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Luxor One Day Small Group

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From$70
Price
From$70
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29
12
Availability : Sunday - Tuesday - Thursday
Hurghada
Luxor
Max People : 8

We take you on a trip to Luxor city with a small group of up to 8 people to discover the ancient civilization and the towering architectural temples. Your trip starts at 5 am and ends at the hotel around 8:00 pm. During the trip, you will be accompanied by a tour guide, professional drivers, an air-conditioned tourist car, and lunch at a restaurant on the Nile.

Tour Details

We take you on a trip to Luxor city with a small group of up to 8 people to discover the ancient civilization and the towering architectural temples. Your trip starts at 5 am and ends at the hotel around 8:00 pm. During the trip, you will be accompanied by a tour guide, professional drivers, an air-conditioned tourist car, and lunch at a restaurant on the Nile.

Pick-up locations

All hotels in Hurghada – El Gouna – Sahl Hashish – Makadi – Safaga

Pickup Time

From 4:00 AM to 5:00 AM depending on the client’s location  

The exact time must be coordinated with the reservation officer

 

Price Includes

  • Tour guideRussian or English language
  • Lunch (open buffet)Without drinks
  • transportModern air-conditioned tourist vehicle
  • All transportation in destination location

Price Excludes

  • Any Private Expenses
  • Drinks in the restaurant
  • A motor trip on the Nile10 Euros per person optional
  • Entrance ticketsThe customer pays by bank card or buys them from the Ministry of Tourism website

Complementaries

  • Sunglasses
  • Camera
  • Breakfast from the hotel
Itinerary

1Karnak Temples

The Karnak Temple Complex, commonly known as Karnak comprises a vast mix of temples, pylons, chapels, and other buildings near Luxor, Egypt. Construction at the complex began during the reign of Senusret I (reigned 1971–1926 BC) in the Middle Kingdom (c. 2000–1700 BC) and continued into the Ptolemaic Kingdom (305–30 BC), although most of the extant buildings date from the New Kingdom. The area around Karnak was the ancient Egyptian Ipet-isut (“The Most Selected of Places”) and the main place of worship of the 18th Dynastic Theban Triad, with the god Amun as its head. It is part of the monumental city of Thebes, and in 1979 it was added to the UNESCO World Heritage List along with the rest of the city. Karnak gets its name from the nearby, and partly surrounded, modern village of El-Karnak, 2.5 kilometers (1.6 miles) north of Luxor.

2Colossi of Memnon

The Colossi of Memnon (Arabic: el-Colossat or es-Salamat) are two massive stone statues of the Pharaoh Amenhotep III, which stand at the front of the ruined Mortuary Temple of Amenhotep III, the largest temple in the Theban Necropolis. They have stood since 1350 BC and were well known to ancient Greeks and Romans, as well as early modern travelers and Egyptologists. The statues contain 107 Roman-era inscriptions in Greek and Latin, dated to between AD 20 and 250; many of these inscriptions on the northernmost statue make reference to the Greek mythological king Memnon, whom the statue was then – erroneously – thought to represent.

Scholars have debated how the identification of the northern colossus as “Memnon” is connected to the Greek name for the entire Theban Necropolis as the Memnonium.

3temple of Hatshepsut 

The mortuary temple of Hatshepsut (Egyptian: Ḏsr-ḏsrw meaning “Holy of Holies”) is a mortuary temple built during the reign of Pharaoh Hatshepsut of the Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt. Located opposite the city of Luxor, it is considered to be a masterpiece of ancient architecture. Its three massive terraces rise above the desert floor and into the cliffs of Deir el-Bahari. Hatshepsut’s tomb, KV20, lies inside the same massif capped by El Qurn, a pyramid for her mortuary complex. At the edge of the desert, 1 km (0.62 mi) east, connected to the complex by a causeway, lies the accompanying valley temple. Across the river Nile, the whole structure points towards the monumental Eighth Pylon, Hatshepsut’s most recognizable addition to the Temple of Karnak and the site from which the procession of the Beautiful Festival of the Valley departed. Its axes identify the temple’s twin functions: its central east-west axis served to receive the bark of Amun-Re at the climax of the festival, while its north-south axis represented the life cycle of the pharaoh from coronation to rebirth.

4Valley of the Kings

The Valley of the Kings, also known as the Valley of the Gates of the Kings, is an area in Egypt where, for a period of nearly 500 years from the Eighteenth Dynasty to the Twentieth Dynasty, rock-cut tombs were excavated for pharaohs and powerful nobles under the New Kingdom of ancient Egypt.

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