Medinet Habu

While not as impressive as the Ramesseum, the mortuary Temple of Ramesses III, known as Medinet Habu, is enormous — only the sprawling Temple of Karnak is larger — and in quite good repair

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Colossi of Memnon

These two enormous sandstone statues are just sitting by the side of the road on the West Bank of the Nile. They originally fronted the enormous temple of Amenhotep III (in the 18th Dynasty), but the temple has been destroyed.

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West Bank, Luxor

The west bank of ancient Thebes is visited by nearly every tourist in Egypt. This is the location of the beautiful tombs of the Valley of the Kings, the Valley of the Queens and the Valley of the Nobles

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Temple of Amun

Almost nothing remains of the largest temple every built in Egypt — a 700 x 550 meter, 4.2 million sqare foot temple that would have once stood behind the Colossi of Memnon

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Valley of the Queens

The Valley of the Queens has nearly 80 tombs, for queens and other wives, and many princes and other royal children. Many nobles and officials were buried here, long before the first queen was buried here.

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Tombs of the Valley of the Queens

Tomb of Amun-Hir-khopshef Unfortunately no pictures of this tomb, or the others we visited in the Valley of the Queens. We’ll be better for the Valley of the Nobles and Valley of the Kings Amun-Hir-Khopshef was the oldest son of Ramesses III. He died young and is shown in his tomb as a boy with […]

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Temple of Hatshepsut

The fabulous terraced temple here (and the area itself) is called Deir al-Bahari. The Mortuary Temple of Hatshepsut is a huge tourist attraction, a tremendous monument to one of the few women in Egyptian history who rose to the throne.

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Chapel of Hathor, Temple of Hatshepsut

The small chapel of Hathor is on the south, past the colonnade with the reliefs of the trip to Punt is the Chapel to Hathor with a number of intact Hathor-headed columns.

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Temple of Thutmose III, Temple of Hatshepsut

The temple of Tuthmosis III lies directly against the side of the Mortuary Temple of Hatshepsut, but almost nothing remains except the stumps of columns and the faint outline of a ramp.

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