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The Harris Papyrus provides that:
"I built a house for thy son, Khonsu in Thebes, of good sandstone, red gritstone, and black stone (granite). I overlaid its doorposts and doors with god, (with) inlay figures of electrum like the horizon of Heaven"Thus it was Ramesses III who makes claim to the construction of this temple, even though only seven small chapels that surround the four columned hall located behind the sanctuary of the barques (Hall of the Barque) bear his cartouches. Elsewhere, we find the names of Ramesses IV and Ramesses XI. According to their dedications, it would also seem that the High-Priests Herihor and Pinedjem constructed the first court and the pylon.
The temple dedicated to the moon god Khonsu at Karnak consists of a peristyle court which is bordered by a portico of twenty-eight monostyle columns divided into four groups. Two of these
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The sanctuary of the barque in turn leads to a kind of pronaos that provides access to three sanctuaries located to the north and four small lateral sanctuaries. The one in the northeast corner contains a representation of the dead Osiris lying on a stretcher between the goddesses Isis and Nephthys.
Fronting the temple of Khonsu's pylon are the bare remnants of a colonnade of a type similar to that which proceeds the "upper gate" of the great Temple of Amun. It is bordered on the outside by a row of sphinxes. The pylon itself measures 34.5 meters in length, 7 meters wide and 18 meters high. On its facade are four grooves meant to house masts with banners. Under the torus of each wing of the pylon is a dedication that informs us:
"the first high priest of Amun, master of the rites, Pinedjem, son of the first high priest of Amun, Piankh, has made this very great and august pylon for his father Khonsu-in-Thebes-Neferhotep on the front of his temple"
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Champollion recorded this temple in his time, and observed that the antae pillars of the portico bore the inscription of the High-Priest Herihor. He also observed that:
"Cornice decorated by an anaglyph bearing under the curve of the 'annary' scepter the captions of Ptolemy. This portion of the doorway is therefore modern and replaces a more ancient doorway cap from which two end stones remain. These, being employed under the tori of the two massifs of the pylon, could not be disengaged without danger. It is there in the curve of the annary scepters that the first high priest of Amun, Pinedjem maa kheru can still be read, in the place of the Ptolemaic inscriptions. The rest of the cornice bears more modern inscriptions because the stone have been renewed."
Champollion, Notices descriptives, vol. 2, pp. 219-24
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On the architraves to the east and west of this court, the Horus name of the high-priest is up into relationship with Amun, his Two Goddesses name with that of Mut, and finally his Golden Horus name with Khonsu. It is again specified there that he created this large columned hall as a work for eternity, "with the hand of Ptah who provided the blueprint". Towards the rear of the peristyle court are columns that are presumed to have been taken from the great funerary temple of Amenhotep III on the west bank, which is interesting considering that the High-Priest was commissioned with protecting the funerary monuments on the West Bank at ancient Thebes (modern Luxor).
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Left: Colonnade of the west portico in the peristyle court in the Temple of Khonsu
Right: Columns in the portico of the peristyle court in the Northeast Corner
All of the dedicatory texts on the architraves of both the large and small columns are the same, naming Menmaatre Setepenamun (Ramesses XI), who is said to have built this hall called "'Wearer-of-Diadems'... Live the Good God [Neter-nefer]... the monument builder, plentiful in wonders, whose every design comes to pass (immediately) like his father Ptah-South-of-His-Wall". On the base of the wall of the hypostyle hall, we see "High-Priest of Amun-Ra, commander in chief of the armies of North and South, Herihor" inscribed, and told that he worked at the enlargement of the house of Khonsu, exalting it with electrum, precious stones and offering tables in silver and gold.
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Columns in the hypostyle hall in the Temple of Khonsu
Centered through the doorway at the rear of the hypostyle hall is the Hall of the Barque. In its center are the remains of a barque sanctuary. The upper block and walls of this room are inscribed in very deep sunk relief with the throne name, Heqamaatre Setepenamun (Ramesses IV).
