Luxor Day Tour from Cairo by Flight.

Cairo.
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Luxor Day Tour from Cairo by Flight.

Duration :   12 Hours
The Price :   215,00 $
Max People :    12
Start Location:   Luxor.
Age Range :   5-80
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Pick up by your Egypt Royal Tours Representative from your hotel in Cairo by air-conditioned vehicle to Cairo Domestic Terminal at the Airport to fly to Luxor, upon your arrival our guide will be waiting you with sign of Egypt Royal Tours.
visit the magnificent Karnak temple, Luxor Temple, Colossi of Memnon, Then Followed by the world-famous Valley of the Kings, original burial site of the boy King Tut Ank Amun where the magnificent Tombs were discovered carved deep into the desert rock, richly decorated and filled with treasures for the afterlife of the Pharaohs.

Continuing on to visit Hatshepsut’s Temple at El Deir El Bahari. This impressive Temple was dedicated to Queen Hatshepsut the only female Pharaoh.

Then transferred to Luxor Airport for your flight back to Cairo and transfer to your hotel.

What’s included:
Air-conditioned van with modern model
All transfers & Domestic flights
Tour guide
All the entrance fees to all the mentioned sites in tour program
All Service charges & taxes
Lunch
What’s excluded:
Any extras
Tipping

Places You’ll See :

Schedule Details

Karnak Temple.

Travel by air-conditioned vehicle to visit the magnificent Karnak temple the largest temple ever built, walk through the Avenue of Sphinxes, visit the Hypostyle Hall with its 134 gigantic columns, see the Obelisks of Queen Hatshepsut and Tutomosis III, and witness the temple of Amon, adorned with exquisite lotus and papyrus designs.

Luxor Temple.

The Luxor Temple is a large Ancient Egyptian temple complex located on the east bank of the Nile River in the city today known as Luxor (ancient Thebes) and was constructed approximately 1400 BCE. In the Egyptian language it was known as ipet resyt, "the southern sanctuary". It was one of the two primary temples on the east bank, the other being Karnak, Unlike the other temples in Thebes, Luxor temple is not dedicated to a cult god or a deified version of the pharaoh in death. Instead, Luxor temple is dedicated to the rejuvenation of kingship; it may have been where many of the pharaohs of Egypt were crowned in reality or conceptually (as in the case of Alexander the Great, who claimed he was crowned at Luxor but may never have traveled south of Memphis, near modern Cairo).

Colossi Of Memnon.

The Colossi of Memnon 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.

Valley Of the Kings.

Followed by the world-famous Valley of the Kings, original burial site of the boy King Tut Ank Kamun where the magnificent Tombs were discovered carved deep into the desert rock, richly decorated and filled with treasures for the afterlife of the Pharaohs and have the opportunity to visit three Tombs. (The three tombs visited are determined by the Egyptian Government as to preserve them from the large flow of visitors and for recommendations King Ramses the 4th and the 6th tombs are the finest and the most colorful tombs you can visit in the valley of the Kings and you can ask your guide to visit King Tut tomb or Queen Nefertari wife of King Ramses if you wanted and they request additional fees.

Hatshepsut Temple.

Continuing on to visit Hatshepsut’s Temple at El Deir El Bahari. This impressive Temple was dedicated to Queen Hatshepsut the only female Pharaoh, which rises out of the desert plain in a series of terraces and merges with the sheer limestone cliffs, On the return journey stop-off at the Colossi of Memnon, 2 gigantic statues representing Amenophis III facing the Nile.

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