First and second courts The temple contains two courts, the first court of the temple is entered through a pylon entrance that portrays Isis, Osiris, Ramesses, and Menereptah. The first court contains inscriptions of Ramesses' battle scenes and scenes of Seti. The Second Court contains scenes of Ramesses interacting with gods. The scenes were used to commemorate Ramesses II's achievements and acceptance as ruler.
First and second hypostyle halls A hypostyle hall is a large room consisting of many columns to support a roof; the temple's two hypostyle halls may have been the first portion of the temple constructed. Both halls contain columns and reliefs. In the first hall, twelve columns and reliefs were carved by Ramesses II. The first and second hall are divided by a wall and consist of 36 columns.
Abydos King List In The Gallery of Ancestors, also referred to as The Gallery of the List, one can find the
Abydos King List. This list is depicted in
low relief, carved under the reign of Ramesses II, and it shows Seti and Ramesses making offerings to their royal ancestors. These royal ancestors are the past kings of Egypt. Notably, some rulers, like the
15th Dynasty Hyksos that ruled Egypt during the
Second Intermediate Period 1650-1550 BCE and the reign of the
18th Dynasty heretic
Akhenaten of the
New Kingdom 1550-1069, were omitted from the list, possibly due to being associated with periods of internal weakness and divisions. The Gallery of Ancestors led into the storerooms, desert behind the temple, and the slaughterhouse.
Slaughterhouse The slaughterhouse would have been used to offer offerings to the temple's gods. The slaughterhouse provided access to the desert through its eastern entrance and was connected to the temple through The Gallery of Ancestors to its north. Consisting of a slaughter court, hall, and three rooms, each consisting of depictions of offerings. The court contained depictions of Seti offering meats to the gods, such as the scenes with Osiris, Isis, Horus, and
Wepwawet. The Hall contained scenes of animal butchery with priests carrying off the offerings to be used in processions. The Gallery of Ancestors contains scenes that continue these ritual offerings with the king purifying the meat.
Chapels The temple contains six barque chapels, completed by Seti I's death, in a row dedicated to the gods Osiris, Isis, Horus, Amen-Rem Re-Harakti, and Ptah. Additionally, there is one more chapel belonging to Seti, which is meant to represent Seti as a god. The first three chapels, dedicated to that of Osiris, Isis, and Horus, are intended to represent the principal gods of Egypt's religion and the triad of Abydos. The following three gods are the principal gods of the country, representing their cities, with Amen-Re representing
Thebes, Re-Harakti representing
Heliopolis, and Ptah representing
Memphis. The chapels originally had alleys that lead to seven exits at the front of the temples which would have served as used to move
barques for processions, until the exits were filled in by Ramesses II.
Osiris Fetish The south wall of the Osiris Chapel features an image known as the Osiris Fetish which establishes a connection between solar imagery and the god Osiris. However, this is not the only depiction of the fetish as similar images can be found in the temple of Ramesses II and the Chaple of
Ramesses I. The fetish contains imagery that is associated with the sun, as there are representations of lions possibly related to the god
Aker, symbolizing the horizons, sunrise, and sunset. Within the image, there is a traditional
henu gesture being performed which signifies obedience and submission to a god, as well as symbolically used during rituals to animate the king's soul. The imagery of the sun countries as next to the fetish depiction of rams adorned with the solar headdress, possibly representing the sun crossing into the underworld as the god Mendes. The fetish may have been exposed to the public when the barque was carried by priests during a procession alongside a “
corn” mummy used to represent Osiris, as the wall opposite of the fetish depicts which underscores Osiris' role in regeneration.
Osireion The Osireion is the symbolic tomb of Osiris, created of
red granite and sandstone that housed a
sarcophagus and a chest for
canopic jars. This sarcophagus was possibly surrounded with floodwater in order to grow barley that would have ritually been used for symbolic resurrection of Osiris allowing the Osireion to serve as a center for the cult of Osiris. Unfortunately, parts of the Osireion now have water due to the
Aswan dam raising water. == Economy ==