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A temple complex was virtually never constructed in isolation,
for most at least needed an estate in order to survive at all.
In fact, the temple itself was almost always surrounded by
other support facilities, or facilities needing support from
the temple. Some of the structures were directly related to
religious functions of the temple, while others were more
administrative in nature. Unfortunately, many such structures,
such as the Sanatoria, the House of Life, storage and support
facilities, were built of mudbrick and are therefore significantly
deteriorated.
Mammisis
The mammisi, which is often referred to as a birth house
and considered by some to be a temple in its own rite, was
certainly a structure with considerable religious
significance, especially for the king. This term, which is
actually a coptic word for "birth-place", was
originally invented for the structure by Jean
Francois Champollion. Located within the temple precinct
and often oriented at right angles to the main temple axis,
this type of structure was associated with the mysterious
birth of the gods and the celebration of their births.
Particularly in New
Kingdom mammisis, the divine birth of the king might also
be celebrated. While the birth of a god, such as Horus the
Younger was primary in the mammisi, the king's divine
relationship with the gods is also frequently stressed.
Mammisis were very common in the Greek
and Roman
period, when they were present in all known, major temples,
but their origin was probably Egypt's Late
Period. However, their appears, evidenced by 18th
Dynasty reliefs describing the divine birth of Hatshepsut
at Deir el-Bahri
and that of Amenhotep
III at Luxor, to have been earlier counterparts.
The best known mammisi is associated with the Temple of Hathor
at Dendera, which was dedicated to Ihy
(the son of Hathor and Horus).
This mammisis was built by Augustus, but not decorated until
the reign of Trajan. This particular structure is especially
useful, for its inscriptions and decorative theme provide
explanations and information on mammisis. At Dendera
there was also an earlier birth house begun by Nectanebo
I during the 30th
dynasty, while other such structures are known by us at Philae,
celebrating the birth of Horus, Kom
Ombo, for the birth of Panebtawy and Edfu,
celebrating the birth of Harpre.
The best preserved of these is the frontal part of the
mammisi at Edfu and the rear section of that at Dendera. From
these, we see a somewhat unique architectural style, at least
from the Greek and Roman Periods, where an entrance vestibule
opens into a relatively shortened building. Surrounding this
room, a peristyle structure with screen like walls between the
columns, might also be erected.
The decorative theme within these structures was obviously
related to the birth of a god and his or her godly parents.
Hymns were often included but text might describe the complete
act of procreation, from the courtship of the parent deities
through the birth and presentation of their child. In the
mammisi located in the Temple of Hathor celebrating the birth
of Ihy even depicts his formation on the potter's wheel.
However, these birth houses did not just depict the divine
child and parents, but often included other associated
deities, who were frequently portrayed in the act of praising
the young god. Bes
was frequently carved in relief on the abaci of the columns,
and in several birth houses, Hathor is not only the goddess of
motherhood, but is also shown in her role as goddess of music
and intoxication.
Sacred Lakes
We believe that most temple precincts included a sacred
lake. Archaeologists have excavated a number of these, and
therefore we know that at least from the New
Kingdom times, these lakes were rectangular in shape with
straight, or sometimes with sides that were slightly curved
inward. However, other forms of sacred lakes existed as well,
such as the horseshoe shaped pool (known as an isherw-water)
that enclosed the main buildings in the sacred precinct of Mut
at Karnak.
Another form, which was the pool that completely surrounded
the main cult place called the Osireion
at Abydos
and also encircled the shrines of the Maru-Aten at el-Amarna.
These lakes were usually cut deep enough to take advantage
of the underlying ground water and then lined with stone. On
the side of the lake facing the actual temple complex, a
stairway was included in order to reach the level of the
water, which could vary at different times of the year.
Sacred, or divine lakes (pools), were known to the
Egyptians as shi-netjer (she netjeri), but they were also
provided with individual names like most major elements of the
temple complex. They usually functioned on both a symbolic and
practical level. Physically, they could provide the priests of
the temple with a reservoir of water to bath in at dawn before
entering the temple to begin their day's work, as well as a
source of water for ritual purification and offerings.
But symbolically, the lake was an important piece in the
ancient Egyptian's concept
of creation. It was from the primeval waters that life
first arose, and each morning as the sun got was renewed each
morning, the Aten
(sun disk) would rise above the sacred lake, representing in a
tangible manner the same underlying forces of life and
creation. Furthermore, at Karnak, special pens which held
geese would allow the birds to escape each morning through a
narrow tunnel on to the surface of the lake. The goose was one
of the great god Amun's
forms in his role as creator. There were, of course, also
sacred lakes associated with the cult of Sobek,
that held crocodiles. Other ritualistic ceremonies such as
those associated with the resurrection of Osiris
at Sais
were also performed on the shores of that temple's divine
lake.
Of the sacred lakes that are known to us, the one at the
Temple of Karnak (by far the largest) is notable, for it has
been cleaned and flooded in order to give us an idea as to the
original appearance of this element of the temple
precinct.
