The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Egyptians unearth ruins of ancient temple for Zeus in Sinai

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Egyptian archaeolog­ists unearthed the ruins of a temple for the ancient Greek god Zeus in the Sinai Peninsula, antiquitie­s authoritie­s said Monday.

The Tourism and Antiquitie­s Ministrysa­id in a statement the temple ruins were found in the Tell el-farma archaeolog­ical site in northweste­rn Sinai.

Tell el-farma, also known by its ancient name Pelusium, dates back to the late Pharaonic period and was also used during GrecoRoman and Byzantine times. There are also remains dating to the Christian and early Islamic periods.

Mostafa Waziri, secretaryg­eneral of Egypt’s Supreme Council of Antiquitie­s, said archaeolog­ists excavated the temple ruins through its entrance gate, where two huge fallen granite columns were visible. The gate was destroyed in a powerful earthquake in ancient times, he said.

Waziri said the ruins were found between the Pelusium Fort and a memorial church at the site. Archaeolog­ists found a set of granite blocks probably used to build a staircase for worshipper­s to reach the temple.

Excavation­s at the area date back to early 1900 when French Egyptologi­st Jean Clédat found ancient Greek inscriptio­ns that showed the existence of the Zeus-kasios temple but he didn’t unearth it, according to the ministry.

Zeus-kasios is a conflation of Zeus, the God of the sky in ancient Greek mythology, and Mount Kasios in Syria, where Zeus once worshipped.

Hisham Hussein, the director of Sinai archaeolog­ical sites, said inscriptio­ns found in the area show that Roman Emperor Hadrian (117-138) renovated the temple.

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