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Nile Cruise Aswan-Lu xor 4 Days trips

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Nile Cruise Aswan-Lu xor 4 Days trips
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Nile Cruise Aswan-Lu xor 4 Days trips

Take a leisurely tour of the monuments along the Nile River and enjoy a 5-star luxury cruise service. Professional guides will explain the tour and learn about ancient Egyptian civilization and culture

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Itinerary

Day 1: Arrive at Arrive Unfinished Obelisk Philae Temple Nubian Village

Stop At: Aswan High Dam, Manteqet As Sad Al Aali, Aswan Egypt
Visit Aswan High Dam
Aswan Dam (Arabic: السد العالي) is divided into Aswan Low Dam (also known as Old Aswan Dam, Little Aswan Dam) and Aswan High Dam (also known as Aswan Dam). Aswan is located in Egypt In the city under the Nile's first waterfall, two dams cross the Nile here. Because the design of the old dam was not enough to control the flood, new high dams were built to protect the population, farmland and cotton fields living along the river.
Duration: 40 minutes

Stop At: Unfinished Obelisk, Sheyakhah Oula, Aswan Egypt
Visit Unfinished Obelisk. Visit Unfinished Obelisk.
Duration: 50 minutes

Stop At: Temple of Philae, Island of Agilika, Aswan Egypt
Visit Philae temple
Philae temple, located in Aswan, Egypt, was built on the island of Philae in the South Nile River in the city of Aswan. It is dedicated to the god of love, Isis, and is famous for the mythology of stone carvings and reliefs. The oldest place to keep religion in ancient Egypt. After the impoundment of the Old Aswan Dam at the end of the 19th century, the original site of Philae Temple was gradually submerged. The Aswan Dam, which began construction in the 1960s, exacerbates the problem. Since 1972, the Egyptian government, with the assistance of UNESCO, has built cofferdams around the temples to drain the river water in the weirs. Then gradually dismantled the temple and relocated it to the island of Agilekia, more than 500 meters away from the original site, and rebuilt it as it was. In March 1980, the relocation and reconstruction work was completed and the temple was reopened.

The Temple of Philae, part of the Nubian site in the nearby area, was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1979.
Duration: 1 hour

Stop At: Nubian Village, This is a Village and does not have a web-site, Aswan Egypt
Option Tour at your own expense Nubian Village 50 $ Person per person
Duration: 2 minutes

Meals included:
• Lunch: Open buffet
• Dinner: Open buffet
Accommodation included: 5 Star Nile Cruise

Day 2: Early morning at your own expense Abu Simbel Temple Kom Ombo Temple

Stop At: Abu Simbel Temple Complex, Abu Simbel, Abu Simbel Egypt
Early morning Option Tour 0400 am Abu Simbel Temple 130 $ Person per person

Abu Simbel Temple (Arabic: أبو سنبل or أبو سمبل) is an ancient cultural site located 290 kilometers southwest of Aswan, Egypt. It is said that the name was derived from the earliest guide who brought Westerners to the scene (a little boy) name. It is located on the west bank of Lake Nasser and consists of two giant temples carved from rock. Abu Simbel and many of its ruins downstream to Philae Island have been used as Nubian ruins by UNESCO. Designated as World Heritage.

It consists of the archway gate built by Yiya, the giant Ramesses II cliff statue, the front and rear pillar halls, and the shrine. From 1964 to 1968, due to the construction of the Aswan dam, the overall migration to the back mountain more than 60 meters above the riverbed was a successful attempt to protect the world's cultural relics.
Duration: 8 hours

Stop At: Temple of Kom Ombo, Nagoa Ash Shatb, Kom Ombo 81611 Egypt
Kom Ombo Temple

The temple was worshipped by two different gods, built on the same equivalent temple for ancient Egyptians to worship. They are the sun god Horus and the crocodile god of destruction.
Duration: 2 hours

Meals included:
• Breakfast: Open buffet
• Lunch: Open buffet
• Dinner: Open buffet
Accommodation included: 5 Star Nile Cruise

Day 3: Edfu (Horus) Temple Luxor Temple

Stop At: Temple of Horus at Edfu, Adfo, Edfu Egypt
The Temple of Edfu (also known as the Temple of Horus, Temple of Horus) is an ancient Egyptian temple located in Edfu, a city on the west bank of the Nile in Egypt. It is the largest and best preserved temple after the Karnak Temple [1]. In addition to serving Horus, the head of the eagle, the temple also serves as a religious sacrifice. In addition, the inscriptions on the walls of the temple also provide scholars with a lot of information on the language, mythology and religion of ancient Egypt during the Hellenistic period.
Duration: 2 hours

Stop At: Luxor, Luxor, Nile River Valley
Luxor Temple
It can be deduced from the reused building materials in the temple that there was already a temple here during the twelfth dynasty of Egypt. Pharaoh Thutmose III built the first part of the new temple here.

