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| Temple of Khnum at Esna | 
The Temple of Khnum at Esna,  or  Isna, 
was  constructed about  50 
Kilometres  south  of 
ancient Thebes,  better  knew 
today  as  Luxor. The temple was devoted to the
ram-headed deity Kum or Khnum, a female counterpart,  the 
goddess  Neith,  and their son, leaving in a triad
construction similar to Edfu. 
It  has  3 
precept  entrance doors and, as
strange as it sounds, with some Inca  style  construction 
of  unadorned design,  as  in  earlier 
Egyptian  times  at the 
Koricancha  temple  in 
Cuzco,  Peru. Although there are
older sophistications, most of the temple was primitively built during the
(Greco - Roman) period, the Greek penchant for this place likely was to do with
the fact that Greeks concerned the Egyptian goddess Neith with their goddess
Athena, the goddess of wisdom. 
Dedicated to Khnum, the creator god who fashioned human-kind
on  his 
potter’s  wheel  using 
Nile  clay,  the 
temple  was  began 
by Ptolemy  VI  Philometor 
(180-145  BC)  and 
built  over  the 
ruins  of previous temples.  The hypostyle Hall, as it stands today, was
constructed by Romans.  Parts of the
ornaments date from as late as the 3 rd 
Century  AD.  
In  the  design 
of  this  temple 
there  were  great 
astrological imports as Khnum in a way is also a god of the universe on
account  that  occasionally 
he  is  was 
as  a  ram 
with  4 heads.  The ram in hieroglyphs acts spirit and as
such each head is thought to represent the spirit of a several Egyptian god,
Ra, Shu, Seb and Osiris as the four elements: "fire, air, earth and
water",  all  of 
which  make  the 
easy  universe  or 
Zodiac.  Khnum was  also 
strongly  tied  to 
Osiris  as  both 
were  river  gods 
that finally  got  the 
Nile,  these  gods 
were  eventually  merged and 
worshiped  in  a 
various  way. 
The columns at the entry represent lotus flowers, a mythological
symbolism of the birth of Ra, the Sun 
god  that  supposedly 
sprang  from  one 
of  these  flowers 
at  the  beginning 
of  the  creation 
of  the universe.  Likewise in the walls of this temple are
engraved a great number of calendars, and in the cap appears  a 
great  Zodiac  agency 
with  Egyptian  and 
Roman  symbols. 
Two pictures of the goddess Hathor at each face of the ceiling
look giving birth to the sun, and the 37 men navigating in a boat representing
the Dekans are depicted at her belly. 
Inside of the Dekans (sky divisions) are the 12 Zodiacal symbols very similar
to how they are known today. 
