Sybennytos lies nearly due east of Sais, in latitude 31° North. Sebennytos was anciently a place of some importance, and standing on a peninsula, between a lake (λίμνη Σεβεννυτική, now called Burlos) and the Nile, was favourably seated for trade and intercourse with Lower Egypt and Memphis. The neglect of the canals, however, and the elevation of the alluvial soil have nearly obliterated its site. (Champollion, l'Egypte, vol. ii. p. 191, seq.).
A temple dedicated to the (local) god Onuris-Shu once existed at this location but is now reduced to ruins. The site is also known as part of the route of the Holy Family during their time in Egypt.[1]
References
^ Bill Manley, The Seventy Great Mysteries of Ancient Egypt" Thames & Hudson Ltd, 2003. p.101