A PHP Error was encountered

Severity: Warning

Message: session_start(): open(/var/cpanel/php/sessions/ea-php54/sess_vcgbrics9gksieag0t390fi7f3, O_RDWR) failed: No such file or directory (2)

Filename: hooks/pick_language.php

Line Number: 31

A PHP Error was encountered

Severity: Warning

Message: session_start(): Cannot send session cache limiter - headers already sent (output started at /home4/ramyn09/public_html/system/codeigniter/core/Exceptions.php:183)

Filename: hooks/pick_language.php

Line Number: 31

A PHP Error was encountered

Severity: Warning

Message: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /home4/ramyn09/public_html/system/codeigniter/core/Exceptions.php:183)

Filename: drivers/Session_cookie.php

Line Number: 701

Ain Umm El Dabadib | Blog - Lady Egypt Tours

Ain Umm El Dabadib | Blog

Ain Umm El Dabadib

Ain Umm El Dabadib

 

The broad flat Wadi in which Ain Umm el-Dabadib stands was crossed by at least three ancient tracks, offshoots of the Darb Ain Amur. The first track led from the fortress of el-Labekha past el-Dabadib and continued on westwards towards Ain Amur and Dakhla Oasis, while a second crossed the plain directly towards Hibis Temple. A third track crossed through el-Dabadib and north-westwards over the escarpment, eventually leading to a route connecting the Nile Valley with Dakhla Oasis. The fortress stands at the southern end of the settlement – a magnificent structure even today with its huge mud brick walls enclosed within an area of around 100m square. The area within the enclosure is partly covered by encroaching sand but still has many structures visible.
 
Four massive rectangular towers marked the corners of the fort, making it architecturally different to any other fortress in Kharga Oasis (which had rounded towers), suggesting that it may have been a later construction. The tallest of the el-Dabadib towers, on the south-western corner, still contains remains of spiral staircase and rises to a current height of about 15m. The main entrance was on the southern side and smaller buildings crowded around its southern and western walls. The interior of the fortress is now ruined, its floors collapsed, but several vaulted chambers at ground level are still intact.
 
Remains of a small Christian church adjoin the east side of the fortress, its arches and pillars forgotten and partly buried by sand until 1998 when local antiquity thieves damaged the walls in search of artifacts. Although the damage (done by battering the walls with a forklift truck) is extensive, there are still remains of the original red plaster and Greek, Coptic and Arabic graffiti and prayers.
 
 
The ruins of a settlement exist on the eastern side of the fortress, but the main visible settlement areas begin about half a kilometer to the north, where hundreds of small buildings served as homes and shops. The fortified town appears to consist of many luxurious houses, sometimes up to three storey's high, which are currently being studied by the team undertaking the North Kharga Oasis Survey. A smaller and slightly earlier settlement lay further to the north. In the north-east section of the fortified settlement, next to a spring or well, are the remains of an Egyptian-style temple with sides slanted inwards from the base. Recent discoveries in the area include a possible mill and a small hermitage.
 
The fortress town seems to have been surrounded by a large area of cultivation, irrigated by a vast system of underground aqueducts. The five aqueducts so far discovered at Ain Umm el-Dabadib are by far the best example of such elaborate tunnels in Kharga Oasis, but more sophisticated than the Roman qanats in the other areas and similar to the ‘foggara’ found in Libya and Algeria. The tunnels are also similar to those in ancient Persia, leading scholars to speculate that the irrigation system may date back to the Persian occupation of Kharga. The aqueducts run in a northerly direction from the town towards the escarpment winding and bending along the sides of three narrow valleys. They all feature regular vertical shafts which probably functioned as air vents as well as access for clearing out the sand which must have been intrusive.
 
Ten different cemetery areas have been identified at Ain Umm el-Dabadib by the NKOS team, which include both rock-cut and shallow graves. The rock-cut tombs are in a spur of rock to the east of Aqueduct 3 and the desecrated remains of many mummified human bodies were found scattered about. Some of the tombs were lined with mud bricks and some showed remains of mud brick façades. NKOS are currently studying the methods of mummification.
 
Several areas with Prehistoric remains have also been located at Ain Umm el-Dabadib. The whole plain is an ancient dried-up lake, or ‘playa’ where the action of sand and wind over the millennia can be seen in the shapes of the rocks. It is possible that the site was occupied sporadically from these early times, but its present importance is in providing valuable information covering the transitional period between Pagan and Christian Egypt.
 
Sadly, since writing this report on Ain Umm el-Dabadib there has been yet more heavy damage to the site inflicted by antiquities looters driving a front-loader. The extensive damage includes the total loss of the temple and a tower, destruction of the east side of the fortified settlement and looting in one of the cemetery areas.

RELEVANT TOURS

EGYPTIAN LEGACY

from $1845

tour info 11 Days / 10 Nights
tour info 11 Days / 10 Nights

BEST OF EGYPT

from $1245

tour info 9 Days / 8 Nights
tour info 13 Days / 12 Nights

CAIRO CITY BREAK

from $460

tour info 4 Days / 3 Nights
tour info 8 Days / 7 Nights
make an enquiry
Make an Enquiry
Have a questions? We're happy to help
Enquire Now
book now
Make a Booking
Book your favorite tour now
Book Now
Live Chat
Live Chat
Start A Live Chat with us
Chat Now