Nile Cruise Day 3 – Temple of Horus at Edfu, Temple of Kom Ombo

Temple of horus at Edfu

We sailed overnight on the Nile River and arrived at Edfu the next morning. We were given the option of taking a horse-drawn carriage or a van to the Temple of Edfu, so of course we picked the horse-drawn carriage. 

In the morning of our third day on the Nile Cruise, we were picked up in two horse-drawn carriages and taken from the cruise ship through dusty roads to the Temple of Horus at Edfu. Horus, depicted as a falcon or a falcon-headed man, is the god of war and the sky and, the legitimizer of kingship and the power of the pharaohs.

The Temple of Horus is nearly a thousand years newer than the main temples in Luxor. It was built during the Ptolemaic era between 237 and 57 BC but the architecture imitates the building style of earlier pharaohs. It is surprisingly well-persevered because it was buried under the desert for hundreds of years. The discovery of the temple in such good condition helped archaeologists to gain insight into certain architectural elements and building details of earlier temples in Luxor, like Temple of Karnak and Luxor Temple, that had already been lost to time.

The temple was the largest temple dedicated to Horus and would have been used for many festivals and celebrations in his honor until 391 AD, when paganism was outlawed by the Romans. Christians made efforts to deface and damage the reliefs of the temples and it appears they even attempted to burn it to the ground. Throughout the temple, we saw reliefs where the faces of gods and goddesses were scratched out.

The first pylon of the temple depicts Ptolemy XII as he smites his enemies under Horus’ watchful, perhaps approving, gaze. There are two statues of Horus at the entrance to the temple. The first pylon of this temple reminded me of the first pylon of Medinet Habu in Luxor as both have massive reliefs of the pharoah smiting his enemies. Obviously Medinet Habu is a mortuary temple (for Rameses III) and Temple of Horus is a cult temple built to worship the god Horus, but both served to glorify the pharaoh and his accomplishments. It is interesting to note that even though the Ptolemies who ruled Egypt were Macedonians, they depicted themselves on monuments exactly as traditional Egyptian pharaohs with the same dress, posture and appearance and juxtaposed beside Egyptian gods.

Past the first pylon and the great courtyard, there is a hypostyle hall. We have seen even more impressive columns in the hypostyle hall at Karnak but what was exciting to see at this temple was the ceilings here were still intact. It made the large hall darker and the atmosphere more private, almost sanctuary like. Around the periphery of the temple walls are amazing reliefs where the faces of the pharaoh and Horus were visibly scratched out by early Christians after paganism was outlawed by the Roman Empire.

Toward the back of the hall, we climbed a flight of stairs spiraling upward and climbed another flight going straight down. The Ancient Egyptians believed that Horus, a falcon, flies in a spiral pattern up into the sky and dives straight down back to Earth.

Temple of Kom ombo

We returned to the cruise ship for lunch and a rest as we sailed through the afternoon and arrived in Aswan around 4 pm.  

Our visit to the Temple of Kom Ombo felt different because it was nearly sunset and the light in the sky was fading. Without the strong sunlight of the day, the visit felt more intimate and almost clandestine. The Temple of Kom Ombo is unique because it is a double temple dedicated to two gods – Sobek, the crocodile god, and Horus, the falcon-headed god. Each god has its own temple, gateways and chapels. It was built during the Ptolemaic era between 180 to 47 BC.

During Ancient Egypt, the Nile River was infested with crocodiles that regularly attacked animals and humans. The Ancient Egyptians believed that if they worshipped crocodiles, they wouldn’t be attacked. At Kom Ombo, priests raised the crocodiles and likely worshipped them or used them in rituals. Once the crocodiles died, they were mummified. We saw many of the crocodile mummies in the Crocodile Museum beside the temple.

A peculiar inclusion on one of the wall reliefs was of surgical instruments used during this time. The instruments looked similar to instruments used in surgery today like a knife, tweezers, a drill, hooks, etc.

Beside the temple is a nilometer, a tool used by Ancient Egyptians to measure the water level of the Nile River during its annual flooding. The ultimate purpose was to predict the volume of harvest for the next season to be used for tax purposes.

As we left the Temple of Kom Ombo, night descended. It was just as well because we were tired and EY fell asleep on Leo without even seeing the crocodile mummies. RY and DY continued on unceasingly with their conversation about NERF guns. For the past few weeks, they have been obsessing about NERF guns. When we walk through temples, they talk about NERF guns. When we visit museums, they talk about NERF guns. When we are in the car, they talk about NERF guns. Over meals, they talk about NERF guns.

We joked about how cool and scary it would be to play hide-and-go-seek in the temples, especially at night. This conversation evolved into one about having a NERF gun fight in a temple and a debate over which temple would be the best for a NERF gun fight. This conversation went on until we returned to the cruise ship and continued on in the following days. As far as I could gather, the conclusion reached was that the best temple for a NERF gun fight would be the Temple of Karnak because of the cover provided by the 134 giant columns in the Great Hypostyle Hall. The best time of the day to have the NERF gun fight would be early evening because it wouldn’t be too sunny or hot. RY’s preferred NERF gun would be the Elite 2.0 Shockwave and DY’s chosen weapon would be the Echo.

Author

  • Song

    Song is the mother of four children. She and her family have stepped away from it all and in September 2023, began traveling the world while homeschooling. Song is an ABC (American born Chinese) and has an undergraduate degree from Cornell and an MBA from Harvard. She is an entrepreneur and an educator. Her hobbies include learning, traveling, reading, cooking and baking, and being with children.

1 thought on “Nile Cruise Day 3 – Temple of Horus at Edfu, Temple of Kom Ombo”

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