On the west doorpost of the eighth pylon's southern facade is the cartouches and titles of Tuthmosis II, while on the east doorpost are those of Tuthmosis III. Next to the cartouche of Tuthmosis II (his Son of Ra name) is a niche that has been hollowed out, almost certainly by the
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Fronting these scenes are seated colossi made from several materials. There are two made of limestone and one of quartzite on the west, and only one, made from white limestone, which remains on the east wing. On the west wing, the white limestone colossus, representing Amenhotep I, is carved from a single block. The king is seated with his right hand closed and his left hand open, resting on his knees. Note the emphasis that has been placed on the carving of the breasts. To his left is a small statue of a seated female figure. The colossus to the west of the Eighth Pylon doorway is made out of red quartzite from Gebel el-Ahmar. On the belt and side of the throne are the cartouches of Tuthmosis II, who is believed to have had this statue carved. The finely sculpted feet of the colossus are engaged with the pedestal on which they rest. On the east facade of the pedestal is a delicate, unfinished image of
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There is also a doorway on the western end of the west wing of the eighth pylon. Here, three registers can be found that depict the presentation of fattened cows, crowned and bedecked with ribbons similar to scenes in the Court of Ramesses II at the Temple of Luxor. They are part of a procession of priests carrying flowers towards the eighth pylon.
There is little to be seen in the courtyard between the Eighth and Ninth pylons. The Ninth pylon is built on an axis of and perpendicular to the avenue of sphinxes that leads to the temple of Mut. The fact that the temple of Mut was constructed by Amenhotep III suggests that the ninth pylon, which was build during the reign of Horemheb, might have replaced an older pylon made from brick, and probably built by Amenhotep III. Like the Second Pylon in the Temple of Amun, the Ninth Pylon is hollow. It measures some 66 meters, with a Width of about 11.5 meters. The construction of the Ninth Pylon consists of exterior stone facings formed from a single tier of
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On the west wing of the Ninth Pylons northern facade, the bottom was covered by two registers in which the king is proceeding from east to west (therefore entering the temple). However, the barques carried by the priests on the top register are going in the opposite direction out of the temple. On the east wing of the pylon are bas-reliefs of Ramesses IV.
Within the last courtyard of the secondary north-south axis on the west wing of the Ninth Pylon to the left of the large flagpole niche is an almost obliterated scene that is framed by a sort of bas-relief false door. Flat inlaid stones mark out the site of the cornice, providing the sole protrusion beneath a frieze of uraei. This scene is said to the the counterpart of the inscription that recounts the marriage of Ramesses II with the eldest daughter of the king of the Hittites, which is represented on the southern face of the east wing, which in turn is said to be a replica of the famous "marriage stela" of Abu Simbel.
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Left: Interior Facade of the Passageway of the Eighth Pylon's Doorway
Right: White Limestone Colossus before the Eighth Pylon's West Wing
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Beyond the Amenhotep II monument, on the wall between it and the Tenth and last pylon, we find the king presenting Amun with the presents brought by the high chiefs of Punt. He wears the characteristic wig with five rows of curls. Behind him are two rows of chiefs from the land of Punt with twisted goatees. They carry sacks of gold, skins, feathers and cloth. Here, text
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"The great chiefs of the land of Punt say: 'Glory to thee, king of Egypt, sun of the Nine Bows. As truly as thou art in life we have not known of the black land [Egypt] and our fathers have not trampled it down."Further along this wall, after an opening, we find a scene depicting the presentation of Aegean and Syrian tributes. With his right hand, the king presents the delicately wrought vessels, the horns and the sacks of precious materials that are arranged before the naos of the seated Amun. He holds in his left hand the hek scepter, together with the coiled ropes that bind three rows of prisoners behind him. Here, text tells us that they are, "The miserable lords of Hannebu [Aegeans], the vile chiefs of Retenu [Syria]... terror is in their hearts". Here, the king's cartouche is in the name of Horemheb, but some scholars believe that this scene is attributable to the reign of Tutankhamun.
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It was Horemheb who built the last, Tenth Pylon, reusing many blocks from the temple of Akhenaten. The gate of this pylon measures 15.60 meters under the lintel and the double lintel adds another 2.47 meters, which gives the gate a height of 18.07 meters, not including the cornice. On the gate are four registers of scenes in the name of King Horemheb. From bottom to top, these scenes depict the offering of wine to Amun-Ra, water to Amun-Ra Kamutef, censing to Amun-Ra and on the top, the worshiping of Mut, then Khonsu, repeated four times.
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On the exterior of the Tenth Pylon, and therefore of the north-south secondary axis, as on the north facade, the doorposts include four registers. The register at the bottom is partially covered by a fore-gate that splits Amun off from he king, who is making an offering of bread, which is in the form of a long cone. The king is girded by a diadem over his blue ibes wig topped by the horns of Khnum around which two uraei uncoil and fall to either side of the king's face.
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"My lord made me chief of all works. I established the name of the king forever. I did not imitate that which had been done before. I fashioned for him a mountain of gritstone, for he is the heir of Atum...I conducted the work of his statue, immense in width, taller than his column, its beauty marred the pylon. Its length was 40 cubits in the august mountain of gritstone..."The statue was carved in a monolith of quartzite sandstone and represented the standing and crowned Amenhotep III, with one foot forward. Both of his feet rested on the pedestal made from a separate block of the same quartzite, which in turn rested on a second pedestal of red Aswan granite. The measurements provided plus the size of the feat indicate that the statue would have once stood 20.95 meters tall.
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The facade of the lower pedestal of granite is divided into three parts. In the median axis of the central one, the flowers of the North and South are linked around the sma sign and at the same

Beyond the temple's north-south axis is the avenue of sphinxes that leads from the tenth pylon to the temple of Mut. The avenue was created in the name of Horemheb, and stretches more than 310 meters in length. As of the time when Champollion investigated the temple, there were 120 sphinxes to which Seti II had had added his cartouches. To the east of the avenue is a stylobate constructed of fourteen large granite blocks, of which six were cut during the reign of Amenhotep III. These six blocks from the pedestals of three black granite statues, two of which must have been of very great height. It has been suggested that these statues originally stood at the funerary temple of this king.
Off course, the tenth pylon served as the southern entrance to the precinct of Amun and led, through its gate, past the two limestone colossi to the sphinx-lined avenue which was a processional way, connecting the precinct of Amun with that of Mut.
It should be noted that the area south of the Seventh Pylon was undergoing restoration work by a combined Franco-Egyptian team, though apparently this work is now finished.