Temple of Sobek (Kom Ombo Temple)

Rising above a Nile bend in Kom Ombo, this remarkable sanctuary is Egypt’s best-known double temple—two parallel axial routes leading to two holy sanctuaries: one for Sobek, the crocodile god, and one for Har wer (Horus the Elder). Built mainly in the Graeco‑Roman period, the temple preserves inscriptions that map rituals and festivals and even includes a famous Roman-era scene showing what are often interpreted as surgical instruments. [1]

Aswan • Kom Ombo Double temple plan Ptolemaic → Roman

Quick facts

A fast, practical snapshot of the Temple of Sobek (Kom Ombo)—what it is, why it matters, and what to look for on site.

Location

Kom Ombo town, Aswan Governorate, on the east bank of the Nile; the Crocodile Museum sits beside the temple complex. [1][5]

Dedicated to

Sobek (crocodile god of water, fertility, inundation) and Harwer (Horus the Elder, god of kingship). Each god has a separate axial route and sanctuary. [1]

Main period

Built in the Graeco‑Roman Period (332 BCE–395 CE). The earliest royal name attested is Ptolemy VI (180–145 BCE), with most decoration completed under Ptolemy XII (80–51 BCE). [1]

What’s unique

A symmetrical “double” plan with two parallel processional routes, paired halls, and twin sanctuaries—one of the most distinctive temple layouts in Egypt. [1][3]

Highlights

Festival calendars and cult scenes, richly carved capitals, and a Roman-era panel often read as medical/surgical instruments. [1][6]

Opening hours & tickets

MoTA lists daily hours as 07:00–21:00 and ticket categories/prices on its official page (always double-check for updates before visiting). [1]

Encyclopedic guide

A structured deep dive into the Temple of Sobek at Kom Ombo—its double layout, Ptolemaic and Roman history, crocodile cult, and practical visiting advice.

What you’re seeing at Kom Ombo

Kom Ombo’s temple is often described as “one temple, two sanctuaries”—but the design is more ambitious than that: the builders created two parallel axial passages through the main halls, each ending in its own sanctuary. The southern axis belongs to Sobek; the northern to Harwer. [1]

  • Two “routes”: look for mirrored doorways, paired halls, and twin sanctuary zones at the back.
  • A living landscape: Sobek’s side emphasizes water and fertility themes tied to the Nile inundation. [1]
  • A temple + museum visit: the adjacent Crocodile Museum displays mummified crocodiles and Sobek statues, helping you “read” the cult context. [5]
Mini-orientation (60 seconds)

Start at the front court and walk straight toward the rear. Whenever you pass a major doorway or hall, glance left and right: you’ll notice how many spaces come in pairs. The plan is meant to keep Sobek and Harwer “balanced” in ritual space—even while sharing the same building. [1][3]

Frequently asked questions

Quick answers to common visitor questions about the Temple of Sobek (Kom Ombo).

Yes—MoTA describes two parallel axial passages that run through the halls and end in two sanctuaries: Sobek’s sanctuary on the southern axis and Harwer’s on the northern. [1]
Britannica describes Sobek (Sebek/Suchos) as a crocodile god whose cult included sacred crocodiles and continued into Ptolemaic and Roman times— including at Kom Ombo—where mummified crocodile cemeteries were found. [4]
MoTA notes that a Roman-period (2nd century CE) scene was carved showing what are believed to be surgical instruments. [1] The Mathematical Association of America discusses this Kom Ombo panel and reproduces the instrument set. [6]
Yes—the Crocodile Museum next to the temple displays mummified Nile crocodiles and Sobek-related artifacts, and MoTA provides visitor policies and tips. [5]
The surviving structure was built mainly in the Graeco‑Roman period. MoTA says the earliest attested royal name is Ptolemy VI (180–145 BCE), and most decoration was completed by Ptolemy XII (80–51 BCE). [1]
Plan around 60–90 minutes to walk the temple and slow down for key reliefs. Add 20–40 minutes if you also visit the Crocodile Museum. [5]
Britannica notes that parts of the temple’s pylon and court were eroded away by the Nile—so the temple’s front is less complete than many visitors expect. [3]
Yes—Britannica notes Sobek’s chief sanctuary in the Fayyūm (with a sacred crocodile, Petsuchos) and that Sobek worship continued into Ptolemaic and Roman times in multiple places, including Kom Ombo. [4]

Sources & further reading

For an encyclopedia-style site, sources matter. The references below support the dates, deities, and key claims used on this page.

  1. Ministry of Tourism & Antiquities (Egypt), Kom Ombo Temple (official monument page). View
  2. Ministry of Tourism & Antiquities (Egypt), Kom Ombo Temple (Arabic version—same official content set). View
  3. Encyclopaedia Britannica, Kawm Umbū (Kom Ombo / Ombos overview and the double temple note). View
  4. Encyclopaedia Britannica, Sebek (Sobek) (crocodile god; cult sites; mummified crocodiles). View
  5. Ministry of Tourism & Antiquities (Egypt), Crocodile Museum (official museum page; visitor policies and tips). View
  6. Mathematical Association of America (MAA), Ancient Egyptian mathematics: Medical instruments scene at Kom Ombo. View
  7. Wikipedia, Temple of Kom Ombo (useful orientation and cross-links; confirm with primary sources where possible). View
  8. Wikimedia Commons (images used on this page; see each file page for license and attribution details). View

Note on ticketing: opening hours and prices can change. For the latest official information, always check the MoTA pages above shortly before your visit. [1][5]

Last updated: February 15, 2026