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The Rough Guide to Egypt, 4th Edition (Rough Guide Egypt)
 
 
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The Rough Guide to Egypt, 4th Edition (Rough Guide Egypt) (Paperback)

by Dan Richardson (Author) "The simplest way of getting to Egypt from Britain and Ireland is to fly..." (more)
Key Phrases: annual moulid, simple rooms with fans, clean rooms with fans, Red Sea, Nile Valley, Midan Tahrir (more...)
3.2 out of 5 stars See all reviews (8 customer reviews)


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Editorial Reviews

Review
...full of indispensable advice, erudite and consumer-bright. -- The Irish Times, 30 May 1998, Dublin, Ireland

Best guidebook. -- Sunday Mirror, London, UK

Lively, up-to-date and very reliable. -- Travel and Leisure

Product Description
INTRODUCTION

Egypt is the oldest tourist destination on earth. Ancient Greeks and Romans started the trend, coming to goggle at the cyclopean scale of the Pyramids and the Colossi of Thebes. At the onset of colonial times, Napoleon and the British in turn looted Egypt’s treasures to fill their national museums, sparking off a trickle of Grand Tourists that, by the 1860s, had grown into a flood of travellers, packaged for their Nile cruises and Egyptological lectures by the enterprising Thomas Cook.

Today, the attractions of the country are little different. The focus of most visits remains the great monuments of the Nile Valley, combined with a few days spent exploring the souks, mosques and madrassas of Islamic Cairo. However, possibilities for Egyptian travel also encompass snorkelling and diving along the Red Sea coasts, remote oases and camel trips into the mountains of Sinai, or visits to the Coptic monasteries of the Eastern Desert.

The land itself is a freak of nature, whose lifeblood is the River Nile. From the Sudanese border to the shores of the Mediterranean, the Nile Valley and its Delta are flanked by arid wastes, the latter as empty as the former are teeming with people. This stark duality between fertility and desolation is fundamental to Egypt’s character and has shaped its development since prehistoric times, imparting continuity to diverse cultures and peoples over five millennia. It is a sense of permanence and timelessness that is buttressed by religion, which pervades every aspect of life. Although the pagan cults of ancient Egypt are as moribund as its legacy of mummies and temples, their ancient fertility rites and processions of boats still hold their place in the celebrations of Islam and Christianity.

The result is a multi-layered culture, which seems to accord equal respect to ancient and modern. The peasants (fellaheen) of the Nile and Bedouin tribes of the desert live much as their ancestors did a thousand years ago. Other communities include the Nubians of the far south, and the Coptic Christians, who trace their ancestry back to pharaonic times. What unites them is a love of their homeland, extended family ties, dignity, warmth and hospitality towards strangers. Though most visitors are drawn to Egypt by its monuments, the enduring memory is likely to be of its people and their way of life.

REGIONS AND HIGHLIGHTS

Each of the regions is discussed in its own chapter introduction; what follows is merely the briefest outline of the main attractions.

Most visitors arrive at Cairo. A seething megalopolis, its chief sightseeing appeal lies in its bazaars and medieval mosques, though there is scarcely less fascination in its juxtapositions of medieval and modern life, with fortified gates, villas and skyscrapers interwoven by flyovers whose traffic may be halted by herds of camels. The immensity and diversity of this "Mother of Cities" is as staggering as anything you’ll encounter in Egypt, while just outside Cairo are the first of the pyramids that range across the desert to the edge of the Fayoum, among them the unsurpassable trio at Giza and the vast necropolis of Saqqara. Besides all this, there are superb museums devoted to Ancient, Coptic and Islamic Egypt, and enough entertainments to occupy weeks of your time.

However, the principal tourist lure remains, as ever, the Nile Valley, with its ancient monuments and timeless river vistas – felucca sailboat cruises being a great way to combine the two. The town of Luxor is synonymous with the magnificent temples of Karnak and the Theban Necropolis, which includes the Valley of the Kings where Tutankhamun and other pharaohs were buried. Aswan, Egypt’s southernmost city, has the loveliest setting on the Nile and a languorous ambience. From here, you can visit the island Philae temple of Isis and the rock-hewn colossi at Abu Simbel. Other sites not to be missed are Edfu and Kom Ombo (between Luxor and Aswan) and – for those willing to chance their luck on the fringes of potentially risky Middle Egypt – the amazing temples of Abydos and Dendara (north of Luxor).

