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Egypt Travel Blogs

Background: The regularity and richness of the annual Nile River flood, coupled with semi-isolation provided by deserts to the east and west, allowed for the development of one of the world's great civilizations. A unified kingdom arose circa 3200 B.C. and a series of dynasties ruled in Egypt for the next three millennia. The last native dynasty fell to the Persians in 341 B.C., who in turn were replaced by the Greeks, Romans, and Byzantines. It was the Arabs who introduced Islam and the Arabic language in the 7th century and who ruled for the next six centuries. A local military caste, the Mamluks took control about 1250 and continued to govern after the conquest of Egypt by the Ottoman Turks in 1517. Following the completion of the Suez Canal in 1869, Egypt became an important world transportation hub, but also fell heavily into debt. Ostensibly to protect its investments, Britain seized control of Egypt's government in 1882, but nominal allegiance to the Ottoman Empire continued until 1914. Partially independent from the UK in 1922, Egypt acquired full sovereignty following World War II. The completion of the Aswan High Dam in 1971 and the resultant Lake Nasser have altered the time-honored place of the Nile River in the agriculture and ecology of Egypt. A rapidly growing population (the largest in the Arab world), limited arable land, and dependence on the Nile all continue to overtax resources and stress society. The government has struggled to ready the economy for the new millennium through economic reform and massive investment in communications and physical infrastructure.




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7 DE JULIO DE 2003 Después de tres años en Madrid, no me deja de hacer gracia cuando algunos españoles que han venido a vivir aquí desde otras provincias se quejan de la magnitud de la ciudad, del tráfico, la gente, la extensión... No entienden cómo es que para los llegados del DF Madrid se nos antoja pequeña, agradablemente abarcable, cómoda por la eficiencia de su transporte público y la cercanía de los lugares a los que hay que ir por ocio, estudio o trabajo. Una amiga decía de Madrid que era su “pueblito”. Entre las capitales de las grandes naciones [View Full Entry]

Temoris - Témoris Grecko | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
5421 Words | 0 Comment(s) | 10 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: April 17th 2005 | 2436 Views | [diary=5161]

El mercado Jan el Jalili de El Cairo
Mercado y minaretes de Bab Zuweila
Huellas del terremoto de 1992

By jimmyhans
February 25th 2003
Hurghada, Egypt Africa » Egypt » Red Sea » Hurghada
Beach Holiday in Egypt (Hurghada) A short breakaway during winter time to Hurghada, Egypt. We stayed 1 week in hotel Grand Resort*****, a wonderful hotel! Really 1001 nights! Due to overbooking we received an upgrade to a family suite. Top! Most of the time we did some relaxing at the pool of this great hotel. Or we went to the beach of partner hotel Siva Grand Beach****, which was also a nice hotel (outside facilities, anyway). Trip we did during this holiday: A snorkling trip to Sharm El Naga. This was nice but not that impressive as our snorkling trip to [View Full Entry]

jimmyhans - Jimmy & Hans | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
114 Words | 0 Comment(s) | 8 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: July 8th 2008 | 520 Views | [diary=295975]

Hotel Grand Resort by night
Hotel Siva Grand Beach
Sharm El Naga Beach

By The Travel Camel
December 30th 2002
The Oasis Africa » Egypt » Western Desert » Siwa Oasis
Christmas Eve in Alexandria saw me stroll along the Mediterranean eating considerable amounts of ice-cream, and it afforded me the opportunity to walk to the site of the Pharos Lighthouse, the fifth of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World I have visited. My final journey in Egypt was about to commence and it would take me to a place I had heard much about. So on Christmas Day, I boarded a bus for an excruciatingly awful nine-hour journey to a place near the Libyan border called the Siwa Oasis. Siwa is a sleepy village where the men seem to idle [View Full Entry]

The Travel Camel - Shane Dallas | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
860 Words | 0 Comment(s) | 3 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: January 27th 2006 | 407 Views | [diary=37782]

Shifting sands - Western Libyan Desert, Egypt
Rural life - Siwa oasis, Egypt

By The Travel Camel
December 21st 2002
The Tombs Africa » Egypt » Upper Egypt » Luxor
On the west bank of Luxor, passed the lush fertile flood plain is a range of scorched craggy hills that capture the hottest rays of the sun and bakes the place like an oven. This is the area known as the Valley of the Kings - the world's most famous burial ground. In the neighbouring valleys are the equally barren Valley of the Queens and Valley of the Nobles. For three days I ignored the withering heat and hiked around these valleys and clambered into dusty and humid tombs still wearing the paint that vividly portrays a vanished civilisation. The Valley [View Full Entry]

