DAYR UMM AL-ĠANĀʾIM
Egyptian | Pȝ-sy (?) |
Arabic | الدير | دير أم الغنائم | دير المنيرة |
English | el-Deir | Deir el-Munira |
DEChriM ID | 40 |
Trismegistos GeoID | 14221 |
Pleiades ID | 776167 | PAThs ID | - |
Ancient name | - |
Modern name | Dayr Umm al-Ġanāʾim |
Latitude | 25.596300 |
Longitude | 30.730395 |
Date from | -700 |
Date to | 450 |
Typology | Military camp, temple |
Dating criteria | Funerary, numismatic and ceramic material |
Description | The site of el-Deir, also known as Dayr Umm al-Ġanāʾim, is located on the N-E edge of the Kharga Oasis, 25km N-E of the town of Madīnat al-Ḫāriǧa (Reddé 1999: 379; Dunand, Heim, Lichtenberg 2010: 13). It is situated on the Darb al-Rufūf, a route linking the oasis to Ğirğā and Faršūṭ, in the Nile Valley (Ghica 2012: 230). The site consists of an imposing fortress, a mud-brick temple dedicated to Amun of Hibis, a residential area dating to the Persian period, as well as five cemeteries. Occupation of the site seems to span from Prehistoric times until the fifth century CE (Bagnall & Tallet 2015: 4). Excavations have been ongoing since 1998 under the direction of Françoise Dunand, then under the direction of Gaëlle Tallet, in association with the University of Limoges. Research is currently funded by the French National Research Agency within the framework of the international CRISIS program. Fortress Temple Cemeteries In 2004, excavations began in the Western Necropolis, which has since been classified as ‘Christian’. The record of this cemetery includes various decorated textiles, a number of which are made from wool, a material rarely seen in ‘traditional’ funerary contexts (Dunand, Lichtenberg 2008: 276). The necropolis is somewhat cut into two independent sections, the northern and the southern half. The graves in the north are predominantly oriented E-W, while those in the south are oriented N-S (Dunand, Heim, Lichtenberg 2010: 42). It is this presence of woolen textiles, the E-W orientation of the graves, the single interments, as well as unique aspects of a number of mummies and representations of crosses that have led to the northern half being classified as a Christian cemetery (Dunand, Lichtenberg 2008: 276). This necropolis is consequently of particular importance in relation to the study of the evolution of funerary practices, particularly in relation to the spread of Christianity (Dunand, Lichtenberg 2008: 263, 274-275). It is understood to have been in use at least from the fourth century CE (Dunand, Lichtenberg 2008: 263, 276; Dunand, Heim, Lichtenberg 2010: 48). All of these chronological markers, if interpreted correctly, show that the site, or at least the cemeteries, have been in use for eight centuries, from at least the fourth century BCE, to the fourth/fifth centuries CE (Dunand, Heim, Lichtenberg 2010: 48). Embalmer’s workshop |
Archaeological research | While not excavated until recently, the site has been known for some time, with the early investigations and descriptions centered mainly on the fortress (Dunand, Lichtenberg 2008: 261). The first mention of the site comes from Cailliaud in 1821, after his visit in 1818 (Cailliaud 1821: 96 & pl. 22, 2-3). This simple initiate description was followed by the earliest geological study conducted in the oases, that of John Ball at the end of the 19th century, then by the work of H. J. Llewellyn Beadnell as part of the Egypt Geological Survey. Additionally, the site was likely visited by members of the Metropolitan Museum of Art (MMA), who conducted excavations in Kharga from 1908 to 1928, but no systematic exploration was ever undertaken. A number of objects in the MMA are believed to have originated from Umm al-Ġanāʾim, but their provenance has been lost (Heim, Lichtenberg 2010: 24). An area of the fortress was modified at the end of the 19th/beginning of the 20th century in order to house a small garrison of Egyptian soldiers (Dunand, Heim, Lichtenberg 2010: 22). The German scholar R. Naumann mentioned el-Deir in an article for MDAIK, which included a brief description and a plan of the fortress, whose walls were described as standing to a height of some 12 meters (Naumann 1939: 1-16 & fig. 1-7). Six decades later, a topographic survey of the site was then conducted by Ch. Braun and P. Deleuze, for which A. Lecler took photographs (Reddé 1999: 379). Eventually, excavations began on the site in 1998, led by Françoise Dunand (Dunand, Lichtenberg 2008: 9). Directorship was passed from Dunand to Gaëlle Tallet, and in 2010 a collaborative partnership was also initiated with the team from Amḥayda, led by Roger Bagnall. Since 2013, there has been an emphasis on restoration and development, and in 2014 the team’s architect Nicholas Warner has been engaged in a project geared towards restoring the fort in order to create a tourist-friendly site, while preserving the archaeological heritage (http://oasis.unilim.fr/patrimoine-oasien/). |
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