the same basic layout seen in the diagram of the Temple of Amun-Re at Karnak below. This layout first emerged during the New Kingdom, and can be seen in both cult temples, or “mansions of the gods,” where ancient Egyptians worshipped their deities, and mortuary temples, or “mansions of millions of years,” where ancient Egyptians worshipped deified pharaohs. Diagram showing the plan of the Temple of Amun-Re, Karnak. The main temple axis runs from the Nile Quay, through the First Pylon, into the Outer Courtyard (Great Court), through the Second Pylon, into the Great Hypostyle Hall, through the Third and Fourth Pylons and into the Inner Sanctuary. Terms of Use: The image above is in the public domain. The Saylor Foundation 1 The standard Egyptian temple plan was laid out symmetrically, along a single axis, and was composed of three main parts: an outer court, a hypostyle hall, and a sanctuary. Larger temples often included multiple outer courts, hypostyle halls, and auxiliary rooms. Many temples also included a pylon or large gateway that served as the entrance to the temple’s courtyard. Ideally, these elements would be organized along an east-west axis, and the temple would face the Nile, but sometimes this orientation was abandoned for topographical or other reasons. The temple precinct was surrounded by thick mud-brick walls that symbolically separated the sacred and profane worlds and served a defensive function as well. Of course, some temples featured variations on this basic plan, especially private mortuary temples designed to serve functions different from those of the cult temple complexes. The overall structure of the Egyptian temple was intended to represent the universe at the time of creation and was designed to facilitate the procession of the god during annual festivals. According to Egyptian mythology, the world emerged as a primeval mound out of a watery abyss, the model for which was clearly the annual inundation of the Nile. The sanctuary was always the highest point of the Egyptian temple because it was supposed to represent this primeval mound. The columns of its hypostyle halls were accordingly decorated with lotuses and other plants found in the marshes that would have surrounded the primeval mound. As the floor of the temple gradually sloped upward, the ceiling also simultaneously sloped downward, such that one would move from the brightly lit, open courtyard into the dark, sacred sanctuary of the god. In the Egyptian creation myth, the creator god lived in a reed hut atop the primeval mound. The massive stone structure of the Egyptian temple preserved this most basic form and function, as it was primarily designed to be the residence of the god, where he/she could be fed, clothed, and cared for. Egyptian temples were modeled on the Egyptian household, often including kitchens, dining rooms, and store houses. During its annual festival, the god would leave the temple, symbolically reenacting life’s emergence from the watery abyss of creation. The god would then be carried on a sacred boat on the back of priest through a crowd of worshippers. The Opet Festival was one of the most important annual festivals during the New Kingdom. During this festival, the statues of Amun-Re, Khonsu, and Mut were carried in a procession from the Temple of Amun-Re in Karnak to the Temple of Luxor in order to reenact Amun-Re and Mut’s marriage. The barque of the gods was accompanied by a royal barque that would reenact the coronation ceremony of the king and other rituals The Saylor Foundation 2 that would confirm the pharaoh’s right to kingship. Ram-headed sphinxes leading into the Temple of Amun-Re at Karnak. Terms of Use: The image above is in the public domain. Monuments and statues lined the processional path. In the case of the Opet Festival, the nearly two mile long processional route is thought to have been lined by sphinxes. Barque shrines, our structures designed to accommodate the gods and priests when they needed to rest, also appeared at regular intervals along the route. One of the most famous barque shrines was the Chapelle Rouge (Red Chapel), constructed by Hatshepsut at the center of the Great Temple of Amun-Re at Karnak. The Saylor Foundation 3 The Chapelle Rouge as reconstructed in the Open Air Museum in Karnak. Terms of Use: The image above is licensed under a Creative Commons AttributionNonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 Generic License. It is attributed to Paul James Cowie. The original version can be found here. II. Individual Architectural Components The overall structure of New Kingdom and later Egyptian temples can be broken into the following architectural components, starting from the gate of the temple and moving through increasingly sacred zones: A. Pylon First Pylon at Philae, Ptolemaic Period (332-30 BCE). Terms of Use: The image above is licensed under the Creative Commons AttributionShare Alike 2.5 Generic, 2.0 Generic and 1.0 Generic license. It is attributed to Wikimedia user Rémih. The original version can be found here. Pylons are pairs of large rectangular towers that flank a central lower gateway and serve as the entranceway to the temple. As temple