|
|

Tailor
Made Egypt
This
is your opportunity to literally design your own holiday to Egypt. Use
the information below to help you decide what you would like to do and
see and then let us know using the booking
enquiry form.
Make
as many or as few choices as you wish - even if you just want to book
flights and hotels and have someone meet you at the airport on your
arrival, this is fine. Once you have made your choices, we will get
back to you within 24 hours with a quote for your Tailor-made holiday.

| |
|
Giza
Plateau & Sphinx
From
Cairo you will be able to visit the Pyramids of Giza - The Great
Pyramid of Khufu, the Pyramids of Khafra and Menkaura, the Giza
Necropolis and the majestic Sphinx with its unwavering gaze towards
the sunrises of the last four and a half thousand years. |
Sakkara
& Pyramid Complex of Djoser
The Pyramid Complex of Djoser is just a short journey away from
Cairo at Sakkara and you can see some of the earliest buildings
ever constructed from stone, including the Stepped Pyramid, designed
by the famous architect - Imhotep. |
Egyptian
Museum at Cairo
The greatest collection of Egyptian antiquities is, without doubt,
that of the Egyptian Museum in Cairo. It is a place of true discovery
and, even after many visits, I continue to make new and delightful
discoveries every time I venture into its many galleries.
To be sure, the museum can be daunting in the sheer numbers of
its antiquities on show, but there is an order within its layout
and it is a dream come true for anyone wanting to study Egyptian
antiquities.
|
Coptic
Cairo 
Old Cairo is so named because it is the oldest part of Cairo,
and in fact, predates what is now Cairo. Some Egyptologists believe
that there was a settlement here as far back as the 6th century
BC. Later, the Romans built a fortress here which we call Babylon.
Some of these Roman walls still exist. Later, it became a Christian
stronghold, with as many as 20 churches built within an area of
one square mile. There are only five remaining, but these are
certainly a must see when visiting Cairo, along with the earliest
Mosque ever built in Egypt. |
Islamic
Cairo 
Tucked away amid the modern urban area of Cairo lies one of the
world's oldest Islamic cities, with its famous mosques, madrasas,
hammams and fountains. Founded in the 10th century, it became
the new centre of the Islamic world, reaching its golden age in
the 14th century.
|
Alexandria
Founded by Alexander the Great in 331 BC, Alexandria became the
capital of Graeco-Roman Egypt, its status as a beacon of culture
symbolized by Pharos, the legendary lighthouse that was one of
the Seven Wonders of the World. The setting for the stormy relationship
between Cleopatra and Mark Antony, Alexandria was also the center
of learning in the ancient world. But ancient Alexandria declined,
and when Napoleon landed, he found a sparsely populated fishing
village.
|
Al-Alamein

The north coast of Egypt is becoming more and more of a tourist
destination, and the area of al-Alamein is becoming more popular,
with several major resorts nearby. Al-Alamein takes its name from
the twin peaked hill known as Tell al-Alamein, upon which it stands.
Prior to the battles that took place there and near there during
World War II, al-Alamein was simply a sleepy stop along the modern
north coast railway. But it does actually have some ancient history
associated with it. Al-Alamein is the site of the Gaucum of Ptolemy
and the Leucasis, Leucaspis, or Locabsis of the Romans. |
Golfing
in Cairo
The Oberoi Golf Course is a shared fairway designed with nine
fairways and eighteen tees and greens. It will provide one with
some great photo opportunities and a challenging round of golf.
The front nine yardage markers are on the left hand side of the
fairway and the back nine markers are on the right hand side of
the fairway. This is one of the most historical golf courses in
Egypt, established in 1889. The most spectacular part of this
golf course is not the course itself, but the Great Pyramids that
loom over the course in the background. One's eyes are always
drawn to them, and it is a nice spot to view them because everything
is calm and quiet, not like on the Plateau itself. It is one of
the only golf courses where one can play and view one of the Seven
Wonders of the Ancient World at the same time. |
Suez
Canal 
The canal allows two-way water transportation, most importantly
between Europe and Asia without circumnavigation of Africa. Before
its opening in 1869, goods were sometimes offloaded from ships
and carried over land between the Mediterranean and the Red Sea.
