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The
town of Akhmin stands on the ruins of the
ancient town of Ipu, dedicated to the fertility
god Min. This town was the capital of the
9th Upper Egyptian nome, and was occupied
from prehistoric times through to the end
of pharaonic history. It was once home to
an immense temple complex dediated to Min,
supposedly larger than the complex of Amun
at Karnak. When Akhmim became the center
of Christianity in Upper Egypt, the church
of Anu-Shenouda was built on top of this
complex.
Recent
excavations are beginning to uncover fascinating
glimpses of the remains of Ipu. An 11 meter-high
statue of Queen Meritamun, daughter and consort
of Ramesses II, was discovered here in 1981,
along with talatat blocks from the reign
of Akhenaten and fragments of other statues.
Excavations began here again in 1991, and
have uncovered more traces of the Min temple
built by Ramesses, including parts of several
colossal statues of Ramesses II.
HOURS
OF OPERATION:
Open daily, 9 AM – 5 PM
TICKET
COST:
Egyptian: 1 LE
Foreign: 20 LE
Student rates available to bearers of a valid student ID from an Egyptian
university or an International Student
ID Card (ISIC)
LOCATION:
Downtown Akhmin, east bank of Nile near Sohag
DIRECTIONS:
BY BUS: A microbus runs from Sohag to
Akhmin
BY
TAXI: ask for “mintaqat akhmin” for
the town an "timsaal meret amun" for
the statue
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