Egypt
Aswân Reservoir Colony

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    • Day 165

      Nile River Cruise

      September 2, 2022 in Egypt ⋅ ☀️ 106 °F

      Miles: 2.4 Steps: 6033 Flights: 10

      We started our 4 day cruise up the Nile today! We are “sailing” from Aswan to Luxor - it doesn’t cover that big of distance, but we’ll be seeing a lot of sites between the two cities.

      The boat has seen a few miles, but is still nice - especially as we’ve been staying in mostly budget accommodations or hostels so far. This seems luxury to us now.

      After getting settled in our room, we met our guide (also a luxury we haven’t had thru most of the trip) and headed off.

      First he took us to the Aswan high dam - they built it in the 1970’s - well, the Russians built it compensated with HALF of their Egyptian cotton harvest for the next 25 years! He said (haven’t fact checked it) that it’s the largest dam in the world and the lake it created, Lake Nassar, is also the largest man made lake in the world. It was 98 meters deep! The dam now provides Egypt with 80% of its power needs. The other positive is it controlled the crocodiles! Before the dam was built, 4 out of every 10 Egyptians were killed by these crocodiles. 😳 They can leap 3 meters and would literally snatch people off their boats or the shore. They contained all the crocodiles, and they now live on the other side of the dam - approximately 18,000 of them! The negative impact - it displaced the Nubian people, and they had to relocate dozens of ancient temples to higher ground.

      The dam is under military control so our very short visit was very controlled. Hard to get any good pics. Apparently, if it were to be destroyed it would kill all Egyptians within 12 minutes (as almost all live near or on the Nile) and the flow would rock the pyramids in Cairo! So there were rocket launchers, missles, and motion sensors everywhere to protect it. 😳

      Then we went to the Temple of Philae. It is the only temple in Egypt built on an island. It was one of the temples that was relocated - taken apart and completely rebuilt on an entire different island

      Excited to be able to just sit back and enjoy the next 4 days not having to worry about how to get anywhere, where we’ll be laying our heads, or what to eat.
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    • Day 16

      Temple de Philae

      October 19, 2022 in Egypt ⋅ ⛅ 35 °C

      Décider la veille d'aller au temple et partager les mini.bus, bateau avec Julien canadien trop sympa qui voyage pour 3 mois (et part en Inde prochainement)

      Aller en excursion c'est rejoindre la route principale
      Grimper dans un mini bus blanc
      Payer 2pounds (sans rien demander pour faire comme les locaux)
      Te manifester quand tu veux descendre
      Marcher
      Négocier le prix d'un bateau (qui est à 200pounds) et essayer de le partager avec d'autres (mais ils sont tous accompagnés d'un tour operator ou un guide privé. hallucinant!)
      Et finalement tomber sur un guide trop gentil avec un groupe d'Australiens

      Ce temple est d'une beauté
      Sur une île au milieu du Nil
      Et les chats...mamamia!
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    • Day 10

      Assuan - Tempel Philae

      April 8 in Egypt ⋅ ☀️ 26 °C

      Nach der archäologischen Einstimmung beim unvollendeten Obelisk ging es weiter zum Tempel Philae. Dieser liegt 8km südlich von Assuan auf der gleichnamigen Insel mitten im Nil, wir fuhren mit einem Schiff dorthin.
      Die Tempelanlage entstand im 7. oder 6. Jahrhundert v. C. und ist gut erhalten. Die Menge an Wandreliefs und Hiroglyphen war enorm, die Geschichtskentnisse unseres Guides Mohammed sind es auch.... Die Besichtigung bei ca. 30°C war noch erträglich, ab nächster Woche sollen die Temperaturen in Ägypten erheblich ansteigen. (da haben wir mit unserer Reisezeit wirklich Glück gehabt!)
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    • Day 6

      Aswan 1; Philae Island / Temple of Isis

      November 22, 2022 in Egypt ⋅ ⛅ 27 °C

      Upon our arrival at Aswan, we transfer directly to the Riverside departure point for Philae Island and the Temple of Isis. The British built the first Aswan Dam in 1902 and this caused the Temple to be partially submerged; because othis unexpected consequence, prior to the new High Dam construction the complete Teple was relocated brick by brick to nearby Agilka Island and landscaped to match the original site.

      Constructed during Ptolomeic times in a fusion of Egyptian and Greco-Roman styles, The Temple of Isis has long fascinated visitors. Isis was the wife of Osiris, and the Goddess of Health, Marriage and Wisdom.

      Inside the Grand Court is the Sanctuary with a stone pedastal dedicated to Ptolomy III surrounded be incredible wall reliefs. After our tour, we continue to explore and walk round the rest of the island before taking the boat back to our tour bus and Aswan.
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    • Day 7–8

      Aswan - Philae, Felucca's, Nubians!

      December 26, 2023 in Egypt ⋅ ☀️ 25 °C

      Visited the Isis temple at Philae, rode on a watercraft, and visited the Nubian village on Elephantine Island. I love this part of Egypt, being on the Nile is so peaceful and the felucca boats are beautiful!Read more

    • Day 80 - Aswan, Egypt

      September 27, 2023 in Egypt ⋅ ☀️ 40 °C

      This morning we woke up from a restless nights sleep on the sleeper train. The train was a lot noisier and the driver seemed to slow down and speed up sporadically through the night.

      We had breakfast on the train and we were warned it was bread, jam, bread, another couple of spreads and bread. The croissant & roll were good with a bit of jam.

