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Minya

Sights in Minya

  1. Khemenu

    Little remains of the wealthy ancient city of Khemenu, the most striking ruins being two colossal 14th-century BC quartzite statues of Thoth as a baboon. These supported part of Thoth's temple, which was rebuilt throughout antiquity.

    A Middle Kingdom temple gateway and a pylon of Ramses II, using stone plundered from nearby Tell al-Amarna, also survive. The most interesting ruins are from the Coptic basilica, which reused columns and even the baboon statues, though first removing their giant phalluses. The 'open-air museum' is officially free, but if you arrive with a police escort you will be expected to pay baksheesh.

    reviewed

  2. Tell al-Amarna Necropolis

    <p> Two groups of cliff tombs, about 8km apart, make up the <strong> Tell al-Amarna necropolis </strong> which features some coloured, though defaced, wall paintings of life during the Aten revolution. Remains of temples and private or administrative buildings are scattered across a wide area of this imperial city. </p>

    reviewed

  3. Zawiyyet al-Mayyiteen

    On the east bank about 7km southeast of town, a large Muslim and Christian cemetery, called Zawiyyet al-Mayyiteen, consists of several hundred mud-brick mausoleums. Stretching for 4km from the road to the hills and said to be one of the largest cemeteries in the world, it is a strange and thought-provoking sight.

    reviewed

  4. Tuna al-Gebel

    Several kilometres south of Hermopolis and then 5km along a road into the desert, Tuna al-Gebel was the necropolis of Hermopolis. Given the lack of tourists in the area, check with the Minya tourist office that the site is open.

    reviewed

  5. Museum

    Displays tomb paintings, glassware, sculpture including a limestone statue of a Ptolemaic priest, baboon and pencil-thin ibis mummies, and other artefacts from nearby Hermopolis and Tuna al-Gebel, in no particular chronological order.

    reviewed