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Wednesday, March 21, 2012

رأى رجل مسن فى حازم صلاح ابواسماعيل

Posted by at 5:09 PM

Live MOVIES

Posted by at 4:43 PM

Karnak Temple

Posted by at 3:40 PM

The temple of Karnak was known as Ipet-isut by the ancient Egyptians. It is a city of temples built over 2000 years and dedicated to the Theben triad of Amun, Mut and Khonsu. The size of the temple of Amon is amazing. It is the largest temple supported by columns in the world. The most imposing structure is the hypostyle hall which measures over 300 feet long and 159 feet wide. Within its area stands 34 columns, each almost 70 feet high, with open papyrus shaped capitals. Stones resting on top of these columns offer some of the best views of what the temple was like in ancient times. Protected from the Sun the hieroglyphics on their underside are still the brilliant colors they were thousands of years ago. The temple was built by various pharaohs over a long period of time. Amon-Ofis III built the twelve columns architraves, Ramses I began the decoration of this and it was continued by Seti I and Ramses the II. There are a number of obelisks on the temple grounds. It is the largest Temple in the World! The complex contains a group of Temples such as the Great Temple of Amon Ra, The Temple of Khonso, The Ipt Temple, The Temple of Ptah, the Temple of Montho and the Temple of the God Osiris. A 20m high, mud brick enclosure wall, surrounded all of these buildings.

حازم صلاح ابو اسماعيل 1 ضد 6

Posted by at 2:44 PM

Dandara Temple

Posted by at 1:55 PM
The Temple of Dandara was known as the Castle of the Sistrum or Pr Hathor House of Hathor. Hathor was the goddess of love, joy and beauty. With the exception of its supporting pillars, which had capitals sculpted in the image of Hathor and were defaced by the Christians, the walls, rooms and roof are complete and extraordinarily well preserved. The stone steps of the spiral staircase are time worn but still used to ascend to the roof, where there is a small chapel decorated with Hathor-headed columns - the Christians seemed to have missed these. Lying about 70 kilometers north of Luxor, the Ptolemaic temple at Dandara is one of the bestpreserved monuments in Egypt and well worth a visit. Several hotels in Luxor offer boat trips to the site, departing early in the morning and returning that evening. The drive from Luxor, in spite of the convoy system imposed by Egyptian security, is pleasant and takes one past several interesting villages. Thirty kilometers (18 miles) north of Luxor on the East Bank lies Qus, ancient Apollinopolis Parva, with a fine twelfth century mosque. Forty-one kilometers (25 miles) north, Qift, ancient Coptos, lies at the mouth of the Wadi Hammamat, one of the principal routes to the Red Sea and to the mines and quarries of the Red Sea Hills

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