Egypt Monuments Highlights

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Sightseeing In :-Abu Simbel

Abu Simbel is a small village on the west bank of Lake Nasser, about 290 kilometers south of Aswan and only 40 kilometers north of the Sudan border. The temples of Abu Simbel were carved during the reign of Ramesses II, in the 19th dynasty. Ramesses II built these temples to commemorate his victory in the Battle of Kadesh and also to threaten the Nubians.

The temples were first excavated in 1813, and before that nothing was known about this complex. When Swiss Burckhardt discovered the complex, it was covered by sand up to knees. He found the top of the complex, but he was unable to find an entry to the temple and asked an Italian explorer (Belzoni) to travel with him to the site. In 1817, Belzoni returned to Abu Simbel and he succeeded this time to enter the complex. These temples were part of the UNESCO mission to rescue the Nubian monuments, the temples were dismantled and relocated in 1960 on a hill high above the basin of the High Dam.  The cost of the rescue mission of Abu Simbel Temples was approximately 40 million USD. 



The whole complex was cut into large blocks and was relocated 65 meter higher and 200 meter back from the Nile River. Many tourists from all over the world come to see Abu Simbel temples as there are regular flights as well as daily convoy from Aswan to the complex.

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