Luxor Hot Air Balloon tour

Luxor Hot Air Balloon Hot air balloon flights show guests Egypt's vast Sahara Desert. Floating 1000 feet in the air, tourists look down at the Theban Necropolis and the West Bank of the Nile.   Daily operating Itinerary of Hot Air Balloon.     • 4.30 :5.00 am Osoris Steward See more details

Egypt & Jordan Tours

  Egypt and Jordan. two Arabic Countries are side by side they are totally different. Begin with a visit to The Great Pyramids of Giza—the only remaining Wonder of the Ancient World—and continue on to St. Catherine's, Mount Sinai and Cairo. Then travel to Jordan where you’ll discover the See more details

Golf Tours

Combine playing Golf and sightseeing tours in EgyptPlaying golf under the Great Pyramids 18 holes in the morning and then visit the Pharos sights in the afternoon. The weather is certain to encourage ones desire to play golf in early morning tee off and sightseeing tours afterwards, shopping might See more details

Oasis Desert Safari Tours

The word oasis is often used to describe a place where you can forget the burdens of everyday life relax rest and renew yourself. Egypt's oasis are just refuges from the modern world, in the dramatic setting of the desert surrounded by sand and sky, the oasis have a sense of timelessnes See more details

Luxury Tours

   Dahabiya, a beautifully crafted Egyptian sail boat. Dahabiya is a passenger boat used on the River Nile in Egypt. The term is normally used to describe a shallow-bottomed, barge-like vessel with two or more sails. The vessels have been around in one form or another for thousands of years, wit See more details

pharos tours

    Welcome and thanks for considering Egypt as your Holiday destination. Egypt is probably the world's oldest civilization with a great heritage from the ancient world. the Great Pyramids, temples and monuments, for which its known for. Egypt the land of the pharos is a land bustling with l See more details
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Kharga Oasis

Kharga Oasis

El-Kharga, also known as Al-Kharijah,  is the southernmost of Egypt's five western oases. It is located in the Libyan Desert, about 200 km to the west of the Nile valley, and is some 150 km long. It is located in and is the capital of El Wadi el Gedid governorate.  This oasis, which was known as the 'Southern Oasis' to the Ancient Egyptians is the largest of the oases in the Libyan desert of Egypt and "consists of a depression about 160km long and from 20km to 80km wide."

Kharga is the most modernized of Egypt's western oases. The main town is a highly functional town with all modern facilities, and virtually nothing left of old architecture. Although framed by the oasis, there is no oasis feeling to it; unlike all other oases in this part of Egypt.

A regular bus service connects the oasis to the other Western oases and to the rest of Egypt. A railway line Kharga - Qena (Nile Valley) - Port Safaga (Red Sea) has been in service since 1996.

 

 Kharga_Oasis_Bagawat

Darb el-Arbain caravan route

 

The Darb el-Arbain trade route, passing through Kharga in the south and Asyut in the north, was a long caravan route running north-south between Middle Egypt and the Sudan. It was used from as early as theOld Kingdom of Egypt for the transport and trade of gold, ivory, spices, wheat, animals and plants. The maximum extent of the Darb el-Arbain was northward from Kobbei, 25 miles north of al-Fashir, passing through the desert, through Bir Natrum and Wadi Howar, and ending in Egypt.

All the oases have always been crossroads of caravan routes converging from the barren desert. In the case of Kharga, this is made particularly evident by the presence of a chain of fortresses that the Romans built to protect the Darb el-Arbain. The forts vary for size and function, some being just small outposts, some guarding large settlements complete with cultivation. Some were installed where earlier settlements already existed, while others were probably founded anew. All of them are made of mud bricks, but some also contain small stone temples with inscribed walls.

Described by Herodotus as a road "traversed ... in forty days," the Darb el-Arbain became by his time an important land route facilitating trade between Nubia and Egypt.

 

View of Kharga Oasis with the Temple of Hibis in the centre and the desert cliffs at the top

Archaeological sites

 

 

The Temple of Hibis is a Saite-era temple founded by Psamtik II which was erected largely by the Persians(Darius the Great and Darius II) during their rule over Egypt ca. 500 BC. It is located about 2 kilometres north of modern Kharga, in a palm-grove. There is a second 1st millennium BC temple in the southern most part of the oasis at Dush. An ancient Christian cemetery at Al-Bagawat also functioned at Kharga Oasis from the 3rd to the 7th century AD. It is one of the earliest and best preserved Christian cemeteries in the ancient world

 

 

 


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