- The
temples of Wadi es-
Sebua (Arabic: وادى السبوع, lit. 'Valley of the Lions', so-called
because of the sphinx-lined
approach to the
temple forecourts)...
-
Lists of
princes and
princesses were
found in the Ramesseum, Luxor, Wadi es-
Sebua and Abydos. Some
names are
known to us from ostraka,
tombs and
other sources...
-
original site of Wadi es-
Sebua,
which today contains three ancient Egyptian temples in
Lower Nubia, the
temples of Wadi-es
Sebua,
Maharraqa and
Dakka respectively...
- The Omo
sebua is a
traditional house style of the Nias
people from Nias island, Indonesia. They are
built only for the
houses of the village's chiefs...
-
other relocated temples from
Nubian sites such as Philae, Amada, Wadi es-
Sebua, are part of the
UNESCO World Heritage Site
known as the
Nubian Monuments...
- (sometimes also
known as Baltoe, Balatu,
Balatu Sebua, Ballatu, Foda, Gari Telegu,
Klewang Buchok Berkait, Roso
Sebua or Telagoe) is a
sword that
originates from...
-
Dakka and
Maharraqa in 1961 and
Dendur in 1962. The
temples of Wadi es-
Sebua and Beit el Wali and the rock tomb of
Pennut at
Aniba were
moved in 1964...
- Sons of
Pharaoh Ramesses II at the
Sebua Temple. From
right to left: Amunherkhepeshef, Ramesses, Pareherwenemef, Khaemwaset, Montuherkhepeshef, Nebenkharu...
- the
temple of
Dakka was
similar architecturally to the
temple of Wadi es-
Sebua, it
lacked a
front courtyard of sphinxes; however, its 12-metre-high pylon...
- of
Dakka in 1966 at the New Wadi es-
Sebua site
which lies only 4 km (2.5 mi) west of the
original Wadi es-
Sebua location. As
Christine Hobson notes:...