The Travel Camel - Shane Dallas | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
845 Words | 0 Comment(s) | 1 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: February 7th 2006 | 180 Views | [diary=37781]


By The Travel Camel
December 19th 2002
The Temples Africa » Egypt » Upper Egypt » Abu Simbel
The next destination of this Pharaonic tour of Egypt took me to the modern city of Luxor (aka Thebes) - one of the greatest cities of the ancient world. Within this region lay some of the most spectacular temples and tombs ever created - the Valley of the Kings, Karnak, Medinut Habu - words that are smothered with history. There are many temples within a couple of hours of Luxor, including those of Edfu, Dendara and Medinut Habu. These soaring stone structures are incredible due to their state of preservation. You can spend endless hours wandering around corridors and courtyards exploring [View Full Entry]

The Travel Camel - Shane Dallas | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
1325 Words | 1 Comment(s) | 2 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: February 2nd 2006 | 222 Views | [diary=37780]

A pharaoh's legacy - Abu Simbel

By The Travel Camel
December 13th 2002
The Museum Africa » Egypt » Lower Egypt » Cairo
Some people claim that it is the most important museum in the world - but if the Egyptian Museum isn't number one, it must rank in the top five. I spent many hours wandering around the gloomy halls trying to absorb this mass of material. The undoubted highlight of the Museum are the items found in the tomb of Tutankhamun. The items of Tutankhamun are to treasure hunting what Versailles in France is to palaces - both are exceptionally opulent and ostentatious. The death mask was just spectacular, but the inner coffin, made out of 110kg of solid gold, was even [View Full Entry]

The Travel Camel - Shane Dallas | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
1074 Words | 0 Comment(s) | 2 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: February 2nd 2006 | 156 Views | [diary=37783]

A symbol of faith

17th November 2002 As I sit outside my room on my first evening in the Camel Dive Club Hotel I await the new adventure of diving and being by myself in Egypt. The evening is warm a cool 25c the pool is lit and looks warm and inviting, still and deep. It’s a busy place with lots going on all around. On my visit out in to the streets looking to see what there is to do I finally stated talking to Hamad a salesman of course I went to dinner in a nice but quite seafood restaurant good food, it [View Full Entry]

coppermill - Bryan Avery | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
2032 Words | 0 Comment(s) | 0 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: June 13th 2009 | 44 Views | [diary=402930]


By twotravelbugs
October 2nd 2002
Swimming with the fishes Africa » Egypt » Sinai » Dahab
I think last time we wrote, we were going to take a bus to Hurghada and then take the boat to Sharm El Sheik and on to Dahab. About 10 minutes before the bus left, we changed our minds and bought tickets to Suez instead, with the idea of staying there one night and catching another bus to Dahab, saving ourselves about 200 Egyptian pounds each. It meant more time sat on a bus, but we got to Dahab just after the people that took the expensive option. We didnt have any time to look round Suez, at the canal or [View Full Entry]

twotravelbugs - Karen and Colin | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
482 Words | 0 Comment(s) | 4 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: August 8th 2007 | 69 Views | [diary=171227]

Chapel on top of Mount Sinai
View from the top of Mount Sinai
Masked Butterfly Fish

Karnak is a place that is hard to describe. Huge. Grand. Visually astounding. Its a massive complex (over 100 acres all up, but you only look at a part of it) which you enter down a short avenue of sphinxes with rams heads and 'holding' statues of Ramses II - remember that avenue of sphinxes from Luxor temple? This is the other end. The further you go in the "main" part, the bigger things get, more and more grand. The columns in the hypostyle hall are awesome, huge round decorated pillars, all the walls have a different story to tell, of [View Full Entry]

twotravelbugs - Karen and Colin | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
679 Words | 0 Comment(s) | 12 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: August 8th 2007 | 60 Views | [diary=171213]

Ram headed sphinxes with statues of Ramses II
Bubastite Portal
Inside the Great Hypostyle Hall

The tour we were booked on this morning didnt turn up. After hassling the guy in the hostel for a bit - he wasnt bothered that we had paid already! - he spoke to someone on the phone then wandered into the street and flagged down the first passing minibus full of tourists. This he claimed was our tour, but... still, it was going where we wanted to go. We drove about 7km from Luxor until we reached a bridge over the Nile. Then of course, we had to drive all the way back again as the tombs we were going [View Full Entry]

twotravelbugs - Karen and Colin | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
561 Words | 0 Comment(s) | 12 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: August 8th 2007 | 87 Views | [diary=166107]

Further up the Valley of the Kings, Thebes
Inside the Tomb of Ramses IV
Tomb of Ramses III