Temple of Mut, Jebel Barkal

Coordinates: 18°32′7″N 31°49′50″E / 18.53528°N 31.83056°E / 18.53528; 31.83056
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Temple of Mut, Jebel Barkal
Northern State, Sudan
RegionNubia
Coordinates18°32′7″N 31°49′50″E / 18.53528°N 31.83056°E / 18.53528; 31.83056
TypeSanctuary
Part ofJebel Barkal
History
BuilderTaharqa
Founded680s BCE
Arab States

The Temple of Mut, also named Temple B300, is a temple at

White Crown of Upper Egypt. Dedicated to the goddess Mut, the wife of Amun, the Temple of Mut was erected by pharaoh Taharqa in the 680s BCE, at a time when he ruled Upper and Lower Egypt.[1]

History

Restoring a ruined structure abandoned by

New Kingdom pharaohs, named B300-sub, Taharqa built an outer temple of cut stone masonry comprising entrance kiosk, pylon, Bes pillars, columns topped with sistrum-headed Hathor capitals and carved five wall painted chambers into the rock base to honor the goddess Mut, who believed to dwell together with the state-god Amun inside Jebel Barkal.[2] From the outer structure only two of the Hathor columns still survive, but the rock-cut chambers are in good shape and were cleaned and restored from 2015 to 2018.[3]

  • Ground plan of the Temple of Mut.
    Ground plan of the Temple of Mut.
  • View of the ruins of B 300 in 1821 by Frédéric Cailliaud.
    View of the ruins of B 300 in 1821 by Frédéric Cailliaud.
  • Ruins of the temple of Mut at the foot of Jebel Barkal.
    Ruins of the temple of Mut at the foot of Jebel Barkal.

Setting

The rock-chambers contain restored paintings with representations of Amon, Taharqa and lion-headed or human-headed forms of the Double Crown wearing Mut. The paintings are accompanied by hieroglyphic inscriptions, where Taharqa says that he found the temple built by the "ancestors" in "humble work", and that he rebuilt it as "splendid work".[4] The figures are painted in ochre and white kaolin on a background painted in Egyptian blue. Alluding in some regard to the myth of the Eye of Ra, the goddesses represented in the Temple of Mut played important roles both in the myth of the divine origin of the king and in coronation ceremonies.[5]

Reliefs and paintings

  • View inside the first rock cut chamber of B 300 as it was in 1821 by Frédéric Cailliaud
    View inside the first rock cut chamber of B 300 as it was in 1821 by Frédéric Cailliaud
  • Amun accompanied by Mut with the uraeus-pinnacle shown crowned with a sun disk hanging from the cliff.
    Amun accompanied by Mut with the uraeus-pinnacle shown crowned with a sun disk hanging from the cliff.
  • Taharqa, followed by the sistrum shaking queen Takahatenamun.
    Taharqa, followed by the sistrum shaking queen Takahatenamun.
  • Taharqa in the Temple of Mut.
    Taharqa in the Temple of Mut.
  • Lion-headed Mut with Taharqa.
    Lion-headed Mut with Taharqa.

See also

References

  1. ^ History of temple B300.
  2. ^ Timothy Kendall, El-Hassan Ahmed Mohammed; A Visitor's Guide to The Jebel Barkal Temples. The NCAM Jebel Barkal Mission; 2016 pp.12-24.
  3. ^ Jebel Barkal, The Mut Temple Conservation Project.
  4. ; pp.132-135.
  5. ^ Timothy Kendall; Napatan Temples: a Case Study from Gebel Barkal. The Mythological Nubian Origin of Egyptian Kingship and the Formation of the Napatan State. Tenth International Conference of Nubian Studies. Rome, September 9–14, 2002.

Sources