Places of Worship; Temples, Birthhouses, Shrines and Reliefs
Temples
It is fairly easy to find temples to the Late Period Isis, when she already was Romanized. Wether some of these places would have been reconstructed over earlier sites is hard or impossible to tell, though it seems that those which were build in Nubia were all founded on new locations. Temples from earlier periods are not easy to find, though she is frequent in reliefs and in texts. Here are some temple sites, also such which are of definitely Roman making.
Philae
The most impressive temple of Aset which has survived to our day is the temple at Philae. It was built and added to by several rulers from the 30th Dynasty, who were said to be very devoted to Aset, to the late Roman period and into the Christian days, ca 300 A.D. Here is also a Birth House in the Inner Courtyard, dedicated to the birth of Heru, and built and extended to by Ptolemy III-VIII. This temple held its own until it was ordered closed by the emperor Justinianus in ca 535 A.D. Go Here for a page about the Island of Philae.
Behbeit-el-Hagar
While Philae was located by the 1st cataract, on the border to Nubia, there was another temple in the Delta, Behbeit-el-Hagar close to nowadays Sammaud, (ancient Greek name Sebennytos). This temple was built by the 30th Dynasty rulers too, and a very important cult place, thought to be a sort of correspondent in Lower Egypt to Philae in Upper Egypt. It was built of granite and with finely carved relifes. Unfortunately it lies mostly in crumbles today, maybe from an eartquake in ancient times or from the stone being used in other structures, or both. The rests of the Ptolemaic temple can still be seen among the rubble, and one block was even transported to the Isis temple in Rome.
Qift, Gr: Koptos. In ancient times Min was the main deity here. In the Late Period also Heru and Isis began to be worshipped. There was a temple to Min and Isis to the north, built under Ptolemy II. This temple was added to by later Roman emperors, and there has been found
several evidence from earlier times, including blocks from Senwosret I and a gate from the time of Thutmose III. Also a stelae from the 6th and 7th Dynasties was found here, inscribed with a list of 'royal provisions' for the temple and its personnel.
There is also, a little to the northeast of Quift, a small temple to Min, Isis and Heru, by Cleopatra VII.
Other temples to Isis from the Roman days are at Alexandria, (a small temple to Isis and Harpocrates in the Serapeum), Aswan, Dabod, Deir-el-Shelouit, El-Hilla, El-Qalá and Shanour. According to Herodotos, Amasis built a big temple to Isis at Memphis, but no trace if this has been found sofar.
Other places of worship:
Edfu Temple of Horus - relief of Isis. Ptolemy XII
Dendera - Temple of Isis with birthouse, by Nectanebo.
Abydos - chapels & reliefs from Seti I.
Akhmim - a big Ptolemeian temple for Min, to whom Aset often was called spouse, indicates that a shrine or small temple for Aset once existed here.
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