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 […]
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.
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.
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.
Ramesses III ruled in the 20th Dynasty, the first in a series of pharaohs named after Ramesses II the Great. Ramesses III is the builder of the temple at Medinet Habu, as well,
This tomb is long, straight, and very deep. Ramesses IX, another of the many pharaohs of the Ramessid Dynasty (the 20th Dynasty), built this tomb just near the entrance to the valley.
The tomb of Seti II is rarely visited — it lies at the end of the wadi and is often overlooked by hordes of tourists flocking to see Tut’s tomb. It was used for storage and as a restoration area during the excavation of Tutankhamun’s tomb.