The canal comprises seven parts, north and south of the Great
Bitter Lake, linking the Mediterranean Sea to the Gulf of Suez
on the Red Sea. The opening of the Suez Canal in 1869 created
the first salt-water passage between the Mediterranean and Red
seas. The Red Sea is about 1.2 m higher than the Eastern Mediterranean,
so the canal serves as a tidal strait that pours Red Sea water
into the Mediterranean.
|
St
Catherines Monastery & Mt Sinai
The oldest record of monastic life at Sinai comes from the travel
journal written in Latin by a woman named Egeria about 381-384.
She visited many places around the Holy Land and Mount Sinai,
where, according to the Hebrew Bible, Moses received the Ten Commandments
from God. The
monastery was built by order of Emperor Justinian I between 527
and 565, enclosing the Chapel of the Burning Bush ordered to be
built by Helena, the mother of Constantine I, at the site where
Moses is supposed to have seen the burning bush; the living bush
on the grounds is purportedly the original. The site is sacred
to Christianity and Islam.
|
Sekem
- an eco-friendly village
The
SEKEM initiative was founded to realise the vision of sustainable
human development. SEKEM aims to contribute to the comprehensive
development of the individual, society and environment. A holistic
concept encompassing integrated economic, social and cultural
development forms the key SEKEM vision. |
Dakhla
Oasis 
In
pharaonic times the oases were places of wells, orchards, vineyards
and farms as attested in many of the New Kingdom tombs in the
Nile Valley. Dakhla especially seems to have been very fertile
and known to be a centre for the production of wine, fruit, grain
and minerals which were extracted from its inhabitants in the
form of taxes. There are remains of Ptolemaic structures in Dakhla,
with more evidence from this period emerging with recent excavations,
but so far there is little evidence of Greek occupation. The Romans
however, left many important remains in Dakhla, including the
recently restored Temple of Amun at Deir el-Hagar. There are only
two of the fortress-temples (so prominent in Kharga) and much
of the Roman architecture and art is quite different to that seen
in the southern oasis. |
Karnak
Temple
In ancient Egypt, the power of the god Amun of Thebes gradually
increased during the early New Kingdom, and after the short persecution
led by Akhenaten, it rose to its apex. In the reign of Ramesses
III, more than two thirds of the property owned by the temples
belonged to Amun, evidenced by the stupendous buildings at Karnak.
Although badly ruined, no site in Egypt is more impressive than
Karnak. It is the largest temple complex ever built by man, and
represents the combined achievement of many generations of ancient
builders. The Temple of Karnak is actually three main temples,
smaller enclosed temples, and several outer temples located about
three kilometers north of Luxor, Egypt situated on 100 ha (247
acres) of land. Karnak is actually the sites modern name. Its
ancient name was Ipet-isut, meaning "The Most Select (or
Sacred) of Places".
|
Luxor
Temple 
Many festivals were celebrated in Thebes. The Temple of Luxor
was the center of the most important one, the festival of Opet.
Built largely by Amenhotep III and Ramesses II, it appears that
the temple's purpose was for a suitable setting for the rituals
of the festival. The festival itself was to reconcile the human
aspect of the ruler with the divine office. During the 18th Dynasty
the festival lasted eleven days, but had grown to twenty-seven
days by the reign of Ramesses III in the 20th Dynasty. At that
time the festival included the distribution of over 11,000 loaves
of bread, 85 cakes and 385 jars of beer. |
Valley
of the Kings
The Egyptian belief that "To speak the name of the dead is
to make him live again" is certainly carried out in the building
of the tombs. The king's formal names and titles are inscribed
in his tomb along with his images and statues. Beginning with
the 18th Dynasty and ending with the 20th, the kings abandoned
the Memphis area and built their tombs in Thebes. Also abandoned
were the pyramid style tombs. Most of the tombs were cut into
the limestone following a similar pattern: three corridors, an
antechamber and a sunken sarcophagus chamber. |
Valley
of the Queens
The Valley of the Queens is located on the West Bank at Luxor
(ancient Thebes). There are between 75 and 80 tombs in the Valley
of the Queens, or Biban al-Harim. These belong to Queens of the
18th, 19th and 20th Dynasties.
One of five wives of Ramesses II, Nefertari was his favorite and
the tomb here has been is said to be one of the most beautiful
in Egypt. The tomb is completely painted with scenes though out.
In most of these, Nefertari, known as 'the most beautiful of them',
is accompanied by gods. She is usually wearing a golden crown
with two feathers extended from the back of a vulture and clothed
in a white, gossamer gown. Be sure not to miss the side room where
one scene depicts the queen worshipping the mummified body of
Osiris. |
Medinet
Habu Temple of Ramesis III
Medinet Habu was both a temple and a complex of temples dating
from the New Kingdom. It adjoins the cultivation at the southern
end of the Theban necropolis, opposite southern Luxor. The area
was one of the earliest places within the Theban region to be
associated with the worship of Amun. Hatshepsut and Tutmosis III
built a small temple to Amun on the site of an earlier structure.
