These massive temples—known today as Abu Simbel—were built in the 13th century BCE by the pharaoh Ramesses II. He left a legacy of monuments and temples across Egypt, many of which, like Abu Simbel, featured Ramesses II himself as the star attraction. But over the centuries, these temples were almost completely buried in sand and forgotten. It was not until the early 1800s when an explorer saw the heads of the colossal statues poking through the sand that the temples were again discovered. Then in the 20th century, construction of a dam on the Nile River formed Lake Nasser, a massive reservoir that would have flooded the site where the temples stood. To save them from inundation, the temples were disassembled and relocated to a nearby hill. The process took almost five years and required that workers cut the temples into pieces and reassemble them exactly as they were built 3,000 years ago. We think Ramesses II would approve.
3,000 years of history
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Ruins of Inca temples and terraces on Huayna Picchu, Peru
-
World Water Day
-
Martin Luther King Jr. Day
-
Badlands National Park turns 44
-
A red fox on the Swiss side of the Jura Mountain range
-
Moeraki Boulders, South Island, New Zealand
-
Dog days of summer
-
Rosa Parks Day
-
Dhaka, Bangladesh
-
National Trails Day
-
An Alpine fairy-tale castle
-
Alam-Pedja Nature Reserve, Estonia
-
Gunnerside, Yorkshire Dales National Park, England
-
American goldfinch
-
Tintern Abbey, Wales
-
Te Rewa Rewa Bridge near New Plymouth, New Zealand
-
Celebrating Norwegian Constitution Day
-
Detroit Industry Murals by Diego Rivera
-
Blackbird in Essex, England
-
Grab onto the handlebars, kid
-
2024 Toronto International Film Festival
-
Ode to the sun
-
Honoring those who served
-
Notre-Dame Cathedral reopens
-
Nothing plain about it
-
World Meteorological Day
-
Sequential images of a total solar eclipse
-
Polar bears
-
World Migratory Bird Day
-
Celebrating the International Day of Forests
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

