A comprehensive survey of all Egypt s temples from Luxor and Karnak to those in the delta oases and Nubia It traces the processes of building and decorating how they functioned and what happened when they were robbed and desecrated It also discusses the Egyptian pantheon rites and festivals
If you're looking for a primer on Egyptian temples, check this one out. The first half of the book synthetically treats Egyptian temples as a whole, discussing their architecture, evolution, and function. The second half is a run-down of archaeological sites by region. The book is profusely illustrated throughout with photographs of art and ruins, drawings of the same, and maps.
Most Thames & Hudson books I've read aim to cover all the major aspects of the topic, and this one is a prime example. Chapters describe how temple design evolved throughout ancient Egyptian history; the process of construction; the "standard" temple layout that developed in the New Kingdom and afterward; the symbolism that permeated temple design (a particularly strong element of the book, because symbolism is Wilkinson's specialty); and the temple's religious functions. The last and largest section is a catalogue of temple sites, moving north to south from Alexandria to Jebel Barkal, with side trips to the western oases and the sites in the Sinai region. As a result, the book can double as a guide to most Egyptian archaeological sites, including the pyramids, because every pyramid had a temple at its base.
The downside of this approach is that if you have space limitations you can't cover everything in much detail. The catalogue of sites treats all but the most important and well-preserved temples very briefly, and it leaves out a few of the most minor temple sites. The treatment of general subjects like rites and festivals is also rather cursory. I'd particularly like to see more coverage of priests and the temple's economic significance. However, Egyptian temples are a very big subject, and it's hard to fit all that information into 256 pages. To get a general understanding of their evolution, construction, design, and cultural significance, there is no better book than this one. Its major rivals are Temple of the World, which discusses only selected sites but gives good descriptions of the activities performed there, and Temples of Ancient Egypt, which discusses a handful of limited topics but gives an impression of how temples functioned in different eras.
The Complete Temples of Ancient Egypt is structurally impressive. Wilkinson assembles a meticulous inventory of temples — their locations, layouts, chronological developments, and architectural principles. It’s especially strong in mapping spatial hierarchies and symbolic axes, offering detailed explanations of pylons, courtyards, sanctuaries, and their alignment to celestial or ritual logic. The visual documentation is abundant, and for architectural comparison, it’s highly effective.
And yet, something’s missing.
The book treats temples as formal systems, not as lived or sensed environments. The textures of stone, the acoustics of hypostyle halls, the temperature shifts between thresholds — none of this enters the analysis. Wilkinson breaks down structure after structure with admirable clarity, but without attending to the bodily or atmospheric experience of these spaces. The temples remain abstract — diagrams more than places.
I found myself cataloguing rather than connecting. There’s no exploration of how these buildings shaped attention, awe, or ritual embodiment. The reader is told what the temples are, but rarely how they functioned as emotional or sensory matrices.
This is a deeply useful reference — highly legible, logically constructed — but it engages more with order than with presence. A guidebook of immense value, though one best supplemented with more immersive sources.
The blurb above quotes the word "comprehensive" and that's precisely what you get here. Every Ancient Egyptian site is listed, from pre-Dynastic times to the Greco-Roman period. It's well illustrated throughout with both photographs and drawings, and for any student of this fascinating subject, this would be a great addition to your library. To the mildly curious though, this would be a little heavy going, and probably light on the material one normally associates with Ancient Egypt, i.e the mummies, the Great Pyramids etc.
Een super degelijk standaardwerk over de Egyptische tempels. Van de relatief jonge, goedbewaarde toeristische trekpleisters als Edfu, Philae... tot Luxor en Karnak... tot de minder bekende Nubische tempels, de tempels in de Fayoem en Nijldelta en de sites die amper bewaard zijn gebleven maar die uitermate belangrijk waren in de Egyptische geschiedenis. Ik heb zéér veel bijgeleerd uit dit werk. Een aantal van de sites wil ik toch wel zeker eens bezocht hebben, maar hiervoor zal ik niet terecht kunnen bij reguliere touroperators vrees is :p
A book that gives an overview of egyptian temples and has a catalog of some of the most important temples. Its language is clear and easy to understand and for anyone who wants to explore egyptian temple architecture deeper it has a good bibliography.
This is one I MUST buy! It has everything on the temples my current library lacks complete with pictures and floor plans. Looks like it can be found fairly affordable, too! I'll be checking it out a lot from the library for reference until I buy it. It's such a relief to find something good after a string of bad books on Egypt!