Amenhotep III ordered his architect, Amenhotep, to build a temple, pillar, and a second inner courtyard south of today's temple. The colonnade was also built during his reign. The temple was closed during Amenhotep IV, Amon's name was obscured, and a temple of Aton was built on the edge of the temple. Tutankhamun continued the construction of the temple, and Harun Hebu completed the temple.

Ramesses II built the first courtyard, a gate with statues, and an obelisk. Nektaneb I built the courtyard in front of the gate.

Alexander the Great ordered the transformation of the temple, changing the four pillars supporting the roof into a small church. The entire temple was combined into a fortress during the Roman Empire. Four churches were also built throughout the temple in the first centuries after the AD.
Duration: 2 hours

Meals included:
• Breakfast: Open buffet
• Lunch: Open buffet
• Dinner: Open buffet
Accommodation included: 5 Star Nile Cruise

Day 4: Valley of the kings Hatsheput queen Temple Memnon colossi Karnak Temple

Stop At: Valley of the Kings, Luxor City, Luxor 85511 Egypt
Valley of the kings
Valley of the Kings (Arabic: وادي الملوك Wādī al Mulūk; Coptic: ϫ ⲏⲙⲉ; English: Valley of the Kings) is a valley located in Egypt where the pharaohs and nobles of the 18-20 dynasty of the New Kingdom of Egypt were buried.

The Valley of the Kings is located at 25 ° 44′N 32 ° 36′E. It is located on the top of the pyramid-shaped peak Al-Qurn on the west bank of the Nile, opposite Thebes (now Luxor). The Valley of the Kings is divided into the East Valley and the West Valley, and most important tombs are located in the East Valley. Only one mausoleum in the West Valley is open to the public: the mausoleum of Itnut Ai (the successor of Tutankhamun). West Valley also has many other important tombs, including Amenhotep III, but it is still not open to the public during the excavation.
Duration: 2 hours

Stop At: Temple of Hatshepsut at Deir el Bahari, Kings Valley Rd Deir el-Bahari, Luxor 23512 Egypt
Hatsheput queen Temple
Hatshepsut (Hatshepsut or Hatshepsowet; circa 1508-January 16, 1458), or translations of Hatshepsut, Hitchesor, or Hasepsu, in ancient Egyptian meaning: "Noblest Lady". She was the eighteenth dynasty pharaoh (c. 1479 BC-c. 1458 BC) and the second female pharaoh to be examined in ancient Egypt. She is a well-known female pharaoh in ancient Egypt.
Duration: 1 hour

Stop At: Colossi of Memnon, Thebes, Luxor Egypt
Colossi of Memnon
The Colossi of Memnon (Arabic: el-Colossat or es-Salamat) were two large stone statues of Pharaoh Amenhotep III, who ruled in Egypt during the 18th Dynasty. They have been standing at Theban Necropolis since 1350 BC, which is west of the Nile and not far from the modern city of Luxor.
Duration: 40 minutes

Stop At: Temple of Ramesses III, Karnak, Karnak,, Luxor Egypt
Karnak Temple
Karnak Temple is the oldest temple in Thebes. It is 4 kilometers north of Luxor town on the east bank of the Nile. The temple has been built over a long period of time and is divided into three parts by brick walls. The middle part is the best preserved and the largest part, covering an area of about 30 hectares, also dedicated to the sun god Amon; the left is dedicated to the god Montu, covering 2.5 hectares; the other is dedicated to The goddess of Amon, the goddess of Mute in the form of a vulture, has not yet been discovered.

Around Kanek Temple are Temple of Kons and other small temples. Each religious season ritual begins at Kanek Temple and ends at Luxor Temple. There is a one-kilometer-long slate boulevard between the two sides, lined with holy sheep statues on both sides. The pavement is interspersed with some slabs wrapped with gold or silver foil, shining.

The Karnak Temple is famous worldwide for its vast scale. It is the largest pillar-supported temple on earth. Graphically speaking, the mass of the Temple of Karnak can house a Notre Dame, covering more than half of Manhattan. The large pillar hall of the Temple of Karnak is about 5,000 square meters. There are 134 stone pillars arranged in 16 rows in the hall. The two central rows are particularly large, each up to 21 meters in height and 3.57 meters in diameter. It can hold 100 people on it. Stand up. The stigma is an open papyrus flower. The entire hall uses such dense columns to create a shocking effect.

The stone pillars in the hall are like virgin forests. They are only lighted by the high side windows formed by the difference in roof height between the middle and the sides. After being divided by the beams and stigmas, the light gradually becomes dim, forming the mysterious and depressive atmosphere of "the deification of kingship" required by Pharaoh . These huge images are shocking, and the spirit feels repressed under the weight of material, and these repressive feelings are the starting point of worship, which is the starting point of the artistic conception of the Temple of Karnak Amon.
Duration: 2 hours

Meals included:
• Breakfast: Open buffet
No accommodation included on this day.



Duration:4 days
Commences in:Aswan, Egypt
Country:Egypt
City:Aswan

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