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Fig. 4: The entrance to the burial chamber of Baennentiu. © DAIK.  Fakhry’s meticulous work has always been rewarded. For instance, his inves- tigation of the chapel of King Wahibre at el-Qasr, first discovered by the German Botanist Paul Ascherson (1834-1913) in 1876 and examined later by Georg Stein- dorff in 1900, revealed that the ceiling inscriptions had three lines, not just one.** His good fortune is also recognized when he detected in Bahariya an unfinished temple, known to the local inhabitants as Qasr el-Megysbeh, which was built by Alexander the Great in honour of the gods Amun-Re and Horus.*° Most scholars were expecting and hoping to find further traces of Alexander’s visit in 332 BC at Siwa itself.

Figure 4 The entrance to the burial chamber of Baennentiu. © DAIK. Fakhry’s meticulous work has always been rewarded. For instance, his inves- tigation of the chapel of King Wahibre at el-Qasr, first discovered by the German Botanist Paul Ascherson (1834-1913) in 1876 and examined later by Georg Stein- dorff in 1900, revealed that the ceiling inscriptions had three lines, not just one.** His good fortune is also recognized when he detected in Bahariya an unfinished temple, known to the local inhabitants as Qasr el-Megysbeh, which was built by Alexander the Great in honour of the gods Amun-Re and Horus.*° Most scholars were expecting and hoping to find further traces of Alexander’s visit in 332 BC at Siwa itself.