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LUXOR:
Town of the palaces

Valley of the Kings Hatshepsut's temple Ramesseum Temple of Amon Temple of Khonsu Luxor Museum Luxor Temple Colossi of Memnon Tombs of the Nobles Medinet Habu VAlley of the Queens Workers' Village or Deir el-Medina Temple of Merneptah Temple of Amenophis 3 Temple of Seti 1 Temple of Mentuhotep 2 Asasif Tombs Small temple of Amon Temple of Mentu Temple of Mut When you travel up the Nile, Luxor is your most likely goal. As well as everybody else's. If there were no tourists, perhaps there wouldn't be a Luxor anymore. Everyone here works with guiding, handicrafts, hotels, restaurants or whatever. And if you thought you had experienced hustling before, wait until you get to Luxor.

Colourful house of Luxor, Egypt

Modern Luxor has many colourful houses, simple but charming.
Crossing the Nile

Waiting to cross the Nile.

But you simply have to go here. Next to Cairo, this is the city holding the most impressive Pharaonic monuments. And they're bountiful too. Valley of the Kings, the Theban Necropolis and Karnak, are all a few kilometres away from the city of Luxor. Therefore the name, the palaces, 'al-Uqsuur. The reason for all this is Luxor having been Thebes, the capital of the New Kingdom, and estimates on population run as high as 1 million.

Inside the Temple of Karnak

Stepping inside the Temple at Karnak, the dimensions are impossible to catch on photo.
Tomb decoration from the Valley of the Kings

The tombs in the Valley of the Kings are famous for the colourful wall-decorations.

Thebes was the city suffering for Akhenaten's attempts to force a monotheistic religion on the people of the Nile, when Thebes, the centre of Amon worship, seized being the capital. But Akhenaten never succeeded, and at his death power returned to Thebes.

Luxor

Thebes held its force up for some 1,500 years, but it all ended around 650 BCE. The city gradually waned, and its importance was lost forever when the Muslims came to power in Egypt. Not before Napoleons landing in Egypt in 1798, did it get back its vitality, but this time as a tourist trap. A position it has kept ever since.

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By: Tore Kjeilen