Karnak logo
About the project
Header image

All original material on this site is copyrighted by the University of California Los Angeles and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 License. For all other materials, please contact the copyright holder.

Creative Commons License

Notes on the project

Through at least three thousand years of development, from local shrine in a regional town to national center of power, the temple of Amun-Ra at Karnak has known dramatic modifications tied in with political shifts, religious reform and ritual changes. As a legacy of a culture where every aspect of life was permeated with religion, the study of this temple complex touches upon every factor of human existence in ancient Egypt. Karnak therefore presents an excellent entry for understanding more about all aspects of ancient Egyptian culture and the study of its legacy.

The Digital Karnak Project aims to make the site of Karnak more accessible to students and instructors in the English-speaking world. The features of this website have been designed to provide college classrooms (and the interested public) with easily accessible, up-to-date, expert material relating to the temple precinct. As part of this goal, a 3-D Virtual Reality model of the temple was constructed, offering students a completely new way to view the temple: reign-by-reign, following the complex patterns of royal construction, modification and destruction that are now obscured by the latest building phases at the site. Footage of this model, as well as original videos and maps, are accompanied by thematic essays written and reviewed by Egyptologists to supply students and instructors with reliable information in a digital and visually dynamic platform. A simplified version of the Virtual Reality model of the temple is also made available in Google Earth, for a completely interactive experience.

A team of noted Egyptologists, educators, architects, and technologists were brought together to develop learning resources related to the Temple at Karnak in Egypt. The project had three primary goals: (1) to assemble databases of information related to Karnak, (2) build an interactive computer model of the site, and (3) create a series of resources using the model and databases that are available online free-of-charge through this website and can be easily used for undergraduate education.

The Digital Karnak Project combines the experience and talent of two sections of the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA): the Experiential Technologies Center (ETC) and the UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology (UEE). Directed by Dr. Diane Favro through the School of the Arts and Architecture with support from UCLA’s Academic Technology Services, the ETC uses powerful information technology tools to support creative and cross-disciplinary research in archaeology, architecture, humanities, social sciences, and the performing arts. Dr. Willeke Wendrich of the Department of Near Eastern Languages and Cultures is director of the UCLA Digital Humanities Incubator Group (UDHIG) and the editor-in-chief of the online UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology (UEE), a repository for scholarly content related to Egypt.

The Digital Karnak Project was funded in part with a grant from the National Endowment of the Humanities (NEH). Financial assistance was also provided by the Steinmetz Family Trust. Staff assistance and computing infrastructure was provided by UCLA's Institute for Digital Research and Education (IDRE) and UCLA's Academic Technology Services (ATS).

Credits

Project directors Diane Favro , Willeke Wendrich
Project coordinator Elaine Sullivan
Academic committee Peter Brand , Betsy Bryan , Donald Redford
Egyptology content Elaine Sullivan , Carrie Zarnoch
Models Eunkwang Kim , Tom Beresford (model prototype) , Itay Zaharovits (Google Earth model) , Brendan Beachler (Google Earth prototype)
Renderings Eunkwang Kim , Bruce McCrimmon , Carrie Zarnoch (texture mapping) , Brian Zentmyer (texture mapping)
Additional content Megan DuBois (map design, instruction video design and execution) , Jennie Dillion (instruction video design and execution) , Zoe Borovsky (metadata consultant)
Technology coordinator Lisa M. Snyder
Web site design and implementation Ewan Branda
Web site development Ewan Branda (information architecture, data architecture, server application development) , Shawn Higgins (graphic design, front-end development) , Megan DuBois (graphic design) , Yusuf Bhabhrawala (front-end development) , Yoh Kawano (Google Maps consultant, interface design)
This web site was built using the Ruby on Rails Web Framework. Some of the application architecture for this site was developed for an earlier project, the Digital Roman Forum.