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The City of Aswan, Egypt

Aswan, Egypt's sunniest southern city and
ancient frontier town located about 81 miles south of Luxor, has a distinctively
African atmosphere. Its ancient Egyptian name was Syene. Small enough to walk
around and graced with the most beautiful setting on the Nile, the pace of life
is slow and relaxing. Days can be spent strolling up and down the broad Corniche
watching the sailboats etch the sky with their tall masts or sitting in floating
restaurants listening to Nubian music and eating freshly caught fish.
In Aswan the Nile is at its most beautiful, flowing
through amber desert and granite rocks, round emerald islands covered in palm
groves and tropical plants. Explore the souk, full of the scent and color of
spices, perfumes, scarves and baskets. View the spectacular sunsets while having
tea on the terrace of the Old
Cataract
Hotel (Named due to the location of the Nile's first cataract located here).
Aswan has been a favorite winter resort since the beginning of the nineteenth
century, and it's still a perfect place to get away from it all.
Every night Nubian dancers and musicians perform in the
Cultural Center, just off the Corniche. Folklore troupes recreate scenes from
village life and perform the famous Nubian mock stick-fight dances.

Dancers at the Cultural Center
Aswan is a strategic location which currently houses a
garrison of the Egyptian army, but which has also seen ancient Egyptian
garrisons, as well as that of General Kitchener, Turkish troops of the Ottoman
empire and the Romans.
The city proper lies on the east bank of the Nile.
Relax here, visit a few mosques, but then prepare for an adventure. The bazaar
runs along the Corniche, which continues past the Ferial Gardens and the Nubian
Museum, and continues on to the Cemetery, with its forest of cupolas surmounted
tombs from the Fatimid period. Just east of the cemetery in the famous area
quarries is the gigantic
Unfinished Obelisk. Just
to the south of this, two Graeco-Roman sarcophagi and an unfinished colossus
remain half buried in the sand.
The most obvious is
Elephantine
Island, which is timeless with artifacts dating
from pre-Dynastic times onward. It is the largest island in the area. Just
beyond Elephantine is
Kitchener's Island (Geziret
el-Nabatat). It was named for the British general Haratio Kitchener (185--1916)
and was sent to Egypt in 1883 to reorganize the Egyptian army, which he then led
against the Sudanese Mahdi. But the island is known for its garden and the
exotic plants the Kitchener planted there, and which continue to flourish today.
On the opposite shore (west bank), the cliffs are
surmounted by the tomb of a marabut, Qubbet el-Hawwa, who was a local saint.
Below are tombs of the
local (pharaonic) nobles
and dignitaries.
Upriver a bit is the tomb of Mohammed Shah Aga Khan who
died in 1957. Known as the
Tomb of the Aga Khan, it
is beautiful in its simplicity. A road from there leads back to the Coptic
Monastery
of St Simeon, which was built in the sixth
century in honor of Amba Hadra, a local saint.
Just up river a bit, there is also the old Aswan dam,
built by the British, which was enlarged, expanded, but unable to control the
Nile for irrigation.

