Bibliographic Information

Egyptian temples

Steven Snape

(Shire Egyptology, 24)

Shire, 1996

Available at  / 3 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Colossal stone temples are one of the most immediately recognisable products of ancient Egyptian civilisation: distinctive in appearance, striking in sheer size and impressive in the skill shown in the carving and painting of their walls. This book looks at what is known about Egyptian temples, their chronological development, and the range of different religious structures referred to under the general heading of temples. Different chapters explain, with illustrations, the nature of Egyptian gods and why they needed temples to built for them, what went on within the buildings, and how priests, acting on behalf of the king, served the god on a daily basis and in regular festivals which involved the population as a whole. It explains the underlying ideas which result in Egyptian temples developing such a particular and peculiar appearance and why both architecture and decoration in Egyptian temples reflect different periods of temple building and different types of temple.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction
  • Archaic Period and Old Kingdom temples
  • Middle Kingdom temples
  • New Kingdom Cult temples
  • Mortuary temples
  • Unusual New Kingdom temples
  • Late Period and Graeco-Roman temples
  • Further reading

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