This paper proposes that the spatial distribution of major pharaonic sacred sites along the Nile Valley encodes a tripartite cosmological structure grounded in attested Egyptian textual tradition. Upper Egypt — centred on the Theban complex of Karnak, Luxor, and the Valley of the Kings — corresponds to the zone of celestial rebirth and imperishable stars, as established by Pyramid Text stellar ascent passages and the measured solar and circumpolar orientations of Karnak and the Valley of the Kings astronomical ceilings. Middle Egypt — the zone from Memphis to Hermopolis and Assiut — corresponds to the earthly realm of transformation and judgment, as attested by the placement of the Thoth cult at Hermopolis Magna and the judgment imagery of the Book of the Dead and Coffin Texts. Lower Egypt — the Memphite necropolis complex of Memphis, Saqqara, and Giza with its western desert margin — corresponds to the Duat threshold and the primordial waters of Nun, as encoded in the Amduat's First Hour entry point at the western horizon and the Pyramid Texts' crossing to the Field of Rushes. The paper tests this tripartite model against published temple orientation data (Belmonte 2001; Shaltout and Belmonte 2005) and demonstrates that the measured astronomical alignments at key sites are consistent with — though not uniquely determined by — the three-zone cosmological assignment. The tripartite structure is proposed as a retrospective cosmological reading of a sacred landscape whose individual sites were established over millennia, rather than as evidence of a single planned design.
Diogo Azevedo Oliveira Sennfelt (Thu,) studied this question.
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