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Dush, Egypt

Coordinates: 24°34′42″N 30°42′56″E / 24.5784305°N 30.715438°E / 24.5784305; 30.715438
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Interior of the Temple of Dush
The Treasure of Dush with the god Serapis on top displayed at the Egyptian Museum.
Two Gold Collars from the Treasure of Dush.
Two Lion shaped Gold bracellets from the Treasure of Dush.
Flower shaped clay objects from the Treasure of Dush.

Dush, Egypt, or (Douch in French) formerly known as Kysis,[1] is a small Ptolemaic and Roman era fortress located in Egypt's vast Western Desert in the Kharga Oasis.[2][3] which was built under the Ptolemies and then under the Roman Emperors Domitian, Trajan and Hadrian. Dush is strategically located "about 15 km northeast of El-Qasr, at a convergence of five ancient desert tracks. One of these tracks, "the Darb el-Dush, linked this outpost directly to the Nile valley towns of Esna and Edfu, marking it as a critical route in Roman times."[4] According to Cassandra Vivian: "today thousands upon thousands of potsherds cover the site and two sandstone temples and several cemeteries have been excavated by IFAO, whose dig house is at the base of the hill....From papyri found in the area, dated to the third century, and archaeological evidence it is apparent that the site was of great importance."[5]

Dush holds a sandstone temple with a colonnade originally dedicated to Osiris, who the Greeks transformed into Serapis, and also to the goddess Isis.[6] The Dush "fortress stands atop the highest hill in the area, about 2 kilometres (1.2 miles) northeast of the modern village of Dush. It is 79 meters (253 ft) above sea level. The oldest building found so far on this site, the fortress dates from the Ptolemaic era."[7] The Sandstone Temple of Osiris here was initially built by Domitian, with a court erected by Trajan and other temple portions added by Hadrian. While few decorations survive, parts of the temple "are believed to have been covered in gold. The temple includes several areas, including two courts, a small hypostyle hall with only four columns, and a sanctuary.....Numerous artifacts have been unearthed in and around the temple area, including pottery, coins, ostraca, and jewelry."[8]

Dush cemetary

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Ancient cemeteries surround the town of Dush on its north and west side. By 1998, IFAO "had found ninety-two tombs and nearly 433 individual burials in the Dush cemeteries. They discovered that 16 percent of the men and 19 percent of the women had died at between twenty-one and forty years of age, while 30 percent of the men and 19 percent of the women died aged between forty and fifty-nine, and 5.6 percent of the men and 10 percent of the women lived beyond the age of sixty."[9]

Treasure of Dush

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A French archaeological team from Institut Français d'Archéologie Orientale or (IFAO) have been excavating at Dush since 1976.[4] In 1989, they discovered the "Dush or (Douch) Treasure" which consisted of several sets "of magnificent gold necklaces, crowns and coins dating back to the second century" in one of the magazine complexes at Dush.[10][11] Nearby, the treasure had been concealed in pottery jars and covered by masonry.[12] In 2005, Zahi Hawass, Egypt's former Minister of Tourism and Antiquities announced that: "These golden treasures [from Dush] will be the first of many other exhibits in the Egyptian Museum that will be 'excavated' from its [the Museum's] corridors and halls and put on display with various educational tools explaining their significance" as part of the 'The Golden Jewelry of Dush' display.[13] The Dush or Douch treasure reportedly:

"....consists of a gold Diadem, two bracelets and a necklace of 187 gold plates...[and was]...compressed into a large case hidden in the wall of a Roman fort, not far from a temple dedicated to Serapis and Isis. It weighs 363 grams and was discovered in the Kharga Oasis, Egypt...and dates from the 2nd Century AD [in the Roman period of Egypt]. The diadem is decorated with vine leaves and branches within a temple facade, his right hand is on the head of the god Harpocrates. Busts of the god Isis are surmounting the two columns and coming out of the two rosettes ending the decoration on both sides. The same vine leaves and branches are seen around an agate stone "orange" on the bracelet, and a piece of glass paste "green" on the other side.[14]

References

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  1. ^ Reddé, Michel (1988). "Une Ville Romaine Dans Le Désert Occidental D'egypte: Douch". Revue Archéologique (1): 215–220. ISSN 0035-0737. JSTOR 41736585. Retrieved 12 January 2025.
  2. ^ Temple of Dush, 2025
  3. ^ Detailed Flickr source
  4. ^ a b "The Roman Fortress At Dush". travel2egypt.org. Travel2Egypt. 3 January 2024. Retrieved 11 January 2025.
  5. ^ Cassandra Vivian, The Western Desert of Egypt, op. cit., p.151-152
  6. ^ Dunn, Jimmy. "Dush, the Temple, Fortress and Ancient Town of Kysis near the Kharga Oasis of Egypt". touregypt.net. Retrieved 11 January 2025.
  7. ^ Cassandra Vivian, The Western Desert of Egypt, op. cit., p.152
  8. ^ Cassandra Vivian, The Western Desert of Egypt, op. cit., p.152
  9. ^ Cassandra Vivian, The Western Desert of Egypt, op.cit., p.153
  10. ^ "Cairo museum shows off 'lost' gold treasures". NBC News. The Associated Press. 15 March 2005. Retrieved 11 January 2025.
  11. ^ Michel Wuttmann, Helen Whitehouse, Mona Foad, Sylvie Marchand, "Wall-Paintings in a Roman House at Ancient Kysis, Kharga Oasis," BIFAO 113 (2014) p.158 online PDF
  12. ^ Dunn, Jimmy. "Dush, the Temple, Fortress and Ancient Town of Kysis near the Kharga Oasis of Egypt". touregypt.net. Retrieved 11 January 2025.
  13. ^ "Cairo museum shows off 'lost' gold treasures". NBC News. The Associated Press. 15 March 2005. Retrieved 11 January 2025.
  14. ^ Ancient Egypt and Archaeology Web site source: Cairo Museum, Egypt
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  • Cassandra Vivian, The Western Desert of Egypt: An Explorer’s Guide, The American University in Cairo Press, 2008 Online PDF at Academia.edu

24°34′42″N 30°42′56″E / 24.5784305°N 30.715438°E / 24.5784305; 30.715438