The earliest temple was built c. 3200 BC and was little more than a cultic niche lodged between three large natural
granite boulders. This earliest temple was very small, housing a sanctuary of about that was made of mud bricks. In front of the sanctuary, on the East side, there were some mud brick houses. The temple was enlarged during the 1st and 2nd Dynasties and rebuilt during the
Third Dynasty, but its old plan was kept. On the South side outside the niche between the boulders, some granaries were added. The temple was again rebuilt during the
Fifth Dynasty, possibly under
Nyuserre Ini, at which point the sanctuary located at the center of the rock niche was enlarged. In front of it was now a forecourt, about in size, which was surrounded by an open walkway. A deposit of votive offerings was discovered under the floor of the sanctuary. These were dedicated to the goddess over a few hundred years during the course of the
Old Kingdom by both royal and private individuals and comprised mainly small
faience figures, showing humans and animals. Beyond that, on the South side, granaries and a mud brick administrative building were located.
Pepi I, the second pharaoh of the
Sixth Dynasty ordered once more a rebuilding of the temple. The old plan was kept, but the brick walls were enlarged and a granite sanctuary for the goddess' statue was added. By this time, the god
Khnum was also worshipped in the temple. In his fifth year of reign, Pepi's successor
Merenre Nemtyemsaf I came to Elephantine to receive the submission of Nubian chieftains. On that occasion he might have visited the temple to renew the shrine erected by his father. ==Middle Kingdom==