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Egypt

6

Reasons To
Visit Egypt

  • Ancient Civilisations

    The Ancient Egyptians have attracted more interest and attention than almost any other ancient civilisation. Their feats of engineering, and the details of their lives we can glean from tomb and temple walls make them seem very alive; similarly their obsession with death also fascinates us.

    Ancient Civilisations
  • Ancient Ruins

    From the temples of Upper Egypt, to the numerous fantastic pyramids near Cairo, Egypt is probably best known for its ancient ruins. Even once away from the ever-popular Nile Valley, there are oasis tombs, and remnants of Roman Alexandria to uncover.

    Ancient Ruins
  • Beaches

    The shores of the Red Sea are rightly famous the world over. The water is a stunning clear blue and the coral reefs are simply amazing. Year-round, the sun shines, and there are excursions into the mountainous interior to tempt you away from the sand and lapping waves.

    Beaches
  • Cruises

    Gliding serenely past lush green fields, farmed by ox-drawn ploughshares, admiring the sleek form of a egret is one of the great pleasures of a visit to Egypt. The fact that this glimpse of unchanged rural life also links together some of the greatest historical monuments in Egypt makes a Nile cruise a must!

    Cruises
  • Museums

    The Museum of Egyptian Antiquities is one of the world's great treasure troves, crammed with artefacts from the country's illustrious past. Other, much smaller museums are more than worthy of your time: Luxor museum is especially noteworthy.

    Museums
  • Souqs & Shopping

    As you twist and turn deeper into the Khan El Khalili, passing under Mamluke arches and admiring Ottoman 'mashrabiya' window screens, you're drawn into a traditional world where charismatic vendors try to persuade you to purchase handicrafts and goods manufactured in a tiny workshop behind the shop front.

    Souqs & Shopping

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Excursions in Egypt: Explore the West Bank

Explore the West Bank

Luxor, Upper Egypt, Egypt
  • Culture & History
  • Outdoor Activities

The West Bank at Luxor is known as the Theban Necropolis. The Ancient Egyptian belief in the afterlife arose in part from the death and rebirth cycle of the sun, which they watched each day.

As the sun died over the west bank and then was born again over the eastern horizon, they believed that if they were buried to the west, they too would be reborn, hence the tombs and funerary temples of the nobles and pharaohs of Thebes were all built on the west bank.

This has left us a magnificent array of monuments in a relatively small area, and archaeologists have spent their entire lives exploring here. It was Howard Carter who exploded Egyptology into common conscience with his discovery of Tutankhamun's tomb: never before had a pharaoh been found with all his funerary goods intact. The grave goods were meant to help the pharaoh live a comfortable afterlife, and vast wealth was poured into them: Tutankhamun was a relatively minor king, and people have always been obsessed with finding the funerary goods of someone like Ramses II, although in all likelihood most tombs were plundered within years of being sealed up and the goods are long gone.

What remains are the tombs themselves, centred on two valleys, The Valley of the Kings and The Valley of the Queens. The principle target of this excursion is the Valley of the Kings, where the Theban pharaohs were buried. Tombs were built to differing plans but all involved at least one corridor and burial chamber. Tomb walls were decorated in hieroglyphics celebrating the pharaoh's life and containing prayers from the Book of the Dead, designed to ensure passage into the afterlife. Thanks to the dark, inert atmosphere of the tombs, this decoration has been stunningly preserved, with colours as vibrant as the day they were painted. It is an amazing sensation to be at the end of a tunnel, nearly 100 metres into the solid rock, and see a huge black granite sarcophagus before you with a superbly detailed painting of the sun god being towed over the ceiling in his divine barque.

Of the mortuary temples on the West Bank, that of Hatchepsut is perhaps the most impressive. A massive scheme of restoration has recently been completed: some people think this has left the temple looking sanitised and false, but the truth is, it actually now looks almost identical to the day it was completed, and is the most accurate insight we have into how mortuary temples must have looked. The colonnaded terraces are built in a natural amphitheatre looking towards the Nile, and well-carved statues front most of the pillars. Reliefs depict conventional religious scenes as well as scenes of rural life and the story of an expedition to Punt launched by Hatchepsut and Tuthmosis III which cam back laden with exotic goods including myrrh trees, some of which were planted in and around the temple precinct. Several myrrh trees stumps survive today.

A full day excursion of the West Bank will typically include the Tombs of the Theban rulers in the West Bank and the Temple of Hatchepsut. Duration of the excursion is approximately five hours.

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