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Gives a tour of the Egypt, cross-referenced with detailed maps. The features of this work include: places; essay features - on Egypt's history, people and culture; travel tips - practical listings section, including accommodation, entertainment, transport and essential contact addresses and numbers; and many full-colour photographs and 24 maps.
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Egypt

Egypt  Highlights

Abu Simbel
Every year on 22 February and 22 October, only one day later than originally planned, the dawn rays of the sun reach to the heart of the reconstructed Temple of Ramese II to revive the cult statues. The colossal statues, with finely carved faces but crudely finished bodies, and the reliefs inside the temple, never fail to impress. Guided tours conclude with a visit behind the scenes to the futuristic structure that was built to support the temple once it had been moved.

Aswan
Ivory, ebony, rose and gold are the defining colours of Aswan (215 km south of Luxor). Here, a wild jumble of glistening igneous rocks, strewn across the Nile, suddenly creates narrows between the highlands of the Eastern Desert and the sandy wastes of the Sahara. The barrier to navigation is known as the First Cataract, and was once where the civilized world stopped.

Cairo
A roaring metropolis of 17 million people, Cairo is loved and hated in equal measure. But most visitors to Egypt spend at least a few days here, sampling its mosques, museums and bazaars.

The Red Sea
Gorgeous corals, shooting damsel fish, brightly coloured parrot, butterfly and angel fish - Egypt's Eastern coasts teem with brilliant life. Though the Gulf of Aqaba and the Red Sea attain great depths in the middle, relatively shallow seas cover the continental shelf that runs along the shores. The underwater world is a paradise for divers and for snorkellers, who only need to swim a few metres off the barren coast to discover its treasures.

Egyptian Museum, Cairo
This fantastic museum holds the world's greatest collection of Egyptian artifacts. No-one should be advised to miss anything if possible, but visitors in a hurry should turn left and see the treasures of the Old Kingdom, then head for the end of the corridor to the Akhenaten Room. From there, take the stairs up to the galleries containing the treasures of Tutankhamun.

Karnak, Luxor
The temple complex of Amun-Ra at Karnak and its neighbouring buildings constitute the most overwhelming of all the Egyptian monuments. Apart from the immense conglomeration of elements that make up the temple itself, it also has the most complicated form in the country because, unlike most other temples in Egypt, it was developed over many centuries.

Saqqarah
Built by the last king of the 5th Dynasty (circa 2375-2345 BC), this houses the earliest Pyramid text. The ceremonial causeway has been excavated and the pyramid at the end is one of the least difficult for visitors to enter.

Red Sea and Sinai Monasteries
In the Sinai Desert and along the Red Sea coast, where religions and cultures have so often clashed, lie several ancient monasteries. Santa Katarina - with well-developed tourism facilities - has a very famous monastery near what many believe is Mount Sinai. The Monasteries of St Paul and St Anthony, easy day-trip destinations from Hurghadah, have lost much of their original remoteness. St Anthony Monastery is considered the oldest in the world.

The River Nile
Aswan offers some of the loveliest views of the Nile. It's a wonderful place to take a felucca trip, either for a short voyage around the islands or, for the hardy, to embark on a cruise to Luxor.

Giza
The Pyramids of Giza - the most famous symbol of Egypt and the only survivors among the Seven Wonders of the World - are not hard to find. Standing at the end of a boulevard (Shari' al-Ahram) on the desert plateau above the western edge of Giza, across the river from Cairo, they can most usefully be seen in combination with a visit either to the sites of Saqqarah or to the modern villages of Kirdassah and Harraniyyah.

Luxor
To many egyptologists, Luxor is the most important and dramatic site in the country. Al-Uqsur (the Palaces) is the Arabic name for Thebes, the capital city of the New Kingdom (1570-1070 BC), whose glory still glowed in the memories of classical writers a thousand years after its decline. Here the booty of foreign wars, tribute and taxes poured into the coffers of the pharaohs of the 18th and 19th Dynasties, each of whom surpassed his predecessor in the construction of gorgeous temples and tombs, creating a concentration of monuments that rivals that of any imperial city before or since.

 

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