Monday, May 23, 2011

Sharm El Sheikh and Cairo Holiday Package for 999 USD











 
Day # 1: Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt

Arrive at Sharm El Sheikh. Upon your arrival you will be met by egyptraveluxe Representative and then you will be transferred to your hotel for check in, and enjoy some free time to relax with a peaceful overnight stay.

Day # 2: Sharm El Sheikh / Giza Sightseeing Tours

Breakfast at your hotel in Sharm el sheikh then you will be transferred to Sharm el sheikh airport to fly to Cairo, where you will be met and assisted and then you will be accompanied by your English speaking guide and driver for a full day tour in Cairo to visit The Pyramids, the Great Sphinx , The Alabaster status of Ramses II IN Memphis , The Step Pyramid and tombs in Sakkara - with lunch and Shopping tour at Pyramids bazaars and papyrus institutes also included -Cairo overnight

Day # 3: Cairo Sightseeing Tours /Luxor

After breakfast you will be escorted by your English speaking guide and driver for a full day tour in Cairo to visit the Egyptian Museum of Antiquities, The Citadel of Saladin Mohammed Ali Alabaster Mosque, The Coptic churches- with lunch break. The tour includes a visit to Khan El Khalili Bazaar, from there you will be transferred to Giza train terminal to board your first class sleeper train to Luxor with dinner and overnight stay aboard train

Day # 4: Luxor sightseeing

Breakfast aboard train before arriving Luxor and then you will be met and assisted and by your English speaking guide and driver for a wonderful tour to visit East Bank of the Nile in Luxor to the Karnak temple and Luxor temple with lunch included. With free time at leisure in Luxor for shopping then will be transferred to your hotel for check in with free time at leisure and overnight stay in Luxor

Day # 5: Luxor Sightseeing Tour / Sharm
Breakfast at your hotel in Luxor and then you will be accompanied to visit the West Bank of the River Nile in Luxor to the Valley of the Kings, the temple of Queen Hatshipsut at El Deir EL Bahari and the Colossi of Memnon and then back to cruise for lunch break.and then you will be transferred to Luxor airport for departure to Sharm, where you will be met and assisted and transferred to your hotel for free time at leisure and overnight stay

Day # 6: Sharm El Sheikh Holiday

Breakfast at your hotel in Sharm with free time at leisure and overnight stay Optional Safari Tour to Colored Canyon from Sharm El Sheikh one of the natural wonders of the Sinai, the Colored Canyon is awe-inspiring, take a walk in between dramatic sandstone canyon walls streaked with melting yellows, purples, reds, magentas and gold. In certain places the canyon walls reach up to 40 meters. You feel as if you are enclosed in a spectacular coloring book.
DETAILED ITINERARY


Day # 7: Sharm El Sheikh Holiday

Optional Excursions to Ras Mohammed National Park from Sharm El Sheikh Ras Mohammed National Park is both a terrestrial and an aquatic nature reserve. The 480 square kilometre protected area lies where the Gulf of Suez meets the Gulf of Aqaba at Sinai's southern extremity. The arid desert terrain of sand dunes, gravel plains, fossilized corals and Granite Mountains is home to a number of rare mammal species: Dorcas gazelle, Nubian ibex and red fox. Easier to spot are the resident birds like terns, herons, gulls and ospreys. Thousands of white storks pass through Ras Mohammed each year, heading south during September/October and back north during April/May. About 85 flora species live in the park, including mangroves

Day # 8: Sharm / Home

Breakfast at your hotel in Sharm el sheikh and then you will be transferred back to Sharm el sheikh airport to fly back home

