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Sehel Island |
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The Island of Sehel is about 4km south of Aswan, in the Nile to the
north of the old Aswan Dam. In ancient times travellers on their way
to Nubia, or who had just returned from an expedition to the south,
would make a pilgrimage to the sacred island of Sehel and leave
inscriptions recording their appeals or prayers of gratitude for help
in safely negotiating the hazardous first Nile cataract. Several of
them record events and journeys into Nubia by officials on the king's
business. The inscriptions are carved or bruised onto the jumbled
mounds of granite boulders which are strewn over several areas of the
island. Flinders Petrie visited Sehel in 1887 taking photographs and
making sketches of the thousands of inscriptions he found on the
boulders and cliffs by climbing rope ladders. The two hills which
dominate the south-eastern end of the island boast over 250
inscriptions, many of which are dedicated to the goddess Anukis and
her consort Khnum and date from the Middle Kingdom to Ptolemaic
periods.
A chapel dedicated to Anukis was built at the time of Amenemhet II
during Dynasty XII but little remains of this structure, while
remaining blocks from a small Ptolemaic temple of Khnum were found
scattered around the Nubian village. Anukis was a goddess worshipped
in the area of the Egyptian border and sometimes known as 'Mistress of
Nubia'. She was associated with the cataracts at Aswan and
specifically with the islands of Sehel and Elephantine. A protective
and fertility deity, Anukis was also thought to be a personification
of the Nile who embraced the waters of the inundation. Her husband
Khnum, a ram-headed creator god who is often shown fashioning the ka
of the king on his potters wheel, was also seen as a potent fertility
god under whose protection the cataract region came.
The boulders in the monument areas are now enclosed by a metal fence.
The path up from the river takes you past a section to the west with
some nice inscriptions and a larger hill to the east for which a
ticket is required at the entrance. Here you will see a great number
of well-preserved carvings with hieroglyphic inscriptions dedicated to
Khnum, Anukis and other deities and several royal cartouches. As you
climb the hill to the top there is a spectacular view over the
cataract area to the south. The cataracts are rocky areas of boulders
in the narrow channels of the River Nile which until a century or so
ago, before the construction of the old Aswan Dam in 1902, formed
treacherous rapids of foaming water. It was dangerous to row between
the rocks and larger vessels were forced to unload their cargo in
order to negotiate this stretch of river. Standing on top of this hill
overlooking the river gives us a good idea how hazardous the river
journey would have been and why the traveller would have felt in need
of divine protection. |
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On the summit of the eastern hill stands the most well-known of the
rock-inscriptions on Sehel Island, known as the 'Famine Stela'. The
inscription is bruised lightly onto a large granite boulder and tells
a story set in Dynasty III during the reign of the Horus Netjerikhet,
king Djoser. The dating however is artificial, the text was carved
during the Ptolemaic Period, shown by the style of the vocabulary and
grammar and by the deification of Djoser's architect Imhotep. It is
possible that the text was re-worded from an earlier document but
whatever the source, this is the earliest known connection between the
names of the Pharaoh Netjerikhet, owner of the Step Pyramid at Saqqara
and the name of King Djoser, by which he is now best known.
The stela depicts King Djoser offering to the deities Khnum-Re, Satis
and Anukis of the cataract region. The vertical rows of text below
refer to the catastrophic effects of seven years of famine and drought
during the reign of Djoser and how in a dream the god Khnum appeared
to the king and promised to end the hardship if his instructions on
the building of a temple at Elephantine were followed. The temple was
duly built and a decree issued that a tax of one tenth of all produce
from harvest, hunting and fishing as well as a proportion of precious
minerals and materials brought from Nubia, should be donated to the
temple of Khnum. No other official or administrator would be allowed
to tax the people in the area designated by the king. It has been
suggested that the erection of this stela was another case of
political propaganda by the local priests of Khnum, on finding that
the nearby Temple of Isis at Philae was gaining power in the region
and that Khnum's hold over the area from Aswan north to Esna was
diminishing. Surely a decree of such apparent antiquity and under the
protection of Khnum himself could not be ignored.
The trip by boat to Sehel Island makes a pleasant morning or afternoon
excursion. The island people are friendly and hospitable offering cups
of tea galore in their Nubian homes and the local ladies will follow
you everywhere with their baskets of hand-made crafts, carved dolls
and beaded jewellery. |
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| How to get there |
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Sehel Island can be reached by felucca or motor boat, negotiated on
the Corniche at Aswan. If time is limited a motorboat is faster and
not dependent on the wind as a felucca is. The boat will wait while
you are on the island and take you back to the Corniche or the trip
can be combined with another site such as Elephantine or Kitchener's
Islands. |
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