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Egyption Valley of the Kings

No comments Valley of the Kings Deep in the limestone hills to the north-west of Deir el Bahri is a remote valley. Here the pharaohs of the 18th, 19th and 20th Dynasties chose their eternal resting place. Thutmose I was the first pharaoh to excavate a tomb in the barren valley, and to construct his […]

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So Much to See in Luxor,1848 | Walking Through Egypt

No comments Communications with the People, 1814 Henry Light Egyptian pepole In some villages I was able to assist the sick by medicines and advice; in others, I added to the catalogue of charms by writing Arabic sentences in praise of God and the Prophet at the request of the villagers. These placed in the […]

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Ancient Egyptian Pyramids at Dahshur Part 5

No comments The Menkaure pyramid, too, was built with large, well-squared blocks. Vyse and Perring said that ‘The bulk of the pyramid has been more carefully built than the two larger and the stones have been better finished, and are of greater size’. Moreover, the hole cut into its eastern face by the Caliph Malek […]

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The further campaigns of Ramses III

No comments The further campaigns of Ramses III For three years Egypt was quiet. Then came trouble on the western borders, again with the Libyans, allied with the Meshwesh and five other tribes. There had been a slight infiltration by immigrants into the area west of the Canopic arm of the Nile for some years, […]

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Tomb Of Amenhotep II Facts

No comments Tomb Of Amenhotep II The walls are painted terracotta and the mortuary texts are so drawn that they give the impression of papyrus texts pinned to the walls. There is not too much detail or use of colour and the effect is austere and dignified. Amenhotep II Mummy On each side of the […]

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Esprit du Nil, 1873 | Walking Through Egypt

No comments Nile-boat Prayers, 1842 Sophia Poole Nile River Boats A custom which is always observed by the Arab boat-men at the commencement of a voyage much pleased me. As soon as the wind had filled our large sail, the Reis [captain] exclaimed: “El-Fat-Hah.” This is the tide of the opening chapter of the Koran […]

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My Memories with The Sphinx of Giza | Travel To Egypt Story 3

No comments The Sphinx is the main actor in the nightly Son et Lumiere performance at the Great Pyramids. Each evening the drama of thousands of years of history is reenacted with the aid of multicolored lights, accompanied by stately music and balanced, poetic narration. Although I have seen Son et Lumiere performances at the […]

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The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Age Facts P3

No comments The central feature of the pyramid complex, the mastaba, underwent no less than five alterations, each extending the original plan, and culminating eventually in the pyramid of six steps as we o Isometric section of Zoser’s Step Pyramid at Saqqara. It shows the three building stages of the original mastaba (1,2,3), The shafts […]

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Pyramids of Giza Facts Part 3

No comments Archaeologists consider the corridors and chambers of the Great Pyramid in relationship with its structural development. The entrance to the core of the Pyramid is in the north face, at a vertically measured height of 55 feet above ground level, and it is situated almost exactly midway across the face. From the entrance, […]

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Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Energy Part 5

No comments Ostrander and Schroeder further deal with the Pyramid’s energies of dehydration in their chapter titled Pyramid Power and the Riddle of the Razor Blade, in which they reproduce a table showing dehydration rates of various objects. This table was compiled by a Jean Martial, and gives somewhat scientific credence to pyramid experimentation. However, […]

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Pyramid Archaeologist Part 1

No comments Introduction Pyramids! The word evokes an image of immense structures soaring upward from a vast ocean of sand three massive triangular faced monuments and a huge half-human, half-animal statue arbitrarily grouped together, parched by a searing sun and eroded by relentless winds. Ancient Egyptian Pyramids These are the pyramids of Egypt tangible enigmas, […]

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Temple of Hathor at Dendera Facts Part 1/2

No comments Graeco-Roman Temples in Upper Egypt  Temple of Hathor at Dendera Dendera (Greek Tentyra) is situated on the western bank of the Nile south of Abydos, where the river makes a great curve to the east. Hathor, the sacred cow, was the popular deity. Graeco-Roman Temples in Upper Egypt Evidence of actual temple building […]

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The Triad of Thebes Facts

No comments The Triad of Thebes Nearly seven hundred kilometers south of Memphis lay the tiny village that today has become the goal of visitors from all over the world because of its remarkable ruins. Called Luxor now it was known as Thebes during its period of dominance, and as Waset before that, when it […]

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The Splendid Mosque, 1846

No comments The Splendid Mosque, 1846 Isabella Romer Splendid Mosque This mosque, (the name of which signifies the “Splendid Mosque”, and not, as has erroneously been stated, the “Mosque of Flowers”), may be termed the University of the East, for in the numerous Colleges attached to it are educated all the youths destined in this […]

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