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DENDERA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V08, Page 19 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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DENDERA  , a

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village in Upper
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Egypt, situated in the angle of the
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great westward
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bend of the Nile opposite Kena . Here was the ancient city of Tentyra, capital of the Tentyrite
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nome, the
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sixth of Upper Egypt, and the
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principal seat of the worship of
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Hathor [
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Aphrodite] the cow-goddess of love and joy . The old
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Egyptian name of Tentyra was written'In•t (Ant), but the pronunciation of it is unknown: in later days it was 'In.t-t-ntr•t, " ant of the goddess," pronounced Ni-tent6ri, whence TEvrupa, TEvruprs . The temple of Hathor was built in the 1st century B.c., being begun under the later
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Ptolemies (Ptol . XIII.) and finished by Augustus, but much of the decoration is later . A great rectangular enclosure of crude bricks, measuring about goo X 850 ft., contains the sacred buildings: it was entered by two stone gateways, in the north and the east sides, built by Domitian . Another smaller enclosure lies to the east with a gateway also of the
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Roman period . The plan of the temple may be supposed to have included a colonnaded court in front of the
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present
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facade, and pylon towers at the entrance; but these were never built, probably for lack of funds . The
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building, which is of
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sandstone,
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measures about 300 ft. from front to back, and consists of two oblong rectangles; the foremost, placed transversely to the other, is the great
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hypostyle hall or pronaos, the broadest and loftiest
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part of the temple, measuring 135 ft. in width, and comprising about one-third of the whole structure; the facade has six columns with heads of Hathor, and the ceiling is supported by eighteen great columns . The second rectangle contains a small hypostyle hall with six columns, and the sanctuary, with their subsidiary chambers . The sanctuary is surrounded by a corridor into which the chambers open: on the west side is an apartment forming a court and kiosk for the celebration of the feast of the New
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Year, the principal festival of Dendera . On the roof of the temple, reached by two staircases, are a
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pavilion and several chambers dedicated to the worship of
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Osiris .

Inside and out, the whole of the temple is covered with scenes and

inscriptions in crowded characters, of ceremonial and religious import; the decoration is even carried into a remarkable series of hidden passages and chambers or crypts made in the solid walls for the reception of its most valuable treasures . The architectural style is dignified and pleasing in design and proportions . The interior of the building has been completely cleared: from the outside, however, its imposing effect is quite lost, owing to the mounds of rubbish amongst which it is sunk . North-east of the entrance is a " Birth House " for the cult of the child Harsemteu, and behind the temple a small temple of Isis, dating from the reign of Augustus . The
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original foundation of the temple must date back to a remote time: the
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work of some of the early builders is in fact referred to in the inscriptions on the present structure . Petrie's excavation of the cemetery behind the temple enclosures revealed burials dating from the
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fourth dynasty onwards, the most important being mastables of the period from the sixth to the
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eleventh dynasties; many of these exhibited a
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peculiar degradation of the contemporary style of sculpture . The zodiacs of the temple of Dendera gave rise to a consider-able literature before their
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late origin was established by Champollion in 1822: one of them, from a chamber on the roof, was removed in 182o to the Bibliotheque Nationale in Paris . Figures of the celebrated
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Cleopatra VI. occur amongst the sculptures on the exterior of the temple, but they are purely conventional, without a trace of
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portraiture . Horns of
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Edfu, the enemy of the crocodiles and hippopotami of Set, appears sometimes as the consort of Hathor of Dendera . The skill displayed by the Tentyrites in capturing the
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crocodile is referred to by Strabo and other Greek writers . Juvenal, in his seventeenth satire, takes as his text a religious riot between the Tentyrites and the neighbouring Ombites, in the course of which an unlucky Ombite was torn to pieces and devoured by the opposite party . The Ombos in question is not the distant Ombos south of Edfu, where the crocodile was worshipped; Petrie has shown that opposite Coptos, only about 15 M. from Tentyra, there was another Ombos, venerating the hippopotamus sacred to Set .

See A .

Mariette, Denderah (5 vols.
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atlas and text, 1869–188o) ; W . M . F . Petrie, Denderah (1900) ; Nagada and Ballas (1896) . (F . L1, .

End of Article: DENDERA
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