      We got into Aswan later than expected, around 11am we disembarked to train and got on a bus to head off to the Philae Temple.

      You have to get a boat across to the temple as it is located on an Island. The Temple has been moved from its original spot that was 200m away from this island due to the Great Dam being built and was submerging it under water.
      The Philae Temple was built by the last dynasty of ancient Egypt, the Ptolemaic. It is dedicated to Isis, the goddess of healing, birth, and magic, her husband Osiris, and their son Horus. The temple is one of the last places where ancient Egyptian religion survived after Christianity swept the shores in 550AD. The Temple has served many religions over the years, you can see a basilica inspired altar & crosses throughout the temple.
      It was quite hot on the island so we cooled down with a can of coke & an ice cream that worked out to be very expensive compared to in the towns.

      We travelled back by boat to the mainland. Mohamed called the Accomadation and the rooms weren’t ready so he took us to Philae Essence Palace that cold squeezes flowers to make oils & fragrances. We got a demonstration of the glass blowing of the decorative small vases & a demonstration of the fragrances on offer. Mohamed had ordered us Falafel to the Essence store to have lunch there.

      We finally got to the hotel and it’s biggest attraction is the pool seeing it is so hot!

      Tonight’s dinner is organised by Intrepid at the Nubian Village across on the West Bank across from Aswan on Elephantine Island. We had to take a small boat across, we ended up having to tow a Felucca to a docking point due to the loss of wind. We visited and walked through the village and had dinner at a family’s home. We had a lovely cooked meal and the male host gave us the history of Nubian and how they only have a verbal language not a written language.

      After dinner we went back to the Accomadation by the boat.
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    • Day 4

      Temple de Philae

      April 27, 2023 in Egypt ⋅ ☀️ 32 °C

      Datant de l'ere grecque ce temple avait fait les frais du 1er barrage d'Assouan et Horus Isis et Cie se retrouvaient les pieds dans l'eau à chaque crue ! Et avec le 2nd barrage il aurait été tout bonnement submergé ! Du coup le temple a été déplacé pièce par pièce sur une colline 18m plus haute à quelques centaines de mètres de l'emplacement initial. Un travail de titan!Read more

    • Day 10

      A visit to Philae Temple

      December 30, 2022 in Egypt ⋅ ☀️ 22 °C

      The Philae Temple is an island-based temple complex in the reservoir of the Aswan Low Dam. It was originally located on Philae Island but, following the construction of the Aswan Low Dam in 1902, it was often flooded. Before the building of Aswan High Dam, completed in 1970, as part of a UNESCO project to preserve important buildings, the entire temple complex was dismantled and moved 700 metres to Agilkia Island. It was a mammoth feat of engineering!

      More than two thirds of Philae's surviving structures were built in the Ptolemaic era, when the island became a prominent site of pilgrimage not only for Egyptians and Nubians but for pilgrims from as far as Anatolia, Crete, and the Greek mainland. Some of these pilgrims marked their presence with inscriptions on the temple walls. Many of these can still be seen today including inscriptions left by four Romans in 116 BC, the oldest known Latin inscriptions in Egypt. 

      Along with the various contributions of Ptolemaic rulers, Philae also received additions from the Nubian kings Arqamani and Adikhalamani.

      Later, the Roman era saw an overall decline in pilgrimage to Philae, especially from Mediterranean regions. Nevertheless, it remained an important sacred site, especially for Nubians, who continued to visit both as individual pilgrims and in official delegations from their government.

      Christianity seems to have been present at Philae by the fourth century, at which point it coexisted with traditional Egyptian religion.

      According to the sixth-century historian Procopius, the temple was closed down officially in AD 537 by the local commander Narses the Persarmenian in accordance with an order of Byzantine emperor Justinian I.

      Today, the temple complex attracts tens of thousands of visitors from all over the world every year. It is a unique place, especially when seen in the hour before sunset 🌇!

      After our temple visit, we called at a supermarket and a pharmacy to stock up on tissues, drinks, snacks and other essentials. We were all pretty tired at this point and just wanted to get to the ship, freshen up, eat, and get some sleep. Those of us who are going to Abu Simbel tomorrow have a 1.45am wake-up call! However, Nabil had other ideas and took us to his friend's perfume factory! It's not really my thing. One or two of our group bought something but most didn't. It added an hour to the journey and meant we didn't get to the ship until 8pm!

      So, no time to explore our new surroundings - just a cursory look at our cabin (very nice!), a hastily-eaten dinner (delicious!), a quick shower and bed by 10!! 😀
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    • Day 10

      Boat trip to Philae Temple

      December 30, 2022 in Egypt ⋅ ☀️ 22 °C

      After picking up the rest of our group, it was a mad bus ride up to the Philae Temple to gain entry before the ticket office closed at 4pm!

      We just made it!! Coaches behind us were turned away and told to come back tomorrow.

      Once we had our tickets, we had a 10-minute boat ride to get to the temple itself. The light was gorgeous and it was lovely being out on the water.
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    • Day 12

      Temple of Philae

      December 14, 2022 in Egypt ⋅ ☀️ 73 °F

      The Aswan dam had to be built to protect the temple from flooding. You can see the flood lines as black and pink demarcations pointed out by the arrow. This temple looked exactly like the temple of Horus to me. It is dedicated to Horus so that may be why they look similar.Read more

    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Aswân Reservoir Colony, Aswan Reservoir Colony

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