

Kawa
Location of Kawa

Granite ram of Amun with King Taharqa. Twenty-Fifth Dynasty, from Kawa. On display at the British Museum.
Kawa is a site in Sudan, located between the Third and Fourth Cataracts of the Nile on the east bank of the river, across from Dongola. In ancient times it was the site of several temples to the Egyptian god Amun, built by the Egyptian rulers Amenhotep III and Tutankhamun, and by Taharqa and other Kushite kings.[1]
Shrine of Taharqa
A small temple of Taharqa was once located at Kawa in Nubia (modern Sudan). It is located today in the Ashmolean Museum.[2]
 The Shrine of Taharqa, Ashmolean Museum The Shrine of Taharqa, Ashmolean Museum
 Shrine and Sphinx of Taharqa. Taharqa appears between the legs of the Ram-Spinx Shrine and Sphinx of Taharqa. Taharqa appears between the legs of the Ram-Spinx
 The Ram-Spinx and Taharqa The Ram-Spinx and Taharqa
 Relief of Taharqa on the shrine Relief of Taharqa on the shrine
_to_ram-headed_god_Amun-Re_accompanied_by_Anukis%252C_Temple_T_at_Kawa.jpg.webp) 
See also
References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kawa.
- ↑ Wilkinson, Richard H. (2000). The Complete Temples of Ancient Egypt. Thames & Hudson. pp. 11, 232
- ↑ "Taharqa Shrine". Ashmolean Museum.
- ↑ Museum notice
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