Only accessible to tourists in the last two decades, the Western Desert Oases are scattered across a vast, awesomely desolate region. Siwa, out towards the Libyan border, has a unique culture and history, limpid pools and bags of charm. Another option is to follow the "Great Desert Circuit" (starting from Cairo or Assyut) through the four "inner" oases. Though Bahariya and Farafra hold the most appeal, with the lovely White Desert between them, the larger oases of Dakhla and Kharga also have their rewards once you escape their modernized "capitals". And for those equipped to make serious desert expeditions, there’s the challenge of entering the Great Sand Sea or tracing part of the infamous Forty Days Road. By way of contrast to these deep-desert locations are the quasi-oases of the Fayoum and Wadi Natrun, with their diverse ancient ruins and Coptic monasteries.

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Product Details

  • Paperback: 20001100.00 pages
  • Publisher: Rough Guides; 4th edition (December 4, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1858285224
  • ISBN-13: 978-1858285221
  • Product Dimensions: 7.8 x 5 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.2 out of 5 stars See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #2,321,195 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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Ancient Egypt by David P. Silverman
 

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Customer Reviews

8 Reviews
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4 star:
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Average Customer Review
3.2 out of 5 stars (8 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars OK on practical information but uninformed on history, November 19, 1999
By A Customer
Though I found the Rough Guide to Egypt to be fairly good on providing practical information, its grasp of Egyptian history and culture was poor, much of it copied from other and better guide books.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars A very poor account of my country, February 24, 2000
By A Customer
Egypt is my country, I know it well, but I would not recognize it from what I read in this book. We are an old country, with a great history and culture. But this guide talks of McDonalds, of out of date pop music, of how to cheat my people by paying them as little as possible for their services and generosity. This book is an insult to my country, and I think only fools would waste their money buying it.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Rough Guide to Egypt, June 20, 2000
To the point, told you what you needed to know, without saturating you with information. I travelled with a couple of friends to Egypt and found their book to be more informative than mine, despite the fact that their Rough Guide was a little out of date when they bought it. It is especially useful if you are looking for cheap accomodation in Luxor and to a lesser extent, Aswan, plus it also provided some decent maps of both areas. One amusing snippet that caught my attention was the information about the back way into the Valley of the Kings (for the fit amongst you only) - you turn right just before the ticket collection point at Hapshepsut, passed the souvenir stalls and follow the path up the side of the hill. Once at the top and passed a hill on top, veer right again to go into the Valley of the Kings. Unlike the main entrance (where you are checked to see you have tickets), you don't have to pay to get in this way, but you can't get into any of the tombs if you haven't bought the tickets - courtesy of the information in Rough Guide. The Egyptians check for tickets again at each tomb entrance, which from what I can remember, you are told about in the book anyway. Still worth it for the views though, especially of Hapshepsut, but DON'T GO TOO NEAR THE EDGE OF THE CLIFF.

The Aswan bit is also clearer than other books, for example, one bit of info. it gives compared to others, is the fact that once you have paid to go to Philae Temple (which is on an island), you have to haggle with the owners of the boats in order to get there.

All in all, a very comprehensive book, but the edition I saw needed a little updating.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Thorough and accurate
I spent about a month reading this guide and the Lonely Planet series while planning my trip to Egypt... Read more
Published on March 11, 2002 by 2brn2b

3.0 out of 5 stars WATCH WHEN THE BOOK WAS LAST UPDATED!!
I used this book while in egypt. I found it to be very outdated and did not have much of the relevent information that I needed. Read more
Published on April 18, 2000 by Holton Yost

1.0 out of 5 stars no cigar
An industriously put together guidebook but poorly informed and dull to read. It's not bad on practical information but hardly turns up anything really new or interesting that... Read more
Published on March 17, 2000 by Ronnie Rowland

5.0 out of 5 stars The ONLY book you need for Egypt
This book has a wonderful account of the history and culture of Egypt as well as ways on how to make your hard earned dollar do more for you by not letting people rip you off. Read more
Published on March 14, 2000

4.0 out of 5 stars A must have if you are going to Egypt
I recently took a trip to Egypt, While there I had a copy of the Rough Guide, it was a real help and I could not have been able to stay as long as I did had it not been for the... Read more
Published on April 14, 1999

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