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All Spain Madrid Templo de Debod

Templo de Debod

An ancient Egyptian temple in the middle of Madrid, Spain.

Madrid, Spain

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Jacque
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The temple by night  
The temple at dusk   http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/comm...
View from the portals   Luis Morato / Atlas Obscura User
View through the second portal,   Luis Morato / Atlas Obscura User
Inner stairs   Luis Morato / Atlas Obscura User
South chapel maybe used to worship Osiris   Luis Morato / Atlas Obscura User
Detail on the portal   Luis Morato / Atlas Obscura User
Relief with hieroglyph   Luis Morato / Atlas Obscura User
The Adijalamani chapel is the oldest room in the temple. It was built by this King from Meroe between 200-180 B.C.   Luis Morato / Atlas Obscura User
A view of the temple   Xavixavir / Atlas Obscura User
  Auxburg / Atlas Obscura User
  Taterchips / Atlas Obscura User
  Taterchips / Atlas Obscura User
  notoriousFIG / Atlas Obscura User
  Archimedes / Atlas Obscura User
  jilks / Atlas Obscura User
The relief shows the King Adikjalamani offering two jugs of milk to Ammon and the Goddess Nut.   Luis Morato / Atlas Obscura User
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About

The Templo de Debod, or Temple of Debod, is an ancient Egyptian temple bizarrely out of place in the heart of Madrid, near the Plaza de España.

Gifted from Egypt to Spain in 1968 in thanks for Spain's contributions to saving historic sites that would be flooded when the Aswan High Dam was completed, it originally stood in Egypt’s Nile Valley  since the 4th century BCE, when King  Adijalamani built the temple dedicated to the Egyptian gods Ammon and Isis in Nubia, near to Abu Symbel. 

The temple  was dismantled stone by stone and transferred to Madrid where it was rebuilt following the original plan where the old barrack Cuartel de la Montaña, destroyed during the Spanish Civil War, was located. Currently is a park, (Parque del  Oeste) , and the temple is surrounded by a pool that reflects its image. It is striking by day and famously magnificent at sunset. This zone of the park is on a hilltop allowing for panoramic views of Madrid.

By day, tourists frequent the temple while noisy wild quaker parakeets originally from Argentina shriek in the tops of the surrounding chestnut trees. At night, a different crowd arrives: young people drinking in preparation for a night on the town. Vendors snake through clumps of 20-somethings sitting on the grass to offer cans of beer for a couple of euros—mildly illegal, but apparently without repercussion. The temple is lit golden at night, shining beautifully over this buzzing scene, and the lights of the royal palace are visible in the distance.

Any time of night or day is appropriate for a visit to the Templo de Debod. Admission to this outdoor monument is free, and photography is permitted—in fact, some hold that there is no better place to photograph the sunset.

Related Tags

Sacred Spaces Ruins

Know Before You Go

The temple is a short walk from the Plaza de España metro stop.

Community Contributors

Added By

Jacque

Edited By

hrnick, Luis Morato, Monsieur Mictlan, jilks...

  • hrnick
  • Luis Morato
  • Monsieur Mictlan
  • jilks
  • notoriousFIG
  • Taterchips
  • Archimedes
  • Xavixavir
  • Auxburg

Published

August 2, 2009

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  • templo de Debod at sunset, Madrid, June 2013
  • http://www.sacred-destinations.com/spain/madrid-templo-de-debod
  • http://www.munimadrid.es/portal/site/munimadrid/menuitem.8b2184148b70b0aa7d245f019fc08a0c/?vgnextoid=13b432df1d51c010VgnVCM2000000c205a0aRCRD&vgnextchannel=0c369e242ab26010VgnVCM100000dc0ca8c0RCRD
Templo de Debod
1 Calle de Ferraz
Madrid, 28008
Spain
40.424022, -3.71777
Visit Website
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