432 TEMPLES IN THE VALLEY. [Chap. VII.
by Physcon or Euergetes IL, the courts in front
having been built at a later period by Ptolemy
Alexander I.; who, with his mother Cleopatra,
added some of the sculptures on the exterior of the
subterranean chamber. The front court is com-
posed of columns united by intercolumnar screens,
and opens by a pylon on a staircase of considerable
length, having on either side a solid balustrade of
masonry: and on the face of the rock to the east of
the inner court, is a tablet of the time of the second
Remeses, who presents an offering to Ra and Lucina.
The temple of Amunoph III. stands about a mile
from these to the eastward, in the same valley, be-
tween two and three miles from the river; and,
from the circumstance of these ruins being but little
known to travellers who visit El Kab, it may not
be amiss to observe, that this building bears about
70° west of south from the ruined town of
Eilethyas, and that the two above-mentioned, lying
close to the left of the road, may be visited on the
way.
This temple was also dedicated to the goddess of
Eilethyas. It consists of a single chamber supported
by four columns, eleven paces by nine, with a paved
platform on three sides, and an open area in front,
eight paces by seventeen, formed by columns, and
intercolumnar screens; to which the pylon, con-
nected with the body of the temple by a double row
of columns, forms the entrance.
The subjects of the interior are mostly offerings
by Physcon or Euergetes IL, the courts in front
having been built at a later period by Ptolemy
Alexander I.; who, with his mother Cleopatra,
added some of the sculptures on the exterior of the
subterranean chamber. The front court is com-
posed of columns united by intercolumnar screens,
and opens by a pylon on a staircase of considerable
length, having on either side a solid balustrade of
masonry: and on the face of the rock to the east of
the inner court, is a tablet of the time of the second
Remeses, who presents an offering to Ra and Lucina.
The temple of Amunoph III. stands about a mile
from these to the eastward, in the same valley, be-
tween two and three miles from the river; and,
from the circumstance of these ruins being but little
known to travellers who visit El Kab, it may not
be amiss to observe, that this building bears about
70° west of south from the ruined town of
Eilethyas, and that the two above-mentioned, lying
close to the left of the road, may be visited on the
way.
This temple was also dedicated to the goddess of
Eilethyas. It consists of a single chamber supported
by four columns, eleven paces by nine, with a paved
platform on three sides, and an open area in front,
eight paces by seventeen, formed by columns, and
intercolumnar screens; to which the pylon, con-
nected with the body of the temple by a double row
of columns, forms the entrance.
The subjects of the interior are mostly offerings