4 Days 3 Nights Cruise From Aswan To Luxor (Abu Simbel&Hot Air Balloon)

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Savor the timeless experience that is a Nile cruise as you sail from luxor to Aswan on an indulgent ship with on board swimming pool, enjoy the highlights of Aswan & enjoy the highlights of luxor.

Itinerary Details

Operated by: Luxor Nile Cruise

This is a typical itinerary for this product

Day 1 Aswan tour and Arrival to the Nile Cruise

Stop At: Aswan Governorate

train station or hotel to be transferred to your 5 star Nile Cruise

Stop At: Aswan High Dam

built at 1960 to generate electric and protect Egypt from the water flood.

Stop At: Temple of Philae

This beautiful temple complex is one of the most picturesque in all of Egypt. It sits on Aglika Island just south of the old Aswan Dam and you must ride a water taxi to the island to get to theruins. The temple was moved to its current location following the construction of the High Dam, which threatened to submerge it permanently.

Day 2 Abu Simbel and kom ombo temple

Stop At: 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. The four colossal statues of the pharaoh, which front the temple, are like gigantic sentinels watching over the incoming traffic from the south, undoubtedly designed as a warning of the strength of the pharaoh.

Stop At: Temple of Kom Ombo

The temple's twin dedication is reflected in its plan: perfectly symmetrical along the main axis of the temple, there are twin entrances, two linked hypostyle halls with carvings of the two gods on either side, and twin sanctuaries. It is assumed that there were also two priesthoods

Day 3 Edfu & East Bank of Luxor

Stop At: Temple of Horus

This Ptolemaic temple, built between 237 and 57 BC, is one of the best-preserved ancient monuments in Egypt. Preserved by desert sand, which filled the place after the pagan cult was banned, the temple is dedicated to Horus, the avenging son of Isis and Osiris. With its roof intact, it is also one of the most atmospheric of ancient buildings.

Stop At: Luxor Temple

Largely built by the New Kingdom pharaohs Amenhotep III (1390–1352 BC) and Ramses II (1279–1213 BC), this temple is a strikingly graceful monument in the heart of the modern town. Also known as the Southern Sanctuary, its main function was during the annual Opet celebrations, when the statues of Amun, Mut and Khonsu were brought from Karnak, along the Avenue of Sphinxes, and reunited here during the inundation.

Stop At: Karnak Open Air Museum

The complex is dominated by the great Temple of Amun-Ra – one of the world's largest religious complexes – with its famous hypostyle hall, a spectacular forest of giant papyrus-shaped columns.

Day 4 Luxor West Bank and hot air Balloon ride

Stop At: Luxor

Hot Air Balloon Ride enjoy the high ride across the great city of Luxor

Stop At: Valley of the Kings

The west bank of Luxor had been the site of royal burials since around 2100 BC, but it was the pharaohs of the New Kingdom period (1550–1069 BC) who chose this isolated valley dominated by the pyramid-shaped mountain peak of Al Qurn (The Horn). Once called the Great Necropolis of Millions of Years of Pharaoh, or the Place of Truth, the Valley of the Kings has 63 magnificent royal tombs.

Stop At: Temple of Hatshepsut at Deir el Bahari

At Deir Al Bahri, the eyes first focus on the dramatic rugged limestone cliffs that rise nearly 300m above the desert plain, only to realise that at the foot of all this immense beauty lies a monument even more extraordinary, the dazzling Temple of Hatshepsut. The almost-modern-looking temple blends in beautifully with the cliffs from which it is partly cut – a marriage made in heaven. Most of what you see has been painstakingly reconstructed.
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