Valley of the Queens

Valley of the Kings

The Valley of the Queens, as named by Champollion, is located to the southwest of the Valley of the Kings and is where numerous royal wives and children are buried. Even though it was utilized as a cemetery as early as the 18th Dynasty, it wasn’t until the reign of 19th Dynasty pharaoh Ramses I that royal women began to be buried here.

Temple of Wadi es Sebua

Temple of Wadi es-Sebua

People think that the Wadi El-Sebaa temple is the largest of the southern temples. It is also one of the temples that most people in Aswan don’t know about or care about. The Wadi El-Sebaa temple is important to history because of the Pharaonic state at the time, especially during the reign of King Ramses II.

Temple of Kalabsha

Temple of Kalabsha

In the 13th century BC, during the reign of Pharaoh Ramesses II, two temples were cut out of the rock at Abu Simbel as a tribute to Ramesses II and his queen Nefertari. It is about 300 kilometers by road from the Aswan dam to where it is now, on the west side of Lake Nasser.

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