abu simbel
26 April 1999"On the sand
Half sunk, a shattered visage lies...
And on the pedestal these words appear:
‘My name is Ozymandias, king of kings
Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!’"
Extract from the poem
'Ozymandias' by Percy Bysshe Shelley, an English Poet in the 19th Century.
The poem was inspired by a statue of Ramses II in the Ramesseum, Ramses
II’s funerary temple in Luxor.

Colossal statues of
Ramses II flank the facade of the Great Temple of Abu Simbel.
Ancient Egypt had many remarkable
pharaohs. However, one stands above all others. Ramses II the ‘Great’. A
king of kings who is still remembered 3,300 years after his death. A man
whose mummy lies in the Egyptian Museum, Cairo, a silent smile playing
around his lips, somehow aware that he had achieved the sustaining
principle of Egyptian civilization - everlasting life.
Ramses II belonged to the 19th Dynasty
during the New Kingdom. He did everything on a grand scale and with
enormous enthusiasm. Ruling for 67 years, his reign was one of the longest
in Egyptian history. During his opulent reign he waged the famous battle
of Qadesh (1285 BC) against the Hittites, signed one of the first recorded
treaties in history, sired over a 100 children, and put up Egypt’s largest
and most extravagant buildings. A tall man with a mane of red hair, he ate
and drank too much and had a huge harem. His favorite wife was Nefertari
which appears by his side in most of his monuments. His military fame is
however largely based on his own boastful words, his accounts of his
courageous exploits surviving on the walls of nearly every temple dating
back to his reign. Some of his monuments were began by his father Seti I
and completed by him, whilst some were completely of his own conception.
Amongst the most magnificent of these
architectural feats are the Great Hypostyle Hall at Karnak, the Ramesseum,
his funerary temple on the West bank of the Nile at Thebes (today Luxor),
the Great Temple of Osiris at Abydos, and the temples at Abu Simbel. After
the pyramids, the two rock-cut temples built into the red sandstone cliffs
at Abu Simbel are the most famous monuments of ancient Egypt. Started by
Seti I at a site 350 kilometers from Luxor, they were completed by Ramses
II.
When the Aswan Dam was built in 1965 and
Lake Nasser was created, the subsequently raised waters threatened to
submerge the monuments on its banks. With funding to the tune of US$40
million, UNESCO undertook a vast operation to save the temples at Abu
Simbel. The temples were hand-sawn into 1,050 blocks and reconstructed on
an artificial hill 61 meters higher and 210 meters from the original site.
Today, they overlook the vastness of the still waters of Lake Nasser which
shimmer like blue silk under the morning sun, silence hanging over the
site like a heavy shroud.
 
Carvings illustrate the Nile gods uniting Upper and
Lower Egypt, whilst Ramses II the 'Great' finds eternity through his
massif effigies.

The Temple of Hathor built
by Ramses II in honour of his wife Nefertari.
The facade of the larger temple, the
Great Temple of Ra-Harakhte, is flanked by four 20-meter high seated
statues of the pharaoh Ramses II himself hewn into the cliff. Scattered
amongst the colossi are figures of his mother, his wife Nefertari, and
eight of his children. In the middle of the facade is a small statue of
the falcon-headed sun-god, Ra-Harakhte, to whom the temple was
dedicated to. The sides of the thrones near the entrance to the temple are
decorated with carvings of the Nile gods uniting Egypt. Below them on one
side is a row of African prisoners and on the other a row of Syrian
prisoners. Inside is the Great Hypostyle Hall with four columns on either
side, flanked by 10-meter high Osirid (in the Osiris pose - mummified king
with arms across the chest) statues of Ramses II. The walls are adorned
with reliefs of Ramses II’s campaigns in Syria, Nubia and the Battle of
Qadesh. The great hall leads into eight side chambers and the anteroom,
which further leads into the inner sanctuary, 61 meters deep inside the
cliff. Twice a year, on 22 February and 22 October, the dawn rays of the
sun reach into the inner recesses of the sanctuary illuminating the
statues within.
Adjacent to the Great Temple is the
Temple of Hathor which was built in honour of his wife Nefertari by Ramses
II. Flanked by six statues of Nefertari and Ramses II, with smaller
statues of their children, it is the only temple in Egyptian history that
has a woman portrayed at its entrance. The temple is dedicated to Hathor,
cow-goddess of music, love, joy and dance and the wife of the sun god
during his day’s passage and mother of his birth at dawn. The hypostyle
hall contains columns with hathor-headed capitals. The walls of the hall
and inner sanctuary are decorated with reliefs of Nefertari watching her
husband killing his enemies and the royal couple paying homage to the
gods.

Reliefs of the royal
couple and ancient Egyptian gods, in colours still vivid, adorn the inner walls of the
temples of Abu Simbel.
No trip to Egypt is complete without a
visit to Abu Simbel. Its beauty and grace are a reflection of the high
point of Egyptian civilization when the New Kingdom was at its zenith. In
half a day the quietness and scale of the monument takes one back 3,200
years. The temples like the rest of ancient Egypt’s magnificent monuments
reflect our very own humanity, of what we are as human beings, have been
and eventually will come back to, full circle.
The most convenient way of getting to Abu
Simbel is by an Egyptair excursion which includes return flights,
transfers and a guided tour. However, if there is time and money, the best
way to see the temples is on a Lake Nasser cruise.
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