complexes expanded, certain pylons became part of the interior of the temple proper. Pylons served defensive and symbolic functions: like the mud-brick walls that surrounded the temple precinct, they protected the complex from war and served to demarcate between sacred and profane space. They were frequently decorated with reliefs that depict a larger-than-life Egyptian king smiting his enemies. The overall structure of the pylon also symbolized the rising sun and formed the hierogplyph akhet or “horizon.” Winged sun discs were therefore often carved above the doorway, while a stairs leading to the top of the gateway were built so that pharaohs could present themselves during ceremonials and festivals as the rising sun. The Saylor Foundation 4 B. Obelisks Obelisks at Karnak. Terms of Use: The image above is licensed under the Creative Commons AttributionShare Alike 3.0 Unported, 2.5 Generic, 2.0 Generic and 1.0 Generic license. It is attributed to Wikimedia user Merlin-UK. The original version can be found here. Obelisks (tekhen) were often erected in pairs near the entrance of temples or in other areas to separate one part from another. Obelisks are tall, narrow, tapering foursided monoliths that end with a pyramid-shaped top. Their sides are typically decorated with reliefs and inscriptions commemorating the important events in a pharaoh’s reign. C. The Outer Courtyard Peristyle Courtyard of the Temple of Horus at Edfu, Ptolemaic Period (332-30 BCE). Terms of Use: The image above is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported license. It is attributed to Olaf Tausch. The original version can be found here. The Saylor Foundation 5 Just beyond the pylon, one encounters a large open courtyard that was often used for the assembly of large groups. Only the king, high-ranking officials, priests, and representatives of the people could enter this area. Most outer courtyards in Egyptian temples were peristyle courtyards, with colonnades running along their perimeter. Here, priests performed purification rituals so that they and the king could enter the temple proper. Altars featuring burnt offerings or animal sacrifices were often set off to the side of the main axis. Royal statues were frequently placed between the columns on the surrounding colonnade and reliefs on the walls often depicted the pharaoh defeating his enemies or relating to the gods. Private statues were also placed in the courtyard. D. Hypostyle Hall The Great Hypostyle Hall of the Temple of Amun-Re, Karnak. Terms of Use: Permission has been granted for the unrestricted use of the image above by the copyright holder Jon Bodsworth. The original version can be found here. Moving further into the temple, one encounters the hypostyle hall, which was sometimes separated from the outer courtyard by a pylon. The hypostyle hall was an area on the temple’s main axis that spanned the width of the courtyard. Only purified priests and the king could access it, entering via the main entrance (a door on the same The Saylor Foundation 6 axis). The interior was densely filled with columns. The distance between these columns was less than the thickness of each individual column—proportions established during the Old Kingdom (c.2650-2150BCE) and originally designed to support the weight of the ceiling. The columns of the hypostyle hall symbolized the columns that supported the heavens in Egyptian cosmology and the marshes that surrounded the primeval mound of creation. E. Sanctuary Sanctuary of the Temple of Isis, Philae, Ptolemaic Period (332-30 BCE). Terms of Use: The image above is licensed under the Creative Commons AttributionShare Alike 3.0 Unported license. It is attributed to Wikimedia user Rémih. The original version can be found here. Lying at the end of the temple’s main axis through a set of double doors was the most sacred part of the temple: the sanctuary, a small room that only the king and high priest could enter. In larger temples, the sanctuary was separated from the hypostyle hall by additional halls or chambers like the offering hall, where sacrifices to the god were made. In smaller temples, the altar was placed inside the inner sanctuary. In the sanctuary itself, the statue of the god was often housed within a shrine. In accordance with the overall symbolism of the temple, the structure of the sanctuary was based on a simple reed hut whose walls were decorated with reliefs illustrating cult practices. The main image representing the god was usually made of silver, gold, gilded wood, or stone, its eyes were made of precious stones, and its hair was made of lapus lazuli. Shrines to secondary deities or for the god’s barque would be set to the side of the main sanctuary. The Saylor Foundation 7 Some temples dating to the New Kingdom and later also include a “Chapel of the Hearing Ear” that allowed those who had not been purified (including the common people) indirect access to the inner sanctuary either through a structure as simple as a niche or as large as a chapel. Here, people could address their prayers to an image of the deity or through “priest holes,” where a priest could listen and/or deliver oracles. The Saylor Foundation 8