Friday, May 13, 2011

Female Rights in Ancient Egypt

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There appears to be no distinction between male and female rights in Ancient Egypt. Women had a unique position in comparison to other ancient societies. They could buy, sell and inherit land, the most valuable commodity of Ancient Egypt's slavery-feudal economic system. Women could initiate legal proceedings on their own right, act as witnesses, plaintiffs or defendants. Female rights in Ancient Egypt also included drafting civil contracts such as marriage, divorce and purchasing property. A wife was entitled to one third of the property upon her husband's death, and she could decide the beneficiaries of the other two thirds.As regards to legal status, women were not treated as male property, in sharp contrast to contemporary neighboring societies, including Greece, were women were required to obtain permission from a father, husband or other male to acquire property or be represented in court. A free woman, not having the status of a slave by particular circumstances such as debt, could not be sold or given away.
Ancient Egyptian culture ranked status and privileges according to social position. What we know about female rights in Ancient Egypt is derived from documents pertaining to women of the upper classes. Peasant women often worked as servants to the wealthy. Occupations included wet nurses, midwives, musicians, singers, dancers, domestic duties such as baking, beer preparation and other similar chores. Professional mourners were hired at funerals. It was possible to some degree to rise up in Ancient Egypt social structure, and females of all classes could become priestesses.
Women also enjoyed the status given to their husbands or family relations, and played particular importance in protecting the privileges that came with special titles. Women of the royal family and their attendants held many titles. The pharaoh's principal wife was called "God's Wife" and "Great Royal Wife". The daughters of the pharaoh were never given in exchange for foreign princesses.

Private life of Ancient Egyptian women


No written document has been found so far that gives a hint as to what kind of ceremony was held, if any, when a man and a woman became husband and wife. It is generally believed that a couple simply started living together. Marriage was an important institution, though, and everyone was expected to marry and establish a family. Monogamy was the general rule, with the exception of the royal family, principally to assure dynasty continuity. Female rights in Ancient Egypt included divorce and remarriage. Reasons for divorce were wife's adultery and childlessness, but couples could separate at will.
Pregnancy was very important for Ancient Egypt women, and so was contraception. Doctors (priests) performed all kinds of tests to determine whether a woman was pregnant or not. The earliest recorded pregnancy test comes from an ancient Egyptian medical training papyrus from around 1350 B.C. The woman who thinks she may be pregnant urinates on wheat and barley whole grains/seeds.
“If the barley seeds sprout or grow, it means a male child will be born. If the wheat sprouts and thrives, it means a female child will arrive in a few months. If the barley and wheat grains never sprout and grow when a woman urinates on the grain seeds, the woman is not pregnant and therefore, will not give birth this time around."
Scientists have tested this ancient Egyptian medicinal folklore and found it to be 70 percent accurate. The reason why it works is because the urine of pregnant women contains a high level of estrogen that may help the grains to sprout.
 


A well known method for contracepcion was the use of crocodile dung on the vagina as spermicide.
Ancient Egyptian women are well known for their special care to appearance and beauty. Many cosmetics, perfumes and unguents were invented or first used in Ancient Egypt, although the use of these were not exclusive to the female gender. Good hygiene required shaving body hair, including the head to prevent lice infestation. Tomb paintings of the New Kingdom often depict scenery where elite women are displaying intricately tressed wigs and semitransparent body tight clothes, while dancers and servants appear almost nude.
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Tuesday, May 10, 2011

The bindweeds of Egypt and their symbolic role for the deceased

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From the Middle Kingdom until the 18th Dynasty, representations are found of a parasitic bindweed associated with the stems of papyrus, . Its representations increase and refine themselves during the Amarnian period because of the naturalistic leaning to nature; but it is in Ramesside times, and more particularly that of Ramesses II, that the images become more beautiful and most detailed. The plant is frequently attached to the stem of the papyrus, or to bouquets, but being also able to, more rarely, exist separately. After the 20th Dynasty, if the theme persists, the quality of the representations decrease (as do all more representations of nature).
This success under the Ramesseses is probably linked with the specific beliefs of that time, and notably the eminent place that the solar cults occupy.

The nature of the plant has been under debate a long time










Some people wanted to recognise it as an ivy, others a bindweed. It has been established however that the ivy is not an indigenous plant and does not appear in Egypt until the Greco-Roman period.
It is necessary to incline therefore toward a Convolvulus of the type Bindweed of the fields (Convolvulus arvensis), since it is often present in the floral garlands found in tombs (including that of Tutankhamun). It is not however the only candidate, and another very close variant is possible. However, according to Lopez-Moncet (botanist): "Whatever species is recognised in the bindweed, it seems therefore that although a Convolvulaceae was the archetype of it, essentially chosen for its symbolic character expressing vigour, from the shape of its leaves as triangular or in the shape of an arrow-head, and it has become conventional".

