Mummification Museum

The Temple of Deir El-Medina, located in the city of Deir El-Medina, is a Ptolemaic temple.

Workers who constructed some of Thebes’ most beautiful temples resided at Deir El-Medina, a village on Luxor’s west bank.

Deir Al-Medina is a modest yet lovely Ptolemaic temple.

A series of temple complexes dedicated to the goddess Hathor were constructed by Ptolemy IV (Philopator) and some of his predecessors in the third century BC, on top of which this new complex was created. Incredibly well-preserved to this day, thanks to rigorous preservation procedures.

Because it was constructed primarily to serve the needs of the laborers, the temple has a number of distinctive elements that make it one of the few mud-brick temples still standing today.

They have faded, but the patterns and hieroglyphs still retain much of their former brilliance.

Observe the sun-worshiping Khepri baboons and the judgment scene, which is generally designated for tomb artwork.

The structure, known as Deir Al-Medina, or “Monastery of the Town,” was given this name by Coptic Christians who converted it into a monastery and renamed it.

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Mohamed Atta