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Luxor Dendera Individual Trip Hurghada

Temple of Hathor in Dendera Luxor Dendera Individual Trip Hurghada

Luxor Dendera Individual Trip Hurghada

Luxor Dendera Individual Trip Hurghada is an enjoyable private tour to explore the ancient attractions of Dendera and Luxor from Hurghada, Red Sea Governorate-Egypt!

We recommend the trip because it allows tourists to see attractions in two cities – Dendera and Luxor. These monuments date back to two eras of Egyptian history – Ancient Egypt and the Roman Empire. It gives you significant joy and learning more about the country’s history.

Highlights on Individual trips to Dendera & Luxor from Hurghada

Program of the Private Excursion to Dendera

Schedule in Qena

Agenda in Eastern Luxor

The program in Western Luxor

Departure to Hurghada

What Does the Price of Dendera & Luxor Individual Trip Hurghada Include?

  1. Tickets for visiting temples in Dendera and Luxor.
  2. Lunch.
  3. Drinks.
  4. Private guide.
  5. Also, a private vehicle to Luxor-Dendera and back to the hotel is provided.

What does the Dendera & Luxor Individual Trip Hurghada Program not include?

Items to take with you for the trip to Dendera -Luxor

  1. Breakfast box.
  2. Also, Clothes for the season.

Booking Days of Dendera & Luxor Individual Trip Hurghada

What is Expected to see during the individual trip to Dendera & Luxor from Hurghada?

Monuments in Dendera

Dendera Temple, ComplexThe temple complex at Dendera is quite large, boasting a basilica, two birthhouses, a sacred lake, and numerous other temples and shrines within its walls. Structures at the site hail from various ancient Egyptian eras, with monuments from the Middle Kingdom, the Ptolemaic Era, and the Period of Roman provincial rule.

Evidence shows that the first building on the site went up around 2250 BCE, but the vertical structures mostly date from the Ptolemaic Era forward. In 1995 BCE, construction likely began on the Mentuhotep II monument, the oldest existing network, when the site was rediscovered. The Mentuhotep monument has since been moved to Cairo.

The oldest form is from Nectanebo II, built ca. 345 BCE. It may be more accurate to say the structure as we know it began in 54 BCE when construction started on the Temple of Hathor, the most prominent structure at the Dendera complex.

The Temple of Hathor is one of Egypt’s best-preserved antiquity sites today and an excellent example of traditional Pharaonic architecture. It was built primarily during the Ptolemaic Dynasty, a period of Greek rule in Egypt.

However, the Temple was completed under the Roman emperor Trajan, who is depicted on the walls of the complex making offerings to Hathor. The temple complex also includes a monumental gateway constructed by Trajan and Domitian, another Roman emperor.

Cult of Hathor

This site was the centre of the cult of Hathor. It was believed that during a period known as the Happy Reunion, Hathor would journey from her Temple at Dendera to spend some time with her husband, Horus, at his Temple in Edfu.

This “reunion” was a yearly occurrence, and at the end of the celebration, Hathor’s return to Dendera was thought to signal the official beginning of the Nile’s flood season.

Zodiac of Dendera

The Temple originally housed the famous Zodiac of Dendera. This bas-relief with human and animal figures represented a night skyscape. It was found on the ceiling of a chapel in the Temple of Hathor, where the mysteries of the resurrection of the god Osiris were celebrated. Egyptologists determined it should be interpreted as a map of the sky rather than a giant horoscope or a perpetual astrological tool.

The particular configuration of the planets among the constellations shown in the Zodiac of Dendera occurs only about once every thousand years. Two astrophysicists dated it between June 15 and August 15, 50 BCE. Two eclipses are represented on the Zodiac exactly where they occurred at that time.

The representations of the signs of the Zodiac as we know them today did not appear in Egypt until the Greco-Roman Period. This monument reflects how Egyptian cultural elements merged with Babylonian and Greek astronomical and astrological theories due to the Assyrian and Babylonian deportations of the eighth and sixth centuries BCE and the Persian and Greek invasions of the sixth and fourth centuries BCE.

The Zodiac of Dendera was transported to France in 1821 with the permission of Mohamed Ali Pasha, the Turkish ruler of Egypt at the time. It is currently on display at the Louvre in Paris. The Egyptian government has asked for its return.

Monuments on the eastern bank of the Nile River

Monuments on the western bank of the Nile River

Valley of the Kings

Hatshepsut Temple

Also, Colossi of Memnon

Discover

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