Gebel Adda

Gebel Adda
View of Gebel Adda in 1910
Highest point
Coordinates22°17′50″N 31°38′13″E / 22.29709°N 31.636884°E / 22.29709; 31.636884
Geography
Gebel Adda is located in Egypt
Gebel Adda
Gebel Adda

Gebel Adda (also Jebel Adda) was a mountain and archaeological site on the right bank of the Nubian Nile in what is now southern Egypt. The settlement on its crest was continuously inhabited from the late Meroitic period (2nd century AD–4th century) to the Ottoman period, when it was abandoned by the late 18th century. It reached its greatest prominence in the 14th and 15th centuries, when it seemed to have been the capital of late kingdom of Makuria. The site was superficially excavated by the American Research Center in Egypt just before being flooded by Lake Nasser in the 1960s, with much of the remaining excavated material, now stored in the Royal Ontario Museum in Canada, remaining unpublished. Unearthed were Meroitic inscriptions, Old Nubian documents, a large amount of leatherwork, two palatial structures and several churches, some of them with their paintings still intact. The nearby ancient Egyptian rock temple of Horemheb, also known as temple of Abu Oda, was rescued and relocated.[1]

  1. ^ Ian Shaw, Robert Jameson (eds.): A Dictionary of Archaeology. Blackwell Publishers, Oxford 2002, p. 249, ISBN 0-631-23583-3.

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