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113:, along with its brick enclosure wall and the well. The temple precinct had an area of 78×58 metres; the temple itself is much smaller, with an area of 13×16 m. Its entrance faces south. The outer walls do not have much decoration but on the inside the reliefs are well preserved. The shrine is surrounded by a corridor from which side chapels and a
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of Japan worked on the site, they cleared the enclosure wall and the enclosed precinct from debris and excavated the temple's well which was filled with pottery shreds. Thirty-two strata of fillings were detected in the well, up to the point of 4 meters under ground level, where water made further
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The importance of the Isis temple of Deir el-Shelwit is because Graeco-Roman era religious buildings are rare in this area, and this is the only one not associated with the
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excavation impossible. Remains found in the well prove that the well (and the temple itself) was already abandoned and used as a trash deposit by the Coptic era.
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studied the inscriptions on the propylon and published their studies in 1992. Between 1971 and 1979 archaeologists from the
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According to inscriptions on the propylon, construction of the Isis temple started around the beginning of 1st century
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can be seen. On the reused blocks built into the outer walls of the temple, reliefs stylistically dated to the
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in the mid-19th century, but he did not make a detailed description of it. A French expedition led by
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The propylon is located 60 meters east from the temple, and is lavishly decorated on all sides.
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The reliefs of the temple are dated to the Greek-Roman era and are similar to the ones in
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Today all that remains of the temple is its small main building and ruins of the
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collection of the
University of Chicago - this link doesn't work anymore!
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Dieter Arnold, Sabine H. Gardiner, Nigel
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from the Greco-Roman period. It stands on the West bank of the
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and reached its finished form during the Greek-Roman era.
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102:and about 4 km south of
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257:Le temple du Deir Chelouit
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60:Reliefs on the propylon
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188:cartouches
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25:32°34′42″E
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137:History
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323:ISBN
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