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"Offering that the king gives to Geb, to the Great Ennead, to the Small Ennead, to the neters (gods) of the itr.t of the south and of the itr.t of the North and of all the neters, presented by your son whom you love, the master of the Two Lands, Heqamaatre Setepenamun, the master of the crowns, Ramesses-shu-Maatimri-Imn; ten hundredweight of bread, ten hundredweight of pitchers of beer, ten hundred weight of beef, ten hundredweight of fowl, ten hundredweight of alabaster vessels, ten hundredweight of vestments, ten hundred weight of resins, ten hundredweight of jars of oil, ten hundredweight of bouquets of flowers, ten hundredweight of bouquets of flowers, ten hundredweight of viands, ten hundredweight of everything good and pure, ten hundredweight of everything good and sweet, that is to say, what the sky provides for you, what the earth creates for you, what the Nile brings for you from its cavern. May the hand give the flood purify, and the master of the Two Lands, Heqamaatre Setepenre, the master of the Crowns, Ramesses-shu-Maati-mri-Imn, make an offering to his father, Amun-Ra, the master of the thrones of the Two Lands. I know [the gods] who are in the sky, I know [the gods] who are on the earth, I know [the gods] who surround Horus; I know [the gods] who neighbor Seth. I satisfy Horus by returning his eyes to him, I satisfy Seth by returning his testicles to him. It is I, Thoth, he who satisfies the gods and puts things in their proper place."The last three lines identify the king with Thoth, asserting his knowledge of everything that exists in heaven and on earth, in Horus and Seth, and also makes an allusion to the myth of the struggle
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The entire lower part of the west wall of the Hall of the Barque remained free of any bas-relief, save for a Christian cross, and only the dedicatory frieze is carved, in the name of Ramesses IV, beloved of Khonsu-Neferhotep.
Taking a look at the east wall of this hall, on the lower register, to the right, we see the hand of the king making an offering to Amun-Re and Mut, who are both standing. On both sides of the cartouche on the lintel, the king is wearing the blue war helmet, and making an offering to a seated, Falcon-headed Khonsu, who's head is surmounted by a disk within a crescent.
Above the lintel in the second register, Khonsu offers the palm tree of the years and the sed-festival symbol, while Isis breast-feeds the young king who wears the white corwn of the
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The Frieze above this register is composed of the anaglyph of Ramesses IV's royal name, Heqamaatre Setepenamun, and his Son of Ra name, Ramesses Maatmeryamun, in which the hieroglyph "mes" is replaced by the king wearing the braid of the crown prince. The term "mes" implies, according to its determinative, "to be born", "birth", or "born of".
To the right, on the bottom register of the east wall, the king is first purified by Thoth and Horus, before making his "royal ascent". Further right on the east wall, we discover Ramesses IV offering the first fruits of the season to a falcon headed Khonsu.
Across from the east wall on an outside block of the barque sanctuary is a fine image of Khonsu, wrapped in white linen over which two ribbons cross. He holds all of the scepters in his hand with the exception of the wadj. The hek and nekhakha scepters frame the djed scepter, from
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At the rear of this small hall without columns, on the north east rear wall, on the bottom register we find the king, blessed by a lion-headed Mut, making an offering of a vessel crowned with a falcon head and the disk within a crescent to a standing Khonsu-in-Thebes-Neferhotep, who is bearing the disk of Re encircled by a serpent. Upon the offered vessel is the same symbol as that of the god to whom it is offered. Above, the king, protected by Isis, makes the offering of his anaglyph to Khonsu, who now wears the feathers that are more characteristic of Montu. These two register are surmounted by another frieze.
The extant jambs and double lintel of the doorway at the back of the Hall of the Barque leading to the pronaos were constructed during the Ptolemaic period. On the upper lintel, two groups of
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To either side of the Hall of the Barque are small chapels, with a stairway situated in the southeast corner that leads to the roof, and a sun chapel, which provides a fine view of the surrounding area. Here, atop the temple, one finds footsteps etched into the stone. Pilgrims often traced the contour of their feet to piously mark their journey to such sanctuaries.
Beyond the Hall of the Barque, the pronaos has four columns of the polygonal type but which are slightly fluted on the top sections, except at their perfectly cylindrical bottoms. The base and the beginning of the shafts are carved from one block. Various chapels open to the north, with
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About the temple is an enclosure wall with a gate built by Ptolemy III known as Bab el-Amara.
The frequent appearance of blocks with unmatching and inverted decorations, such as an upside-down chariot above the top of the stairs leading to the roof, shows the extent to which stone from earlier buildings was used in this temple. Begun under Ramesses III, the temple continued to be renewed up into the Roman era.
This temple, located in one of Egypt's most frequently visited tourist areas, is well worth a visit. Notably, the roof with its sun chapel provides an excellent panorama of Karnak which was captured in a well-known drawing by the 19th century artist, David Roberts.