Elephantine Island
| The Nubia Museum
Location:
Aswan, Egypt
How to get there:
International flights direct to Aswan, or via many
European and Eastern European cities. Also package tours and charter
flights. Contact your travel agent for details.
Description
The Nubia Museum harbors the history
of the "Land of Gold" as the word Nubia in the
Hieroglyphic, language of ancient Egypt in which pictorial symbols are used
to represent
meaning and sounds, means the "Land of Gold"...Hence, this land, over times,
was abounding
in monumental treasures.
The Nubia Museum, in Aswan, as a matter of fact, is deemed to be one of the
most
important Egyptian museums. A number of factors have combined together,
yielding the
magnificence of such museum, as it is the only unique open museum of its
kind.
Preparing this museum lasted for ten years, all dedicated for hard work to
come up with
such lovely museum. Let alone, it stands as a wonderful model of
international cultural
cooperation representing in United Nations Educational, Scientific, and
Cultural Organization
(UNESCO).
In April 6 th, 1959, the Egyptian government appealed to the United Nations
Educational,
Cultural, and Scientific Organization (UNESCO), seeking help to salvage the
monumental
sites in Nubia, hence, the area between Aswan and the Sudan was inundated by
the Nile
waters especially after completing the Aswan Dam.
The response of the (UNESCO), in fact, came fast, as it called upon the
international
community to contribute to this project.
Since then, (UNESCO) has been a key player in the archaeological field in
Egypt.
In no time, the executive committee, comprising representative of 15 member
states, was
set up, and was commissioned with studying technical, monumental and
financial reports with
the aim of providing the (UNESCO) with basic information required to
effectively implement
the project.
The (UNESCO), obviously, has contributed much to nudging the entire world to
pay more
attention to saving such invaluable monuments. By the end of 1975, and as a
result of this
relentless support on the part of the (UNESCO), the donations influx -
contributed by 24
countries - amounted to $ 123304.
Unsurprisingly then that the operation of saving the Nubian monuments was
described as
the greatest in the history of saving monuments.
The operation, as known, included dismantling Abu Simbel Temple, inter
alia, moving it to
another area to be reassembled once again. Abu Simbel Temple was completely
dismantled to
1036 pieces, each with average of 7 to 30 tons, as they were rebuilt on the
top of the mountain
overlooking the genuine spots, drawn by the ancient Egyptians 3000 years
ago.
The world outcry, however, was translated into many concrete actions;
donations to salvage
the deteriorated-condition monuments, a number of excavation missions -
which pursued their
tasks in such hard conditions in areas extend 500 kilometres along the Nile
banks.
A number of 40 missions have taken part in this great but difficult job,
unearthing several
priceless treasures dating back to pre-history times; Pharaonic, Greek,
Roman, Islamic and
Coptic.
Fossils, which were discovered during excavations, undoubtedly provided full
knowledge
about Nubian life and its development along ages.
In January, 1975, the General Egyptian Authority for Antiquities submitted a
request to the
(UNESCO) seeking the organisation's assistance to preserve the ancient
Egyptian
monuments, through establishing a city for museums harbouring a cluster of
open museums
with a view to displaying rare and wonderful monuments of various ages.
Being the main supporter to save the Nubian monuments, the (UNESCO) approved
this
request, and entrusted the executive committee, responsible for salvaging
operations, with
assuming the tasks of this new project. This committee was named the "The
Executive
Committee for the International Campaign for Establishing the International
Museum of the
Monuments of Nubia in Aswan, and the National Museum for Ancient Egyptian
Museum in
Cairo".
Since February, 1981, a number of symposiums and seminars was held for
contribution to
this great project. It was the first time in the history of the (USECO) to
decide launching an
international campaign to establish local museum. This, however, could be
ascribed to the
magnificent monumental treasures Egypt has.
On February 4 th, 1986, the foundation stone of the museum of Nubia was laid
down, playing
new effective role that was derived from the spring of culture and
civilization at both home and
international levels.
To the Egyptians, the museum is to display life over centuries. As for
foreign visitors, the
museum will show the history of such unique area, as a source of knowledge
for researchers
from around the globe.
The International Museum of Nubia is located in Aswan on an area of 50,000
square
meters, 7000 of which are excluded to building, while the rest designed to
be the yard of the
museum.
The building has three floors for displaying and housing, in addition to a
library and
information center. The largest part of the museum is occupied by the
monumental pieces,
reflecting phases of the development of the Nubian culture and
civilization.
Three thousands pieces of antiq., representing various ages; Geological,
Pharaonic, Roman,
Coptic and Islamic, were registered. The open-door exhibition includes 90
rare monumental
pieces, while the internal halls contain 50 invaluable pieces dating back to
the pre-history
times, 503 pieces belong to Pharaonic time, 52 of Coptic era, 103 of Islamic
age, 140 of Nubian time, in addition to 360 pieces having the tang of
Aswan.
The work in this unique edifice lasted for 11 years straight, and cost LE 60
million.
The museum of Nubia gained this unique position simply because it harbors
unique
monuments not in any elsewhere.
It houses the statute of Ramsis II, which was laid at the very forefront of
the Museum,
statute of Amenras the spiritual wife of Amen, she is of Nubian origin. It,
also, has the head of
the Shpatka, of the Nubian origin, made of rosy granite, head of black
granite of Tahraqa, the
Nubian King, whose reign during the 7th century BC was said to be full of
prosperity. There is
a temple of his name with gold-plated pillars.
There are, also, four mummies for nobles, which were found in Kashmatkh town
in Nubia.
The museum, as well, houses several models and styles of the Nubian
heritage, the
panorama of the Nile, depicting live image of the River Nile streaming
through its banks.
There is also a model for the Nubian-style house, typically copied to mirror
the nature of life
in Nubia.
All pieces exhibited in the museum reflect the character of the Nubia over
history and
display how it merged with the Islamic civilization on one hand and the
mother civilization of
Egypt on the other.
So, the museum of Nubia plays vital role not only at the level of promoting
Nubia to the
entire world but also at the level of maintaining monuments and supporting
researchers,
interested in Nubia, from around the globe.
This, however could be achieved through the museum's study center and the
documentation
centers which publish more information on the "Land of Gold" in Egypt, the
past, the present
and the future.
Nubia Museum, which hosts 3000 monumental pieces of several times, ranks
tenth in the
list of the museums inaugurated in Egypt over the past three years. An array
of important
museums, however, has been inaugurated; Mohamed Nagui Museum, Modern
Egyptian Art
Museum, Museum of Mohamed Mahmoud Khalil and his wife, Museum of Ahmed
Desouki,
Port Said Museum for Modern Arts, Taha Hussein Museum, and the Mummification
Museum
in Luxor.
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