Nilometers
Ancient Egyptian life revolved around the level of the Nile
river. It's high
floods bought fertile growth to the Nile Valley, and when
the flood was lacking, so was the abundance that Egyptians
came to expect. In order to measure the height of the river
and thus predict when the flood would arrive, an open or
well-like gauge was used at sites from Aswan
(Elephantine)
to Memphis, and
later deep within Nubia
at the second and fourth cataracts (rapids). There gauges were
known as Nileometers, and the records of concerning the level
of the Nile were archived, which have at times been
instrumental in various type of analysis by
Egyptologists.
Varying considerably in size, the Nileometer usually
consisted of measuring steps at the water's edge but could be
entirely open, or flanked by walls, sometimes with a roof.
They could consist of only a few steps, or like have as many
as ninety, such as the one on Elephantine Island at modern
Aswan which was built during the Roman
Period. Many temples had their own Nileometers, which were
obviously not only important gauges of Nile flood levels, but
of the god's favor (and the king's performance in his role as
intermediary god) as well. For example, on the island of Philae,
there were two such structures within only a few hundred
meters of each other, one descending down a cliff from the
colonnade near the temple of Nectanebo
I on the southwest corner of the island, while another
further to the north was near a Greek
Period mammisi. Obviously there was no real world need for two
Nileometers in such close proximity to one another.
It should be noted that the Nilometer, while connected with
aspects of the ancient Egyptian religion, continued to be an
important device long after the last temple was closed. For
example, there is an Islamic Nilometer dating to about 705 to
715 AD at Geziret el-Rhoda in Cairo,
and in 1870, the Khedive Ismail had the one at Elephantine
repaired for practical use.
Sanatoria
A sanatoria was basically the very ancient equivalent of a
medical (or magical) clinic (with hospital attributes), where
the sick or injured could come to seek healing from the gods
and perhaps, the wisdom of the priests and scholars of the
temple. Unfortunately, few such structures remain, though
there are ruins at several temples that are thought to perhaps
be sanatorias (including one at Hatshepsut's
temple on the West
Bank at Thebes
(modern Luxor).
However, in the Graeco-Roman
Period temple at Dendera
dedicated to Hathor
we do find a clear example of this structure. In fact, that
sanatoria was probably very important and it developed a
reputation for healing, drawing people from great distances
due to Hathor's reputation as a goddess of compassion.
The sanatoria at Dendera consisted of many chambers where
the sick rested while they awaited the dreams that might bring
divine prescriptions for their recovery. Within this sanatoria
was a central courtyard where temple priests would pour water
over statues that had been inscribed with magical texts,
allowing the magic to pass into the water. This was then given
to the sick for drinking or bathing.
It is entirely possible that the Sanatoria may have been
partially connected with the "house of life", for
there we find the study of medicine in ancient Egypt.
The House of Life
The institutions associated with the ancient temples and
known to the Egyptians as per ankh, or "house of
life", were nothing less then the forerunners of our
modern universities, though they probably also served as an
administrative archive of the temple complex as well. They
were a central point of concentration for scribes and ancient
scholars. We know from documentary evidence of these
institutions at Memphis,
Akhmim,
Abydos,
Koptos, Esna
and Edfu,
though there must certainly have been one located at Thebes.
However, archeological evidence of their existence is rare,
though we have bricks stamped with the words "per ankh"
that were discovered at el-Amarna.
The precise relationship between the temple and the
"house of life" is not entirely known, for they
certainly also had an important role within the palace court.
Some of these institutions may have developed somewhat
independently, while others may have had a close relationship
with the temple complexes.
Regardless, the per ankh certainly functioned as a
scriptorium, where religious and magical texts associated with
the cult of the gods were written, copied, collated, edited
and archived in the associated House of Books (per medjat).
Many of the texts that were created or copied and archived in
the "house of life" were considered sacred as they
dealt with divinely revealed matters, called by the ancient
Egyptians, the ba
re, meaning the "soul" or "emanation" of Re.
All manner of cult text were produced, including mythical and
theological treaties, texts used in the recitations performed
at temple rituals and the master text that would later be
inscribed on the the temple walls, obelisks and other
architectural elements. In this regard, the priests and
officials of the "house of life" may have even been
concerned in a supervisory role with the work of temple
craftsmen.
It may have been in these institutions, from the New
Kingdom onward, that copies of the Book
of the Dead were produced, perhaps sometimes individually
for important individuals, and as templates to be personalized
later with an individual's name. Such books were considered to
be divinely inspired in much the same way that the scriptures
of our modern faiths of today. However, in addition to
religious text, it is thought that a separate area of the per
ankh, or perhaps within a separate building attached to
it, temple accounts, contracts, correspondence and other
temple records were also archived, and in fact, all manner of
secular information may have been stored within these
institutions.
With his boast that he had studied all the texts of the per
ankh in order to discover the secrets of the gods, Ramesses
IV implies that the institution was regarded as a center
of learning in every aspect. Perhaps more encompassing, the
Priest Pa-ti-Ist , who was selected to accompany the Pharaoh
Pasammetichus (Psamtik) II on this expedition to Syria was
told, "Look, you are a scribe of the House of Life, there
is nothing on which you could be questioned to which you would
not find an answer!" This statement seems to imply a vast
coverage of both secular and religious knowledge associated
with the per ankh.
