LUXOR

Luxor, Egypt
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For more than a thousand years, Luxor, was the religious capital of Egypt. The Greeks called it Thebes, “the ancient Thebes of the hundred doors”, until the Arabs baptized it Medinet el Kussur, “City of Palaces”, from which the name Luxor derived. It was the capital of the Pharaohs of the New Empire which coincided with the greatest period of splendor in the Egyptian history. Evidence of the city’s glorious past can be seen in the temple of Karnak erected to the glory of Amon- Ra, king of gods. Measuring 260 meters long it was started by Pharaoh Amon-Ofis III and later completed by Ramses II. The celebration of Opet closed with the priests carrying the sacred boat of Amon-Ra from the temple of Karnak, to the sanctuary of Luxor’s Temple. This procession was always accompanied by a celebratory crowd singing and performing sacred dances. On the West Bank, the kings of ancient Egypt, including Seti I Rameses VI and Tubankhamon, thought they would rest undisturbed during their journeys into eternity. The valleys hosting the tombs of the kings, queens, nobles and court dignitaries follow on one after another. Beyond the temple of Queen Hatsheput you can find the Colossi of Memnon, so called by the Greeks in memory of Homeric hero Memnon, who was said to emerge at sunrise from the statues to greet his mother Eos (Aurora) with musical notes.

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Map of LUXOR