Highlights of Egypt | Philae Temple
Egypt’s Philae Temple is one of the most picturesque in the country and the complex is one of the most fascinating ancient sights in the world. Built to honour Isis, the goddess of magic, fertility and motherhood, and death, healing and rebirth, the temple was originally located on Philae Island. Construction of the current temple complex was started by Nectanebo I, a 30th-dynasty pharaoh, and added to over time by Greek, Roman and Byzantine rulers. In the early 20th century, with the construction of the Aswan Low Dam, the temple complex was flooded and UNESCO launched a preservation project and had the temple relocated to higher ground to prevent it from becoming submerged by the rising waters. Now it sits on Agilika Island just south of the old Aswan Dam.
Often referred to as the Temple of Isis as well as the Philae Temple, it is the last temple built in the classical Egyptian style. Construction of the temple began around 690 BC and it was one of the last remaining places where the goddess was worshipped after the arrival of Christianity in Egypt. The temple officially closed in 550 AD and was used as a church by early Christians.
The Significance of the Philae Temple
Philae in Greek or Pilak in ancient Egyptian means ‘the end’, probably because the island was used to define the southern most limit of Egypt and its boundary with Nubia. From early Egyptian times it was sacred to Isis because it was believed to the be one of the burial places of the god Osiris, her brother and husband. While evidence shows that temples existed on the island from at least the 6th century, the oldest surviving structure today is the Temple of Isis itself which dates back to approximately 380 BC.
Isis is an important figure in the ancient world, being both a major goddess in ancient Egyptian religion and worshipped in the Greco-Roman world. The goddess of fertility and motherhood, she is seen as a giver of life and protector of kings but also is believed to help the dead into the afterlife. According to the Isis-Osiris myth, Isis was the daughter of Geb, god of the Earth, and Nut, goddess of the Sky. She married her brother, the divine king Osiris, and produced his heir, Horus. When Osiris was murdered by Set, she resurrected her slain husband using her magical skills.
In the first millennium BC, Isis and Osiris became the most widely worshipped of the Egyptian deities. Rulers in Egypt and its neighbor to the south, the ancient region of Nubia, began to build temples dedicated primarily to Isis and her temple at Philae became a place of worship for both Egyptians and Nubians. Her magical power was considered to be greater than that of other gods and she was seen as protecting the kingdom from its enemies. The myth was very significant to ancient Egyptians who believed the Nile River flooded every year because of the tears Isis wept for Osiris.