Temples & Sites
Heliopolis (Iunu; On)
In ancient Egypt, Heliopolis was a regional center from predynastic times.
It was principally notable as the cult center of the sun god Atum.
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Saqqara Necropolis
Saqqara, the sweeping necropolis and pyramid field of Memphis, the first Capital of Egypt, has been an important historical site for 5,000 years of Egyptian history.
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Memphis
Memphis, city and capital of ancient Egypt and an important centre during much of Egyptian history. Home to the Memphis Triad: God Ptah, Goddess Sekhmet and son Nefertem.
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Ogdoad of Hermopolis
Hermopolis means “the city of Hermes” in Greek. The Greeks gave it that name because it was a major cult centre of the god Thoth whom they associated with their god Hermes, but the Egyptians knew it as Khmunu (“the City of the Eight”).
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Amarna
Amarna. Kom El-Nana
This local name is given to an enclosure south of the main city and to the east of the modern village of el-Hagg Qandil, originally built by Akhenaten probably as a sun temple.
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Abydos Temple
The temple of Seti I, also known as the Great Temple of Abydos, is one of the main historical sites in Abydos. The temple was built by pharaoh Seti I. At the rear of the temple there is the Osireion.
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Hathor temple of Dendera
The Hathor Dendera Temple holds a special place in the annals of Egyptian history and archaeology, and for me personally, it remains an enigmatic gem amidst the sands of time.
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Karnak Temple Complex
The Karnak temple complex at Luxor developed over more than 1,000 years, principally between the Twelfth and Twentieth Dynasties. It was, at its peak, the largest and most important religious complex in ancient Egypt.
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Luxor Temple
Constructed over hundreds of years by Amenhotep III, Ramses II, Tutankhamun, and other pharaohs, Luxor Temple was the largest and most significant religious center in ancient Egypt.
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Mut Temple
It is dedicated to the Egyptian goddess Mut, the mother goddess of Khonsu and the wife of Amun. It is one of the four main enclosed areas that make up the immense Karnak Temple complex and occupies some 150,000 m².
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Temple of Medinat Habu
Ramses III’s magnificent memorial temple of Medinat Habu, fronted by sleepy Kom Lolah village and backed by the Theban mountains, is one of the west bank's most underrated sites.
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Deir el-Medina
The Deir el-Medina settlement thrived from about 1550 to 1080 BC and its artisans worked on the tombs of the West Bank. Explore the living quarters, tombs and artwork which still adorn some of the walls. Archaeologists have uncovered about 70 houses.
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Valley of the Kings
Valley of the Kings: The rulers of the Eighteenth, Nineteenth, and Twentieth Dynasties of Egypt’s prosperous New Kingdom (c.1550–1069 BC) were buried in a desolate dry river valley across the river from the ancient city of Thebes.
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Valley of the Queens
Valley of the Queens contains at least 75 tombs that belonged to queens of the 19th and 20th dynasties as well as to other members of the royal families, including princesses and the Ramesside princes.
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Temple of Khnum (Esna)
The temple of Khnum at Esna is Located 155Km (96 miles) north of Aswan. The temple, rebuilt by Ptolemy VI (180—145 BC) on an older structure, was probably once as large as the one at Edfu.
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Temple of Edfu
Dedicated to the god Horus of Behedet, lord of Edfu, the Temple of Horus is the most famous monument at Tell Edfu. Due to its completeness and state of preservation, it is the best example of Ptolemaic temple building in Egypt.
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Temple of Kom Ombo
The temple is unique because it is in fact a double temple, dedicated to Sobek the crocodile god, and Horus the falcon-headed god. The layout combines two temples in one with each side having its own gateways and chapels.
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Temple of Isis at Philae
Built beginning ca. 280 BCE. Built during the reign of Ptolemy II (Egypt's Greco-Roman Period), the Temple of Isis at Philae is dedicated to Isis, Osiris, and Horus.
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Abu Simbel
Carved out of the mountain on the west bank of the Nile between 1274 and 1244 BC, this imposing main temple of the Abu Simbel complex was as much dedicated to the deified Ramses II himself as to Ra-Horakhty, Amun and Ptah.
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Luxor Museum
This wonderful museum has a well-chosen and brilliantly displayed and explained collection of antiquities dating from the end of the Old Kingdom right through to the Mamluk period, mostly gathered from the Theban temples and necropolis.
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Colossi of Memnon
The two faceless Colossi of Memnon, originally representing Pharaoh Amenhotep III, rising majestically about 18m from the plain, are the first monuments tourists see when they visit the west bank.
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Mortuary Temple of Queen Hatshepsut
The mortuary temple of Hatshepsut (c.1478/72-1458 B.C.E.) dates from the New Kingdom. It nestles at the foot of the cliffs in a natural "bay" on the West Bank of Luxor.
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Gebel el-Silsila
Gebel el-Silsila
Gebel el-Silsila is a mountainous region with sandstone quarries on both sides of the Nile. The sandstone quarries of Gebel el-Silsila have been used from the Middle Kingdom (c. 2034–1650 BC) until the 20th century.
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The Unfinished Obelisk
The Unfinished Obelisk
The unfinished obelisk is extraordinary, its weight is mind-boggling. At 1,168 tons according to Engelbach, Egypt’s unfinished obelisk has a weight equal to about 200 African elephants and three times the weight of the largest obelisk in Karnak.
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Egyptian Museum
Egyptian Museum
Located in the heart of Tahrir Square, Cairo, the Egyptian Museum is a unique building designed to host the world's oldest collection of Pharaonic art and monuments.
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Giza Plateau
Giza Plateau
The Giza pyramid complex (also called the Giza necropolis) in Egypt is home to the Great Pyramid, the Pyramid of Khafre, and the Pyramid of Menkaure, along with their associated pyramid complexes and the Great Sphinx.
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Grand Egyptian Museum
Grand Egyptian Museum
Grand Egyptian Museum (GEM), museum in Giza, Egypt, housing archaeological artifacts from thousands of years of human civilization in Egypt, spanning from the predynastic period to the Greco-Roman era (c. 3100 BCE to 400 CE).
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Abusir Pyramids
Abusir Pyramids
The Abusir Pyramids, near Cairo in Egypt, are 14 Ancient Egyptian pyramids and named for the House of Osiris: Egyptian god of death and resurrection.
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The Red Pyramid
The Red Pyramid
After the Great Pyramid of Khufu at Giza, the Red Pyramid at Dashur has the largest base (only slightly smaller than Khufu's pyramid, each side measures 722 feet) of any pyramid in Egypt.
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Shrine of Ptah & Sekhmet
Shrine of Ptah & Sekhmet
The Shrine of the Memphis Triad: Ptah, Sekhmet and Nefertem. It is part of the Karnak complex and it lies to the north of the West-East axis of the Precinct of Amun-Re in Karnak Luxor, Egypt.
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Temple of Khonsu
Temple of Khonsu
Situated within the southwest area of the Karnak Temple Complex on Luxor’s East Bank, Khonsu Temple is regarded as an excellent example of a small but complete New Kingdom temple.
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The Nubian Museum
Abusir Pyramids
The Nubian Museum was founded in response to the international salvage campaign of the ancient Nubian monuments initiated by UNESCO upon the request of the Egyptian government in 1960.
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The National Museum of Egyptian Civilization
The National Museum of Egyptian Civilization
The NMEC is considered the first of its kind in Egypt and the Arab world which presents the full range of the richness and diversity of Egyptian civilization throughout the ages, from prehistoric times to the present day.
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