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Conceptually similar
AR6176868 
AR6176678 
AR6176809 
AR6176863 
AR6176870 
AR6176674 
AR6176735 
AR6176806 
AR6176810 
AR6176677 
AR6176688 
AR6176679 
AR6176673 
AR6176682 
AR6176667 
AR6176683 
AR6176675 
AR6176807 
AR6176681 
AR6176871 
Niche, apse and plaster decoration added in Roman times as part of an imperial cult temple, in the Vestibule, c. 301 AD, at the Luxor Temple, built c. 1392 BC, under Amenhotep III, 18th dynasty, New Kingdom, and Tutankhamun, Horemheb and Ramesses II, at Thebes, Luxor, Egypt. The niche has 2 columns with acanthus leaf capitals, and originally housed a statue of the deified emperor Diocletian, who used Luxor temple as a garrison from 301 AD. The walls were painted with the 2 Augusti (Diocletian and Maximian) and the 2 Caesars. Thebes is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen 
Unique Identifier AR6176869 
Type Image 
Purpose Public 
Size 7087px × 4579px 
Photo Credit Manuel Cohen / Art Resource, NY 
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Tags
14TH CENTURY BC
18TH DYNASTY
4th century AD
AFRICA
African
ANCIENT
ANCIENT EGYPT
ANCIENT EGYPTIAN
APSE
ARCHAEOLOGICAL
Archaeology
ARCHEOLOGICAL
archeology
CAPITAL
CIVILISATION
CIVILIZATION
classical
COLOR IMAGE
colour image
Column
Corinthian
cult
DAY
DIOCLETIAN
Egyptian
Exterior
HERITAGE
History
HORIZONTAL
LUXOR
LUXOR TEMPLE
NEW KINGDOM
Niche
NORTH AFRICA
NORTH AFRICAN
Outdoors
OUTSIDE
Plaster
Roman
SITE
Temple
TETRARCHY
THèBES
Tourist Attraction
UNESCO
UNESCO WORLD HERITAGE SITE
VESTIBULE
visitor attraction
WASET