Items | Special Two Days Tour To Luxor From Marsa Alam
Special Two Days Tour To Luxor From Marsa Alam
Al Qarna
Important Information
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Public transportation options are available nearby
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Infants are required to sit on an adult’s lap
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Specialized infant seats are available
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Suitable for all physical fitness levels
Cancellation policy
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.
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For a full refund, you must cancel at least 24 hours before the experience’s start time.
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Cut-off times are based on the experience’s local time.
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If you cancel less than 24 hours before the experience’s start time, the amount you paid will not be refunded.
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This experience requires a minimum number of travelers. If it’s canceled because the minimum isn’t met, you’ll be offered a different date/experience or a full refund.
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Any changes made less than 24 hours before the experience’s start time will not be accepted.
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Have you Visited Luxor and would you like to Discover More about Luxor? Enjoy a private 2-days tour to Luxor from Marsa Alam where you will visit Madinet Habu Temple, The Ramseum temple, Deir El Madina and the valley of the Queens then check in your hotel. Next day tour to Luxor Museum then we drive you back to Marsa Alam.
Highlights
2 days
Offered in German (Deutsch) & 5 Others
Free Cancellation
Mobile Ticket
2 days
Offered in German (Deutsch) & 5 Others
Free Cancellation
Mobile Ticket
What's Included
Tour to luxor museum.
Tour to Deir el Madina, Habu temple, Valley of the Queens
Lunch at Local restaurant
Shopping through famous Bazaars.
Lunch
An assistance of our personal during tours
Pick up services from your hotel & return.
Service of professional tour guide.
Bottled water during your trip.
All transfers by air-conditioned vehicle
Any extras
Personal expenses
Sound and light show
Tipping
Special Two Days Tour To Luxor From Marsa Alam
Al Qarna
About
Have you Visited Luxor and would you like to Discover More about Luxor? Enjoy a private 2-days tour to Luxor from Marsa Alam where you will visit Madinet Habu Temple, The Ramseum temple, Deir El Madina and the valley of the Queens then check in your hotel. Next day tour to Luxor Museum then we drive you back to Marsa Alam.
Highlights
2 days
Offered in German (Deutsch) & 5 Others
Free Cancellation
Mobile Ticket
2 days
Offered in German (Deutsch) & 5 Others
Free Cancellation
Mobile Ticket
What's Included
Tour to luxor museum.
Tour to Deir el Madina, Habu temple, Valley of the Queens
Lunch at Local restaurant
Shopping through famous Bazaars.
Lunch
An assistance of our personal during tours
Pick up services from your hotel & return.
Service of professional tour guide.
Bottled water during your trip.
All transfers by air-conditioned vehicle
Any extras
Personal expenses
Sound and light show
Tipping
Itinerary
Day 1
Day 2
Madinat Habu temple, Ramsseum, Deir El Madina tours
5 Stops
1
Ramesseum
Ramsseum:
Ramesseum, funerary temple of Ramses II (1279–13 BC), erected on the west bank of the Nile River at Thebes in Upper Egypt. The temple, famous for its 57-foot (17-meter) seated statue of Ramses II (of which only fragments are left), was dedicated to the god Amon and the deceased king. The walls of the Ramesseum, which is only about half preserved, are decorated with reliefs, including scenes depicting the Battle of Kadesh, the Syrian wars, and the Festival of Min
3 hours
2
Valley of the Artisans (Deir el-Medina)
Deir El Madina
The main cemetery of the royal workmen at Deir el-Medina is situated to the west of the village, on the slope of the Theban hills. Most of the tombs were built during the 19th dynasty. Some of them are impressive in their decoration and size. By the time of the 20th dynasty, the tombs had been turned into family tombs in which the descendants of the original owners were buried. Little alterations were made apart from the addition of another subterranean burial chamber. The lower courses of the eastern hill of Qurnet Murai were the site of burials of babies and children. More than a hundred children were buried in common domestic pottery jars or amphorae, in baskets, even fish baskets, in chests, boxes or in proper coffins there. The poorest burials were those of still-born babies. They contained no jewelry or amulets, only small vessels filled with food for the afterlife. The adults' graves were situated higher up. Many of these graves date from the 18th dynasty
Lunch During the tour.
3 hours
3
Temple of Medinat Habu
Madinat Habu temple :
In ancient times Madinat Habu was known as Djanet and according to ancient belief was the place was Amun first appeared. Both Hatshepsut and Tuthmosis III built a temple dedicated to Amun here and Later Rameses III constructed his larger memorial temple on the site.
First Pylon – the temple of Rameses III During his time Djanet became the administrative center of Western Thebes. The whole temple complex was surrounded by a massive fortified enclosure wall, with an unusual gateway at the eastern entrance, known as the pavilion gate. This structure, a copy of Syrian middle fortresses is something you would not expect to see in Egypt. Rameses III, a military man probably saw the virtue in such a structure. It is likely Rameses resided here from time to time because a royal palace was attached at the south of the open forecourt of this temple, while priests’ dwellings and administrative buildings lay on either side of the temple. Originally a canal with a harbor outside the entrance connected the temple to the Nile. But this was obliterated by the desert long ago.
Madinat Habu temple from the air
3 hours
4
Valley of the Kings
The valley of The Queens
The Valley of the Queens, also known as Biban el-Harim, Biban el-Sultanate, and Wadi el-Melikat, is a place in Egypt where wives of Pharaohs were buried in ancient times. In ancient times, it was known as Ta-Set-Neferu, meaning - 'the place of the Children of the Pharaoh', because along with the Queens of the 18th, 19th and 20th dynasties (1550-1070 BCE) many princes and princesses were also buried with various members of the nobility. The tombs of these individuals were maintained by mortuary priests who performed daily rituals and provided offerings and prayers for the deceased nobility.
The valley is located near the better known Valley of the Kings on the west bank of the Nile across from Thebes (modern Luxor) . This barren area in the western hills was chosen due to its relative isolation and proximity to the capital.
The kings of the 18th dynasty, instead of the traditional building of pyramids as burial chambers (perhaps because of their vulnerability to tomb robbers), now chose to be buried in rock-cut tombs.
2 hours
5
Temple of Medinat Habu
Madinat Habu temple :
In ancient times Madinat Habu was known as Djanet and according to ancient belief was the place was Amun first appeared. Both Hatshepsut and Tuthmosis III built a temple dedicated to Amun here and Later Rameses III constructed his larger memorial temple on the site.
First Pylon – the temple of Rameses III During his time Djanet became the administrative center of Western Thebes. The whole temple complex was surrounded by a massive fortified enclosure wall, with an unusual gateway at the eastern entrance, known as the pavilion gate. This structure, a copy of Syrian migdol fortresses is something you would not expect to see in Egypt. Rameses III, a military man probably saw the virtue in such a structure. It is likely Rameses resided here from time to time because a royal palace was attached at the south of the open forecourt of this temple, while priests’ dwellings and administrative buildings lay on either side of the temple. Originally a canal with a harbor outside the entrance connected the temple to the Nile. But this was obliterated by the desert long ago.
Madinat Habu temple from the air