Indeed, the "house of life" appears to have not
only been a place where religious texts were copied and
archived but also a center for scholarly learning in many
fields. It was here that priests and scribes studied subjects
such as writing, art, theology, rituals, magic, astronomy,
law, mathematics and medicine, among others. And while there
may have been no classrooms, it is likely that children of the
royal court and other elite may have received instructions in
these fields as well.
As libraries, with their wide collection of knowledge, they
became famous throughout the world. For example, in the 2nd
Century AD, the medical writer Galen tells us that Greek
physicians visited the library of per ankh at Memphis to learn
from its texts. In fact, there is little doubt that the most
famous institution of learning during ancient times, the
Library of Alexandria, was modeled after the more ancient per
ankh.
Support Facilities
Larger temples might literally employ thousands of people
in various capacities, and around these institutions, various industries
matured. Often within the temple's perimeter walls, they
supplied the real world needs of the cult, as well as
offerings to the gods, and could include slaughterhouses,
bakeries and kitchens, breweries workshops and artistic
studios. They might produce everything from bread to furniture
and even the floral arrangements and other gifts for the
gods.
The Temple Estate
Temples were endowed by the kings of Egypt, an arrangement
that gave the pharaoh, as well as the temple, considerable
power. These estates were used to both fund the temple
operations, as well as provide the personnel with their basic
necessities. The endowments included agricultural land near
the temple complex, but might encompass considerably more
complex holdings. The estate would almost certainly include
farm land, but might also consist of vineyards and orchards,
gardens and even quarries and mines as well as areas such as
marshlands, all for the temple's use.
While these estates were most often adjacent to the temple,
the could at times be remotely located as well. For example,
during the New
Kingdom, the Temple of Seti
I controlled large areas even south of the second cataract
in Nubia.
Storage Facilities
Granaries were an important storage area for most temple
complexes. The usually consisted of independent or a series of
adjacent silos made from mud or mudbrick. Independent silos
were usually arranged in groups of two to five, arranged in a
square courtyard.
Besides the products of the temple estate and items
produced in the temple workshops and other facilities, temples
also received gifts and offerings brought in from outside
sources. Hence, not only were granaries needed to store the
yield from the temple's agricultural land, but other various
types of storage facilities might also be needed. These
structures were often located behind the temple in the
vicinity of a roadway. Others, particularly those associated
with mortuary complexes, were frequently build around the
temple within its enclosure, a feature probably due to their
isolation.
Interestingly, while these facilities might at first seem
to be a relatively secular component of the temple complex,
they often had religious aspects as well. Our knowledge of the
religious activities surrounding these storage facilities is
highly lacking, but for example, we know that Granaries were
often the site of specific religious rituals. Various New
Kingdom tomb scenes show offerings that were made to gods
at granaries, and specifically at the granary of Amun
at Karnak,
there is a relief depicting Hapi
making offerings of to the grain and harvest goddess Renenutet.
Perhaps such ceremonies predate the modern religious concept
of tithing, which might induce the various gods to allow a
bountiful crop.
Even at other storage facilities we find evidence of cult
activity. A stone dais adjacent to the magazines at the end of
the portico along the facade of the Ramesseum
on the West
Bank at Thebes,
as well as another in the court next to the magazines of the
mortuary temple of Seti
I at Abydos
appear to include features that might have been related to
cult activities.
The Living Quarters
From the above discussion, it is clear that priests were
far from the only members of the temple complex staff. There
were ordinary field hands, administrators, scholars and
scribes, artists, bakers, warehousemen and others. Many of
these people might reside in local villages, but others, and
specifically the priests as well as high officials and
administrators, often lived in housing on the temple estate,
or sometimes even within the temple walls. At times, in
association with huge temple complexes, such developments
could constitute entire villages.
See Also:
References:
| Title |
Author |
Date |
Publisher |
Reference
Number |
| Atlas of Ancient
Egypt |
Baines, John;
Malek, Jaromir |
1980 |
Les Livres De
France |
None Stated |
| Complete
Temples of Ancient Egypt, The |
Wilkinson,
Richard H. |
2000 |
Thames and
Hudson, Ltd |
ISBN
0-500-05100-3 |
| Dictionary of
Ancient Egypt, The |
Shaw, Ian;
Nicholson, Paul |
1995 |
Harry N. Abrams,
Inc., Publishers |
ISBN
0-8109-3225-3 |
|
History of Egyptian Architecture, A (The Empire (the New Kingdom) From the Eighteenth Dynasty to the End of the Twentieth Dynasty 1580-1085 B.C. |
Badawy, Alexander |
1968 |
University of California Press |
LCCC A5-4746 |
| Oxford
History of Ancient Egypt, The |
Shaw, Ian |
2000 |
Oxford
University Press |
ISBN
0-19-815034-2 |
| Valley
of the Kings |
Weeks,
Kent R. |
2001 |
Friedman/Fairfax |
ISBN |
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