Egypt
‘Ayn al Jadīdah

Discover travel destinations of travelers writing a travel journal on FindPenguins.
Travelers at this place
    • Day 4

      Siwa Oasis

      December 8, 2021 in Egypt ⋅ ☀️ 20 °C

      Siwa is a remote oasis not far from the border with Libya. Settlement here dates to at least the 10th millennium BCE.
      My 1st impression is that it is far larger than I imagined. It is about 80 km by 20 km. So it's a lot more than the romanticized pond or spring surrounded by palm trees, though all those things are here just on auch larger scale.
      The 1st picture looks over a portion of the oasis to give a sense of the extent and scale if this place.
      The 2nd picture looks through a stand of palm trees like those visible in the 1st picture. I can understand the attraction of such places: it is noticeably cooler in there.
      The 3rd picture is the so called Cleopatra's Spring, though there is no record of the famous Cleopatra coming here. It is probably the best known of the springs around the oasis. I'm told there are as many as 240 springs here.
      The 4th picture is in the old city in that section seen in the picture taken from Shali Fortress (see another post). There are efforts under way to revive the old town for tourism. Hints of that effort can be seen here.
      The 5th picture looks across the park in the main square. For me, this pictures typifies Siwa as the combination of sand desert and oasis that it is.
      The last picture is in a different section of the oasis. These are Ronan tombs carved into the cliff face. I'm told that that is is also where the Roman settlement had located their administrative facilities and religious temples too (at least the funerary temples).
      Read more

    • Day 4

      Siwa Amun Temple

      December 8, 2021 in Egypt ⋅ ☀️ 19 °C

      Perhaps the best known story about Siwa has to do with Alexander the Great. While building Alexandria, he came here to visit the famous Oracle of Amun whose temple which dates to at least the 7th century BCE when the present temple was built.
      This post follows a hypothetical version of Alexander's visit. The 1st picture looks over the well of purification and up to a part of the temple. Ritual cleansing was required to enter the temple, and it seems right that Alexander would not have been excepted from this. Amazingly, there is still water in this well.
      The 2nd picture looks through the series of gates into the progressively holier portions of the site.
      Finally, in the 3rd picture, Alexander reaches the Holy of Holies, the Oracle chamber where he tells us that the Oracle proclaimed him a son of Amun and rightful pharaoh. This is also an astronomical space. The window to the left would mark the equinox when the light fell exactly on the stature of Amun that would have been in the center of the room.
      The 4th picture looks across the temple. This is likely the remains of the sight Alexander would have taken in after receiving the Oracle's message.
      The final picture looks across the coronation chamber where Alexander received the crown of Egypt
      Read more

    You might also know this place by the following names:

    ‘Ayn al Jadīdah, `Ayn al Jadidah

    Join us:

    FindPenguins for iOSFindPenguins for Android