In modern botany, the convolvulaceae, the bindweed of the fields, Convolvulus arvensis, is classified as weeds. It is especially difficult to get rid of it because of the length of its long white rhizomes which can reach several metres and are multi-branched. This exceptional rhizome has a means of vegetative reproduction (without using the seeds), which is very effective since only one fragment is sufficient for it to regenerate, sometimes years after its supposed eradication.
The ancient Egyptians had perhaps noticed this astonishing fertility, an additional argument to represent the plant in a context of rebirth.

How to interpret the absence of usual and unusual flowering in the representations

First hypothesis, the flowers were considered insufficiently conspicuous, because they were too small.
Second hypothesis, a voluntary separation of the flowers and the rest of the plant. It is found, for example in the tomb of Panehesy, with characteristic flowers, bell-shaped or funnel-shaped, in friezes. The bindweed lives in very close contact with the papyrus in a swampy habitat, close to the banks of the Nile. Sometimes the leaves seem to spring directly from the stem of the papyrus. Because of this fact, the extraction of the two plants had often to be simultaneous. Besides, the umbel of papyrus is often schematised by artists, in a corolla aspect, which would then also serve to the bindweed as a unique, terminal flower, giant, turned toward the sun. Thus, every plant brings to the other some elements which the other seems to lack.

Classification

Five classes of bindweed exist, which can be divided into subtypes.

Type I


























One or several bindweed wind themselves around a stem of papyrus, in search of light. This can be observed in scenes of offering to individuals (Ia), in bouquets offered to divinities (Ib), or around catafalques (Ic).
Notably at the tombs of Benia and Nefersekheru, the triangular shape of the leaves can clearly be seen.
Another representation at Benia shows a parasitised lotus stem, indicating another possible support for the bindweed, but rarely observed.

Type II









The plants hang as greenery from the roof of kiosks (as in Amarna) or in childbirth. Their representation in this case is very natural.
In the Amarnian tomb of Panehesy, Queen Nefertiti can be found pouring a drink through a filter, for her royal spouse, Akhenaten. The royal couple are under a kiosk with the papyrus capitals. The roof hangs with vines, some of which are in bloom, mixed with lotus and grapes. It is therefore about kiosks of greenery, which are in the open air. The bindweed is represented in a very faithful manner, and it is very unlikely that in the Amarnian period it had the religious connotation that it will have in the Ramesside period.

Type III























The plants were dissociated from the papyrus, their most frequent natural support (which was easy, there are no spikes) and constitute a fully-fledged offering (IIIb); sometimes the bindweed is grasped like a sistrum or a menat-necklace (both are Hathoric symbols) (IIIa). In any case, the presence of the papyrus is implicit.
The coffin of the chantress of Amon, Hatshepsut, is in the Grenoble museum . In stuccoed wood and painted, it dates from the 21st Dynasty. A special place has been reserved for the plant representations, the classic lotuses and papyri, but also the bindweeds. On the lid, four long stems of bindweed hang from the dress from the waist. Below the feet, the bindweed again climbs up itself and around the papyri raised by Nephthys.
Another beautiful example of these representations is found on the coffin of the wife of the craftsman Sennedjem, found in his tomb at Deir el-Medina.

Type IV








The bell-shaped flowers of the bindweed appear between the open flowers of the blue lotus, at the level of the frieze decoration, as in tomb TT278 of Amenemhab.

Type V















































The bindweed is incorporated into tall floral composition, either simply (Va), as offered to the beloved (Vb), or next to the tall "bouquet of Amon" (Vc).
In the scene of the mummy raised in front of the tomb of Nefersekheru, a large bouquet created from papyrus is in front of the mummy. It is surrounded with a plant with large triangular blue-green leaves. These leaves, associated this time with red bell-shaped flowers, are also found around the bunch behind the mummy near the head of the cow Hathor.

Type VI








This represents the floral metaphor.
The best representation is the stela of Tenperet, which is in Louvre . The deceased is standing in worship in front of Ra-Horakhty. The solar disk, which is on the god's head, bathes the lady with its radiance, the rays being symbolised by bindweed flowers.


