4 Nights on the Nile with Movenpick Hamees cruise
Ask about the itineraries of Egypt Nile cruises that offer a lot of attractions in Luxor and Aswan. Cover most of the popular sightseeing on Luxor and Aswan day tours with our professional guide who will accompany you on most of the Egypt tours.
Highlights of the Cruise from Luxor to Aswan:
In 4 days explore the most popular attractions of Luxor and Aswan by a sailing Nile cruise between Luxor and Aswan. Our tour will start at Luxor attractions and ends at Aswan sightseeing.
The Valley of the Kings: It was the burial site of almost all the Pharaonic kings of the 18th till 20th dynasties and the most known tombs are Tut-Ankh-Amon (where discovered the treasures of this Golden King), King Tutmosis I, Tutmosis III, King Ramses VI, King AmonhotepII and King Mrenptah. The clients visit 03 tombs during their tour according to the opening tombs at that time.
The Temple of Queen Hatshepsut: located on the West Bank of the River Nile and also known as Deir El-Bahari Temple which is the Mortuary Temple of beautiful Queen Hatshepsut the first known female monarch (she ruled for about two decades) and who was the stepmother of pharaoh Thutmose III.
The Colossi Statues of Memnon: located West Bank of the River Nile which are two huge stone statues of the Pharaoh Amenhotep III, who reigned in Egypt during the Dynasty XVIII (around 1350 BC).
The huge Temple of Karnak complex: is located on the East Bank of the River Nile and is considered the largest open-air museum it was one of ancient Egypt's grandest and most ambitious building projects with multiple temple buildings and covers more than 100 hectares.
The Temple of Luxor: Our last attraction of the program of Luxor day tours. Luxor temple is located in the heart of the city on the East Bank of the River Nile it is one of the most beautiful temples of Egypt and its entrance is known as the first pylon which was built by Ramses II and was decorated with scenes of his military expeditions (Especially his victory at the Battle of Kadesh).
The Temple of Edfu (Temple of Horus): The temple is dedicated to Horus Horus, the avenging son of Isis and Osiris, and also called "Apollopolis Magna" as per the old Greek documents because the Greeks identified Horus with their god Apollo and it is located in Edfu around 109km away from Luxor and it was one of the most well-preserved sites in Egypt because it was totally buried under the desert sands and rediscovered on the 19th century.
The Kom Ombo Temple: It is unique because it was dedicated to two Gods (Falcon god Horus and the crocodile God Sobek) and built by Ptolemy VI. Its design contains courts, halls, sanctuaries, and rooms duplicated for two sets of gods and it contains 02 parts; The southern half of the temple was dedicated to the crocodile god Sobek, god of fertility who is the creator of the world (in ancient Egyptian religion), however, the northern part of the temple was dedicated to the falcon god Horus.
The High Dam: It's a rock-fill dam located at the northern border between Egypt and Sudan which is considered an engineering miracle to protect Egypt from annual floods from the Nile as construction for the project began in 1960 and was completed in 1968. It was officially inaugurated in 1971 and measures 111m in height, 3,830m in length, and has a base width of 980m. The spillway has a discharge capacity of 11,000m³ a second.
Philae Temple: which is dedicated to the goddess Isis and it's a temple that tells one of the most famous Egyptian mythology about Isis and how she brought her beloved husband back to life, birth her son Horus and mummification Osiris after death.
The temple was moved to a small island called Agilika after building the High Dam to preserve it from the flood and originally it was built during the reign of Ptolemy II (Egypt's Greco-Roman Period).
There were obelisks in front of the temple in the past which were removed by British Consul Henry Salt in 1918 and are now in a garden in Dorset, England.