Koptos in the Roman Period
Under Roman rule Koptos kept its important position as starting point for trading missions going to the Red Sea ports. However, the town had already lost some of its importance in the late Ptolemaic Period, when Qena became the departure point for expeditions to some of the quarries, such as Mons Porphyrites for porphyry. After the Palmyrene rebellion in the third century AD Koptos fell to the Blemmyes and it was destroyed by the emperor Diocletian in AD 292, but shortly after rebuilt.
(click on the images for more examples)
Parts of temple buildings in Egyptian style (click on the images for a larger
picture and more information)
stelae with Greek inscriptions
(click on the images for a larger picture) |
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Limestone window gratings, some found in situ.
(click on the images for more information - for models of houses showing such windows click here) |
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