A few kilometres north-east of el-Qasr, in the area known as el-Tibbaniya
where the ancient caravan route from Bahariya to Siwa begins, are the
ruins of a temple complex first excavated by Ahmed Fakhry between 1939
and 1942. This is the only known temple in the whole of the Western
Desert to be built in the name of the Greek conqueror Alexander ‘The
Great’, whose images and cartouches Fakhry found on the monument. |
The main part of the temple consists of only two sandstone chambers in
the northern part of an enclosure, which was surrounded by a mudbrick
temenos wall. Both the temple and a stone gate in the enclosure wall
face south. When Fakhry excavated here he reported that the partially
preserved walls of the temple showed many undamaged inscriptions and
reliefs depicting Alexander in the presence of Amun-Re and other
deities. The temple is thought to have been dedicated to Amun and
Horus. Fakhry found an inscribed red granite altar in front of the
temple which also bore the name of Alexander (now in Cairo Museum) and
a small statue of a priest of Re in the second chamber. Sadly, the
inscriptions have suffered a great deal of deterioration since
Fakhry’s excavations, the cartouches are unreadable and many of the
reliefs have now vanished due to the effects of years of wind-blown
sand.
Surrounding the temple within the enclosure are at least 45 mudbrick
dwellings and store-rooms, where the priests and administrative staff
would have lived and worked. A great deal of broken pottery, coins and
other small artefacts were found scattered about the area, including a
number of Greek and Coptic ostraca. This suggested to Fakhry that the
site had been inhabited at intervals from the time of Alexander
through to the 12th century AD. The Supreme Council of Antiquities
under the direction of Dr Zahi Hawass re-excavated the site in 1993-94
uncovering several chambers which had never been cleared, but there
could still be much more awaiting investigation.
Attempts have recently been made to consolidate the blocks of the
temple, but a complete restoration is urgently needed if the erosion
to the structure is to be halted. This is probably an important site -
perhaps constructed to commemorate Alexander’s visit to Siwa Oasis to
consult the oracle at the Temple of Amun at Aghurmi. Did the conqueror
pass this way during his journey back to the north coast? Perhaps we
will never know, but the close proximity of the famous ‘Valley of the
Golden Mummies’, the cemetery which begins only a few hundred metres
away, may indicate the importance of the temple to the Graeco-Roman
people who wished to be buried in the area. |