The first descriptions of Pbow by Western archaeologists were from
B.T.A. Evetts,
Alfred J. Butler,
Michel Jullien, and
Louis Massignon, around the late 19th century and early 20th century.
Louis-Théophile Lefort described Pbow in
Les premiers monastères Pachômiens, published 1939. Pbow was somewhat recently discovered buried underneath two newer churches in 1989. According to William Harmless, it was about twenty-four meters wide and forty-one meters long. This church included a section known as an apse, presumably meant for meetings of monks from affiliated monasteries. Outside communal buildings for monks were further discovered on the grounds of the once standing monastery. Peter Grossmann has been a primary investigator of the archaeology of Pbow, starting in the 1970s. According to Grossmann, three different primary churches were built at Pbow over time, superimposed one over the other. ==References==