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 Kristal Fotheri My husband and I took our 16 year old daughter on a 2 day overnight shore excursion to Cairo along with 9 other passengers from our ship. We had an amazing experience!! No complaints at all. Our tour guide, Moustafa, was excellent and radiated passion as he talked about his country and the Egyptian sites he took us to. From the moment we met Moustafa we felt very comfortable and at ease. Not only was he very knowledgeable, he was also very kind and went out of his way to meet our every need, including side jaunts for turkish coffee and helping us to purchase several beautiful cartouches. The trip included two full days visiting the Pyramids (sound & light show, a visit inside the pyramid and camel rides on the Giza plateau), Egyptian Museum, Mohammed Ali Mosque, Saqqara, and Memphis. After a long first day, we spent a very comfortable night at the beautiful & luxurious Oberoi Mena House very near to the pyramids and a delicious breakfast. His company had all of this flawlessly arranged—no issues at all. The van was very comfortable and our driver was excellent, despite the crazy Cairo traffic : ) We felt very safe throughout our tour!! My husband and I highly recommend Moustafa to any one who wants to travel to Egypt.  Ana Aguilar  Egypt is the land of my dreams,and what a better way to do it than with Moustafa.he was our friend that guided us in the most wonderfull places of Egypt.He did &showed us Egypt with the love &the passion that he has for his beloved land.There are no words to describe what he meant for us because he is the best. you will explore this land and feel the love from Egypt through Moustafas passion for his land and for him is not a job is a friend showing the place he was born, grew up, lives and loves. Thats why I Think he is the best. Thank you my friend. We will see each other again but this time will go to Luxor  Sally Griffin  I went on a tour with Moustafa to the pyramids and it was excellent. Moustafa is an excellent tourguide. He is also good fun and friendly and took good care of us. He is very knowledgable and passionate about Egypt and it was a pleasure to tour with him. He makes sure that you see exactly what you want to and can answer any question you may have. I would certainly recommend him as your tourguide if you considering a trip to Egypt.

Abu simbel 

In 1257 BCE, Pharaoh Ramses II (1279-13 BCE) had two temples carved out of solid rock at a site on the west bank of the Nile south of Aswan in the land of Nubia and known today as Abu Simbel. Long before Ramses II, the site had been sacred to Hathor of Absek. The temple built by Ramses, however, was dedicated to the sun gods Amon-Re and Re-Horakhte. Because of their remote location near the Sudanese border in sourthern Egypt, the temples were unknown until their rediscovery in 1813. They were first explored in 1817 by the Egyptologist Giovanni Battista Belzoni.

 

 

                 

The sacred area, marked out as a forecourt and bounded on the north and south sides by brick walls, occupied a place between the sandstone cliffs and the river. Ramses' temple was cut into the face of the cliff, before which is a rock-cut terrace. The temple is approached across this terrace up a flight of steps with an inclined plane in the middle, and enclosed on either side by a balustrade behind which stood a row of hawks and statues of Ramses in various forms.

The rock-cut fa açade of Ramses' temple represents the front of a pylon in front of which are four colossal seated figures of Ramses. This facade is one 119 feet wide, and 100 feet high, while the colossal statues are 67 feet in height. At the top of the pylon, above the cornice, is a row of baboons, who, as Watchers of the Dawn, are shown with their hands raised in adoration of the (rising) sun. The Egyptians believed baboons played a role in helping the sun god Ra defeat the darkness of night and so were believed sacred to the worship of the rising sun.


The actual interior of the temple is inside the cliff in the form of a man-made cave cut out of the living rock. It consists of a series of halls and rooms extending back a total of 185 feet from the entrance. The long first hall is 54 feet wide and 58 feet deep and has two rows of Osirid statues of Ramses each 30 feet high. Those on the north side are shown wearing the White Crown of Upper Egypt, while those on the south wear wearing the Double Crown of Lower Egypt. At the west end of the main hall are three doors, the side ones leading into lateral chambers, and the central one opening into a room with four square pillars. From this room a doorway leads to the vestibule, and beyond that is located the innermost shrine with seated statues of the gods Ptah, Amun-Ra, the deified Ramses II, and Re-Horakhte.

 

The most remarkable feature of the site is that the temple is precisely oriented so that twice every year, on 22 February and 22 October, the first rays of the morning sun shine down the entire length of the temple-cave to illuminate the back wall of the innermost shrine and the statues of the four gods seated there.

With the construction of the Aswan High Dam in the 1960s, the temples were threatened with submersion under the rising waters of the reservoir (Lake Nassar). Between 1964 and 1966, a project sponsored by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) and the Egyptian government disassembled both temples and reconstructed them on top of the cliff 200 feet above the original site.

                

 

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