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The Temple of Debod [1] (Spanish: Templo de Debod) is an ancient Nubian temple currently located in Madrid, Spain. The temple was originally erected in the early 2nd century BC 15 km (9.3 mi) south of Aswan , Egypt.
Some of those divine beings are Amun of Debod, Arensnuphis, Harpocrates, Hathor of Bigga, Horus, Isis, Khnum, Osiris, Mandulis, Nephthys, Satis, Tephenis, and Thoth. [3] The carvings also honor two heroic Nubian brothers turned demigods named Pihor and Pedesi. [2] [3] Pedesi means "he whom Isis has given" and, Pihor means "he who belongs to ...
It is named after prince Francisco Pío de Saboya, a member of the Italian Pio di Savoia family, whose mother Juana de Moura owned property there. Later, barracks (Cuartel de la Montaña) were constructed there. The Madrilene rebels who fought the Napoleonic invaders were executed there on the morning of 3 May 1808, as painted by Francisco de Goya.
Please, let me know if you use this work outside Wikimedia Commons sending me an email on Poco a poco or to diego(at)delso.photo with reference to the URL in the case of a website or to the ISBN/author/title in the case of a printed work or eBook.
I've just looked at my copy of Debod: Tres décadas de historia en Madrid,, and it doesn't give coordinates, just "16km south of Aswan". Even if original coordinated should be added, the Madrid coordinates are still relevant and should be kept.
Temple ruins in 1960. The temple of Derr is more elaborate than the speos of Beit el-Wali and "consisted of a sequence of two hypostyle halls (probably preceded by a forecourt and a pylon) leading to a triple sanctuary where a cult of statues of Ramesses II, Amon-Re, Ra-Horakhty and Ptah was celebrated."
Temple of Debod (Madrid, Spain) Temple of Dendur (Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, United States) Temple of Taffeh (Rijksmuseum van Oudheden in Leiden, the Netherlands) Temple of Ellesyia (Museo Egizio, Turin, Italy
The Church and Convent of Santo Domingo de Guzmán (Spanish: Templo de Santo Domingo de Guzmán) in the city of Oaxaca de Juárez is an example of New Spanish Baroque architecture. The first construction projects for the building date back to 1551, when the Antequera de Oaxaca's City Council ceded a total of twenty-four lots to the Dominican ...