In general,
this area is called El Kab, but it is indeed the two ancient
cities of Nekheb El Kab on the east bank of the Nile River and the older
Nekhen, now known as Kom el Ahmar (the Red Mound) on the opposite bank. Both
cities were important religious centers that date back to the pr-Dynastic
period.
In the
Ptolemaic period Nekheb was called Eileithyiapolis. The city had been very
important prior to the establishment of Memphis, and was later the capital of
the local nome. It was the birthplace of the Middle Kingdom nobles who recovered
Egypt from the Hyksos conquest. The city was protected by goddess Nekhbet
(the white goddess).
There are actually two sections of Nekheb,
which is located on a plain at the mouth of a valley. The first is the ancient
city, which is surrounded by a huge (1740 feet square), thick (38 feet
thick) wall, where visitors enter from a western gate. Inside, there is a Roman temple with a sacred lake; a
depression to the east of the city.
In a
smaller enclosure is the Temple of Nekhbet (attached to a Temple dedicated to
Thoth), with its several pylons, hypo-style hall in front, a mamisi (birth
house) dedicated to Nekhbet (the embodiment of Hathor). The construction of the
temple began around 2700 BC, and was later expanded by pharaohs of the 18th
through 30th dynasties,including Tutmosis III , Amenophis II, and the Ramessides .
The second part of the ruins is the necropolis, which is situated on a rocky
outcrop. There, the most important tombs are those of Ahmose, Renni,
Paheri and Se,which date from the 18th Dynasty and the Ramesside period.