You are looking across the "Sacred
Pool" of the Grand Temple of Amen-Ra
in the city now called Luxor. When this temple
was built, however, the city was called Wa'Set.
The Grand Temple of Amen-Ra was rebuilt in
stone upon the ruins of a far older Temple
for Pharaoh Senwosret I, of the 11th dynasty
in 2000 B.C. His statutes still stand in
the Luxor and Cairo museums and are shown
in volumes One and Two of our video series.
The Greeks called him Sesostris. Senwosret
I called this place the Ipet Isut,
meaning the
"Most Select of Places."
The Greeks called it the "Hermothis" the
domain of Hermes. For the ancient Kemites
the temple the Arabs call Karnac was the
realm of Tehuti or Thoth, good of wisdom,
inventor of writing and books, to root to
the word Thought. From 2000 B.C. to 525 B.C.,
Wa'Set was capital of KMT.
The Grand Temple was the main administrative
center for the ancient chain of temples along
the Nile, which still stand, mark the ancient
African cities and, if one can read the ancient
languages there, can read the history of
these African people for at least 4,000 years
and some places even longer.
Hard evidence shows that formal human burials
have taken place at the city called Wa'Set
for 100,000 years. Across the river from
this temple is the location of the tomb of
Tutanhkamen and the "Valley's of the
King's & Queens" of the "New
Kingdom". (1650 B.C. - 1290 B.C.) Abydos
was the royal burial ground of the 'Old Kingdom"
Pharaohs.
Luxor is the Arab name meaning "City
of the Palaces"
applied to after 641 A.D. to the city of
Wa'Set, which Greeks renamed Thebes after
332 B.C. The truth is sometimes hidden right
before ones very eyes. Amen.
The temple of Amen-Ra, built by over 500
Pharaohs still stands, which is probably
why people still say Amen today. It also
shows Masons wearing aprons 4000 years ago.
This website is dedicated to displaying the
many varied images and facts of the African
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