Tour guide in Kemet

Tour guide in Kemet Private tours all over Egypt and Nile cruise packages

05/12/2021

Discover the delights of Egypt’s second largest city on this private day trip to Alexandria from Cairo. Traveling by air-conditioned minivan with your own private Egyptologist guide, uncover the Greco-Roman origins of this beautiful, laid-back Mediterranean city and see its stunning highlights. De...

05/12/2021
05/12/2021

Visit a traditional community on the banks of the Nile River on a 4-hour Nubian village excursion from Aswan by motorboat. See Soheil Island and the Aswan Dam from the water, then learn about local culture by meeting a Nubian family.you will be escorted by a Nubian bird watching expertfor 2-hour tou...

05/12/2021

Enjoy a leisurely 8-day round-trip journey on the Nile from Luxor, including guided visits to many archaeological treasures. Board your comfortable ship in Luxor and visit the Valley of the Kings ,the colossi of Memnon and the Temple of Hatshepsut, before sailing south and exploring the Edfu and Kom...

13/07/2021

Discover the very best of ancient Egypt, from the Pyramids of Giza to the Museum of Golden Mummies, the Tombs of the Nobles, the Alexander Temple and the Temple of Meffetla. Then have a trip to the ruin on a hill, “the English House” at sunset enjoying the panoramic view.Camping in White Desert ...

03/07/2021

Explore the ancient Egypt’s most famous sites on a 10-day tour from Cairo to Aswan and Luxor with a Nile cruise and 5-star accommodations. Slip into the historic tombs and temples of the Nile valley as you see the sights by plane, boat and horse-drawn carriage. Walk the necropolis at Saqqara and t...

08/04/2021

Discover the highlights of ancient Egypt on this 7-night classic cultural tour, including 3-night ultra deluxe 5-star Nile Cruise. Visit the Pyramids, the Sphinx, Saqqara, Memphis, Old Cairo, the Egyptian Museum, and the Khan el-Khalili bazaar; explore Aswan, Luxor, Edfu, and Kom Ombo. 5-star deluxe...

STATUE OF A SEATED SCRIBEThis painted limestone statue from Saqqara shows a cross-legged scribe with a papyrus scroll ov...
13/11/2020

STATUE OF A SEATED SCRIBE

This painted limestone statue from Saqqara shows a cross-legged scribe with a papyrus scroll over his knees, his hands ready to write. He wears a wig with a central parting as was fashionable in the Old Kingdom, and his eyes are inlaid to express his wisdom and the depth of his psyche.

His gaze gives one the impression that he is meditating and thinking about what he will write so that he appears to be at the very moment of the inspiration and creation of an intellectual work. The level of his gaze is high, probably because the artist wanted to show that he was looking far away, pondering what he was about to write.

Old Kingdom, 5th Dynasty, ca. 2494-2345 BC. Now in the Egyptian Museum, Cairo. JE 30272; CG 36

Chain with a scarab pendant (a powerful amulet), representing Khepri, a deity who embodies the rising sun and the eterna...
06/11/2020

Chain with a scarab pendant (a powerful amulet), representing Khepri, a deity who embodies the rising sun and the eternal rebirth - Made of gold and lapis lazuli - They were found, among other accessories, in the tomb of Ah-hotep (1570 / 1540 BC), a queen from Ancient Egypt, who lived between the end of the 17th Dynasty and the beginning of the 18th - Necropolis of Dra Abu Al-Naga, former Thebes, located on the west bank of the Nile, Egypt.

20/10/2020

How did Tutankhamun die?
There is a lot of dispute on the cause of the death of young King Tut as various organization and scientists have proposed various scenarios for his death.
There are different causes of death have been suggested from a blow to the head , a chariot accident due to his missing ribs, weakened state as a result of generic impairment inherited from his parents who were sibling, and malaria due to traces of tropica that were found in his mummified body.
Although some of these claims have been proved wrong by intensive study, there is a general agreement that “he died from chronic malaria and a badly damaged knee.”

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Khaled Ibn El Waleed
Cairo

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