The temple of Meharrakka was originally
sited 50 kilometers north of its present position, near the village of Ofindina,
which was the southern frontier of Egypt in Greco-Roman times. The temple was
moved to New Sebua by the Egyptian Antiquities Organization in 1961.
The temple dates back to the Greco-Roman
period. It was rescued from the rising waters of the Aswan High dam and placed
on higher ground together with Wadi El Sebua temple and the temple of Dakka.
The decoration of the temple was never
completed, floral column capitals remaining unfinished, and the few relief
carvings that survive depict Osiris, Horus, Isis, Thoth, and Tefnut. There is
evidence that the temple was used as a Christian church. Some vaulting is
preserved where the original entrance was.
Each evening after dinner on the Lake
Nasser cruises, the three temples at New Sebua,
are floodlit about half an hour, making a
romantic tableau against the velvet sky.