Next to their temple, Ramesses III built his mortuary temple,
Medinet Habu’s most conspicuous standing monument.
|
Tombs
of the Nobles - Luxor
The Tombs of the Nobles is a very interesting site on Luxor's
west bank, but often neglected. The reason is of course that no
kings or queens had their tomb or temple built here. It is all
devoted to persons now only remembered by the most detailed historical
works. There are 400 tombs here. But what you can see here is
a great change from the almost repetitive images in the temples
and the great tombs. The noblemen who had their tombs built here
used a different artwork and were concerned with other matters
than the royalty. There is quite little of scenes depicting judgment
and resurrection, and more imagery of earthly life and its continuation
in the afterlife. |
Mortuary
Temple of Hatshepsut
The mortuary temple of Queen Hatshepsut is one of the most dramatically
situated in the world. The queen's architect, Senenmut, designed
it and set it at the head of a valley overshadowed by the Peak
of the Thebes, the "Lover of Silence," where lived the
goddess who presided over the necropolis. A tree lined avenue
of sphinxes led up to the temple, and ramps led from terrace to
terrace. The porticoes on the lowest terrace are out of proportion
and coloring with the rest of the building. They were restored
in 1906 to protect the celebrated reliefs depicting the transport
of obelisks by barge to Karnak and the miraculous birth of Queen
Hatshepsut. |
Hot-air
Balloon Ride over the Theban Necropolis (Luxor)
Luxor
life passes by at a far more sedate pace than Cairo and after
your visits you can relax as you watch life go by, virtually unchanged
since Pharaonic times. No visit to Luxor would be complete, however,
without a hot-air balloon ride at dawn over the Great Theban Necropolis. |
Abu
Simbel 
Not only are the two temples at Abu Simbel among the most magnificent
monuments in the world but their removal and reconstruction was
an historic event in itself. When the temples (280 km from Aswan)
were threatened by submersion in Lake Nasser, due to the construction
of the High Dam, the Egyptian Government secured the support of
UNESCO and launched a world wide appeal. During the salvage operation
which began in 1964 and continued until 1968, the two temples
were dismantled and raised over 60 meters up the sandstone cliff
where they had been built more than 3,000 years before. Here they
were reassembled, in the exact same relationship to each other
and the sun, and covered with an artificial mountain. Most of
the joins in the stone have now been filled by antiquity experts,
but inside the temples it is still possible to see where the blocks
were cut. You can also go inside the man made dome and see an
exhibition of photographs showing the different stages of the
massive removal project.
|
Hurghada
- Red Sea
Hurghada is an exciting holiday resort on the shores of the Red
Sea attracting many holidaymakers from the UK each year. Hurghada
was once a small fishing village but has grown into the second
biggest tourist area in Egypt (and is rapidly growing), perfect
for relaxing, scuba diving, desert exploring or simply sampling
historical delights. Crystal
clear waters, desert sands and year round sunshine make Hurghada
a favourite with tourists
from around the world. |
Sharm-el-Sheikh
- Red Sea
The simplicity of sun, sea and sand. The luxury of five-star hotels,
water sports, shopping and entertainment. This is Sharm el-Sheikh,
one of the most accessible and developed tourist resort communities
on the Sinai peninsula. All around are Bedouins, colourful tents,
mountains and sea. There are small, intimate hotels with modern
designs, as well as larger hotel complexes belonging to International
chains, plus about all the amenities one could expect of a tourist
center, including casinos, discos and nightclubs, golf courses
and health facilities. In fact, with diving and snorkeling, windsurfing
and other water sports, horses and camel riding, desert safaris,
and great nearby antiquities attractions, it is almost impossible
for a visitor to ever suffer from boredom.
|
Nile
Cruise 
A
Nile
River Cruise holiday on the river Nile can be a memorable experience.
If you are looking for a relaxing vacation, surrounded by the
luxuries of comfort, avail the big ships that substitute as Luxury
Nile River Cruises floating hotels. Spacious rooms, modern amenities
and lip smacking gourmet…it will indeed be a trip to remember.
|
Looking
for something special? Use the Booking
Enquiry Form to tell us what you
are looking for and let us put together your dream holiday.
|