Ancient stones rarely behave like still objects in Egypt. At the Karnak temples in Luxor, walls and gateways tend to reappear in unexpected forms, as if the past has been repeatedly folded and stitched back together by different hands across centuries. The latest work north of the temple complex has done exactly that, revealing a gate linked to Ramses III that had been buried in fragments and overgrowth for generations. What began as a careful restoration project has quietly shifted into something more layered, with hints of Roman-era presence surfacing beneath the sand. Among them is a carved stone slab connected to Emperor Tiberius, raising new questions about how sacred space was reused, rewritten, and reimagined over time in ancient Egypt.
Egypt’s Karnak project uncovers hidden stone-built layers beneath Emperor Ramses III’s northern gate
The northern wall gate associated with Ramses III has not had an easy history. Built during the 20th Dynasty, it reportedly suffered heavy damage long before modern restoration began, with its lower sections partially exposed and unstable when first documented in the 19th century. Vegetation had taken hold, stone blocks had shifted, and much of its original form was no longer readable in the landscape.According to Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities Facebook post, between 2022 and 2025, an Egyptian French archaeological team working within the Karnak temples undertook a slow reconstruction effort. Blocks were taken apart one by one, cleaned, recorded, and reassembled with scientific precision rather than guesswork. The aim was not to recreate a romantic version of the past, but to stabilise what remained and understand how the structure originally stood.What makes the process unusual is what surfaced during dismantling. Several reused stones, some bearing decorative elements from the reign of Amenhotep III, appeared embedded within the later structure. It suggests that the gate itself may have been built using material from even older monuments, turning the site into a kind of architectural archive layered with earlier dynasties.

Facebook (Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities)
What does Karnak northern wall excavations reveal
As work expanded around the gate, attention shifted to the surrounding northern wall of the Temple of Amun-Ra. Here, archaeologists appear to have encountered construction phases that do not belong to a single moment in time. Instead, the masonry hints at repeated rebuilding, stretching from the New Kingdom into later Greek and Roman periods.A paved road was also identified during recent fieldwork, one that had been partially recorded in early 20th-century surveys but never fully understood. It links the Ramses III gate to a major courtyard deeper inside the Karnak complex, suggesting that movement through this part of the temple was more structured than previously assumed.Mudbrick installations from later antiquity sit within the same zone, adding another layer of occupation. The picture that emerges is not of a static sacred boundary, but of a working religious landscape that continued to evolve long after its original builders had gone. Experts suggest the area may have been repeatedly repurposed as political control shifted, especially during the Roman and Byzantine eras.
Roman emperor shown like an Egyptian pharaoh in Karnak temple
According to the Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities Facebook post, the most striking find is a sandstone stela linked to Emperor Tiberius, measuring roughly 60 by 40 centimetres. It was uncovered during restoration work close to the gate, lying within an archaeological layer associated with later settlements.The carving shows the Roman emperor presented in traditional pharaonic style, standing before the Theban triad of Amun-Ra, Mut, and Khonsu. Rather than appearing as a foreign ruler, he is shown participating in a familiar religious act, offering recognition to the divine order of the temple.This visual language was not unusual in Roman Egypt. Emperors were often adapted into Egyptian religious frameworks when depicted in temple settings, even if their political identity remained Roman elsewhere. The stela also contains a short hieroglyphic inscription referencing restoration work on temple structures, suggesting it may have functioned as a commemorative marker rather than a purely decorative object.Its presence inside the Karnak complex hints at how Roman authority was absorbed into existing religious systems rather than replacing them outright. The imagery appears designed to align imperial power with local belief structures, reinforcing legitimacy through ritual rather than conquest alone.