Place of the bindweed in the symbolic funeral









Papyrus is more abundant on the west bank of the Nile than on the east bank, especially in Thebes. The entangled bindweed and papyrus, in their natural habitat, is clearly visible in the representation which comes of the tomb of TT217 Ipuy: at the edge of the shallow water which is beneath the man operating the chadouf, can be seen the bindweeds climbing up the stems of papyrus.

• Thus, reaching the western shore where the funeral will take place, the mummy of the deceased must cross a marshy area where the reeds and papyrus grow. The latter representing the Hathoric plant par excellence, because we are in the middle of the area where the cows preferentially graze; the animals which symbolise the goddess. To offer papyrus and bindweeds was a means to curry favour with the goddess and proof that the deceased had successfully reached the western bank and could continue his journey toward the necropolis. The bindweed was also considered as encouraging birth, and it is known that Hathor plays a central role in the (re)birth of the dead that she will bear within. Thus, it decorated, since the Amarnian period, the kiosks of childbirth, such those attested to Deir el-Medineh. The plant being inseparable from the papyrus, forms the marshes of Chemmis where Isis was able to symbolically give birth in safety to the young Horus.

• The bindweed had another important characteristic, which explains its preferential representation, firstly in the days of Akhenaten, then during the Ramesside period (which is known to have taken over many Amarnian ideas): its marked heliotropism. Just like the flower which always faces the forces of light and opens its flowers at sunrise, the late Ramesside period aspires above all else to greet the dawn every day.

• The bindweed is sometimes represented being carried by the deceased's wife on the crook of her left arm, which makes sense knowing that the deceased is often likened to the papyrus stem, which his erect phallus evokes. His wife, likened to the bindweed, shows him her affection whilst coiling herself around him. Become a "complete" papyrus, the couple will also be able to become implanted on the banks, waiting for the passage of the Hathor cow.

Here is S. Aufrère's conclusion: "Thus, the bindweed affirms itself as a vehicle of passage from one world to the other, in a form of horizontal transfer from the marsh towards the shore of the dead, which rises towards the sun, under the light of which it starts blooming, to greet the passage of the solar star, thus in a cascade of colour, as shown in Taperet stele which, although belated, summarises admirably as a reminiscence, an old Theban belief."


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Friday, May 6, 2011

Golf holidays in Egypt


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Stay ahead of the game
Golf Holidays in Egypt, Playing Golf Game,Golf in Cairo, Golf in Luxor, Golf in Hurghada,
Pyramids Tour, Egyptian museum and LUXOR excursions.
Get indulged with the beautiful landscape and exceptional sightseeing attractions in Egypt. Enjoy playing golf in Mena House Golf Course, Kattamiya Heights Golf Resort in Cairo. Royal Valley Golf Club in Luxor and Golf Resort at Soma Bay in Hurghada. Also visit Giza Pyramids, Luxor West & East Banks and relax in Hurghada with the fascinating nature.
Length Approx.5 days
Type private tour with personal
Highlights Tour valid year around with pick up and drop off from the cruise pier
Price From : 410 $ USD
Golf Tours at the feet of the Pyramide - Cairo
Golf Tours in Cairo, Golfing Holidays in Egypt, Playing Golf Game, Pyramids Tour, Egyptian Museum
Get excited by the unique holidays and enjoy our special tour to Egypt to visit the most historical places such as Great Pyramids at Giza and Egyptian Museum. Enjoy playing golf in Mena House Golf Course, Kattamiya Heights Golf Resort in Cairo) &
Length Approx.5 days
Type private tour with personal
Highlights Tour valid year around with pick up and drop off from the cruise pier
Price From : 650 $ USD
A golf holiday of a life time
Golf in Egypt, Golfing Holidays in Egypt, Playing Golf Game, Golf in Luxor, Golf in Sharm, Giza Pyramids, Egyptian Museum and Luxor excursions
Experience Golf in Egypt with fantastic holidays to play golf in a fascinating landscape in Cairo, Luxor & Red Sea. During your holiday enjoy visiting the exotic Pyramids of Giza and Sphinx, National Museum, Luxor West & East Banks and relax in Sharm El Sheikh with the fascinating nature.
Length Approx.5 days
Type private tour with personal
Highlights Tour valid year around with pick up and drop off from the cruise pier
Price From : 650 $ USD
Short golf holiday in Luxor-Egypt
Enjoy the bright sunny days of LUXOR while playing your favorite sport ,get a tour around the valley of the kings ,hatshepsuit temple,colossi of Memnon on the west bank and The Massive impressive Karnak temple extended to Luxor temple
Length Approx.5 days
Type private tour with personal
Highlights Tour valid year around with pick up and drop off from the cruise pier
Price From : 650 $ USD

