You will be taken to Luxor on the final day of the expedition to tour both the east and west sides of the city, beginning on the west bank:
The valley of the kings:
The Valley of the Kings got its name because the majority of the monarchs of the New Kingdom's eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth dynasties (c. 1550–1069) were interred in a dry river valley on the west bank of the ancient city of Thebes (present-day Luxor).
Colossi of Memnon:
There are only two enormous statues of the funeral temple left, each standing up to 20 meters tall. During the Nineteenth Dynasty, the temple served as a quarry from which stones were extracted.
Afterward, the east bank of Luxor:
Visit the temple of Karnak:
The smallest of the ten structures, it was constructed in the west by King Tuthmosis III. It is regarded as a compass because it is a granite column in the north with an engraving of a lotus flower that was growing in Lower Egypt on top and a papyrus plant that was growing in Upper Egypt on the south opposite it.
Temple of Luxor:
Both King Ramses II of the Nineteenth Dynasty and King Amenhotep III of the Eighteenth Dynasty are credited with building the Temple of Luxor. King Ramses II owns the exterior portions of the Luxor Temple, whereas King Amenhotep III owns the inner portions. A few names of different kings in the Luxor Temple.
at the end of your trip, you will be taken to the first spot which will be our end of service.