Templo de Debod
An actual Egyptian temple, built in the 2nd century BC and gifted to Spain by Egypt in 1968 as thanks for helping save the Abu Simbel temples from the Aswan Dam flooding.
About Templo de Debod
An actual Egyptian temple, built in the 2nd century BC and gifted to Spain by Egypt in 1968 as thanks for helping save the Abu Simbel temples from the Aswan Dam flooding. They disassembled it stone by stone, shipped it to Madrid, and reassembled it on a hill in Parque del Oeste, surrounded by reflecting pools that mirror the temple at golden hour. The whole thing sounds implausible, and standing in front of a 2,200-year-old Egyptian temple overlooking the Madrid skyline at sunset, it still feels implausible.
The temple was originally dedicated to the gods Amun and Isis and sat near the first cataract of the Nile in southern Egypt. The interior is small (two rooms, free entry, limited capacity) and shows the original carved reliefs depicting Pharaonic offerings to the gods. The carvings are worn but readable, and the scale is intimate compared to the massive Egyptian temples that tourists visit in Luxor.
But the real experience is outside. The west-facing position means the temple is perfectly backlit at sunset, silhouetted against the sky over the Casa de Campo forest. In summer, sunset is around 9:30 PM, which means you can have dinner first and still catch it. The reflecting pools double the image. The surrounding Parque del Oeste slopes down the hill with roses, fountains, and views that explain why this spot has been popular since Madrid was a small town.
Free, always accessible from the outside. The interior has limited hours (check the Madrid city website). The Teleferico cable car station is a 5-minute walk away, making it easy to combine both in one afternoon visit.
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