Monday, May 2, 2011

Picture tour inside The Massive Karnak Temple


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The Karnak Temple Complex—usually called Karnak—comprises a vast mix of ruined temples, chapels, pylons, and other buildings, notably the Great Temple of Amun and a massive structure begun by Pharaoh Ramses II (ca. 1391–1351 BC). Sacred Lake is part of the site as well. It is located near Luxor, some 500 km south of Cairo, in Egypt. The area around Karnak was the ancient Egyptian Ipet-isut ("The Most Selected of Places") and the main place of worship of the eighteenth dynasty Theban Triad with the god Amun as its head. It is part of the monumental city of Thebes. The Karnak complex takes its name from the nearby, and partly surrounded, modern village of el-Karnak, some 2.5 km north of Luxor.

1- The enterance to the main temple of Karnak -The avenue of the ram-headed sphinxes
The visitor will enter the temple from Its eastern entrance which in ancient times was connected with the river Nile ended with a marina for the boats dock loaded by stones used in building the different Temple facilities ,The marina is the chick point today .few steps forwarad is the avenue of The Ram headed Sphinxes built by Ramasses II around 1252BC.
2- The first open court
3- The Granite statue of Ramasses II with his daughter Bennata


4- The Great Hypo style Hall :(1300BC.)

is found after passing through the Second Pylon. The hall is considered to be one of the world's greatest architectural masterpieces. Construction began during Ramesses I's reign. He was the king who founded the Nineteenth Dynasty and was king for only one year. The work continued under Seti I (1306 - 1290 BC). Seti I also built the Temple of Abydos and many other temples. The hall was completed by Seti I's son, Ramesses II. The effects that are produced inside the hall are much different than they were originally. The huge architraves are not above the capitals that tower above. Toward the center of the hall several architraves and windows that have stone latticework still remain.
This small area can give one an idea of the builders' intent for the lighting effects. Some imagination is required here to appreciate what it must have looked like. The walls, ceilings and columns are painted with the natural earth tones. The light that was allowed in originally kept most of the hall in shadows. The hall ceiling was 82 feet high and was supported by 12 papyrus columns. The columns are made of sandstone and set in two rows of six. Each row is flanked on either side by 7 rows of columns that are 42 feet (12.8m) high. Each row has 9 columns, however the inner rows have 7 columns. The reliefs throughout the hall contain symbolism of Creation. The reliefs in the northern half are from the time period of Seti I and are obviously better done than those done by his son Ramesses II, which are in the southern half. Ramesses II's reliefs are cut much deeper than those of Seti's. This gives a much more dramatic light and shadow effect.

 The great open papyrus columns of the Hypostyle Hall



 5-The Obelisks court    (1500BC.)


T 
6-The broken Obelisk of queen Hatshepsut    (1500BC)


  
7-The Sacred Granite Scarab beetle    (1380BC)

                            
8-The Sacred Lake   (1450BC.)


 9-The Shrine (The Holly of the Holly-est) of Alexander's brother   (332BC.)


 10-The Middle kingdom Open court behind the Holly of the Hollyest  (1900BC)


11- The 'Akh Menu' (the festival hall ) of King Thutmoses III with its intact columns


  12-The Exterior wall of Karnak Temple         
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Photos of Karnak Temple ruins                 




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The Mastaba of Ti at Saqqara

  The wall measures 1.55m wide by 4.50m in height, of which the upper 2.75m is decorated. It contains scenes with seventy-four characters di...