THE ROYAL CITY
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Entrance 20 SDG. To the west of the road (there is a sign), the ruins of the royal complex on the banks of the Nile must have been the center of the capital. It is now overgrown with acacia trees, and it is difficult to imagine its importance at the time of its heyday, when it probably housed more than 20,000 inhabitants. Apart from a few archaeological tells, there remain the remains of a temple of Amun (still identified by ram statues at the entrance), the bases of a temple of the Lion (a little outside the city, as it should be), but above all the more substantial remains of royal baths. Could these baths be the "fountains of youth" to which, according to Herodotus, the Meroians owed their supposed longevity?
Excavations on the site have brought to light a bronze head of the Roman emperor Augustus. It originally came from Egypt where, in 23 BC, the Romans were battling a Nubian revolt in the south, where they wanted to establish themselves. The Roman troops confronted those of Meroe and even razed the city of Napata, the former Kushite capital. In revenge, the head of a statue of Augustus was taken from Egypt and brought back to Meroe, where it was placed under the step of a palace door: thus Augustus was symbolically "trampled"!
Although the entrance is not free, it is interesting to visit a site that lives in the shadow of the postcard pyramids. Note that the ghaffir keeps the key of the baths.
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