Thursday, February 20, 2020

Egypt tour, starting with Cairo museum

Geez Louise, I just downloaded pics off my phone onto my computer to start the culling process and there were 1315 from our Egypt and Jordan trip. I haven't even thought about downloading pics from the actual camera we took along on the trip. We were gone for a total of 17 days, which seemed like the blink of an eye and yet forever. All in all, we had a fabulous time and learned so much along the way from our guides.

It took us almost 17 hours of flying time to get to Cairo, but we had a good trip on American and Royal Jordanian. And on time, too! It was pretty cool to see the menu in Arabic on the flipside of our dinner card. 



Our older daughter A, my traveling buddy on this trip, was the mascot of our tour group in Egypt. Everyone else was my age or older, so she was everyone's daughter or granddaughter for nine days. They were a really fun group, very diverse and well traveled, so we really enjoyed spending time with them to hear their stories. We stayed at the historic Mena House Hotel our first couple nights in Cairo, and the view didn't disappoint.


We kicked off our touring, led by Egyptologist extraordinaire Ahmed Abul Ella, at the Cairo Museum. 


They're in the process of building a beautifully modern and large museum to replace this one, so some of the antiquities had already been moved in anticipation of its opening later this year. I can't recall the story behind every pic I took, but I'll add commentary as my middle-aged memory allows.







We saw several folks dusting the historic statuary.


One of our favorite rooms was the one containing pieces from King Tut's grave goods. Discovered by Howard Carter in 1922, it was cool to tour Tut's tomb in the valley of the kings several days later while on our Nile River cruise. 



Above is daughter A standing in front of one of the largest of the nested burial boxes found in Tut's tomb. In the second pic, it looks like somebody wrote some symbols in black Sharpie on the gold. Believe it or not, these were found on the different pieces of the nested burial boxes because they were all put together in the tomb. So these are basically the 33 centuries old version of modern-day IKEA assembly instructions.Below are three of the four alabaster carved canopic jars that contained Tut's preserved organs.





I enjoyed seeing an original B&W photo of the Anubis statue removed from Tut's tomb, and then the actual statue in an adjacent display case. Below is a close up of the arm of a chair made for King Tut. The hieroglyphics contained inside the elongated oval is called a cartouche. These are used to denote the name/title of an Egyptian monarch. I have no idea if this is Tut's cartouche since I can't ready hieroglyphics. I just found cartouches interesting and for the rest of our time in Egypt, I was always on the lookout for them.


We obviously saw all sorts of interesting things. Here are a few that caught my attention. 


This is a statue of some old pharaoh. Notice the double hands on the top of his head, plus the eyes. It was a bit creepy. Also notice how it's housed in a box and slides out at the bottom. The story is that this statue was taken around "on tour" in Egypt so the folks could worship it. Per the ancient Egyptians, kings were divinely appointed. 

Below is a statue of rebel pharaoh Akhenaten, son of Amenhotep. Every other pharaoh adhered to the stylized statuary, but this guy wanted his to be more realistic. And strikingly androgynous. Maybe this actually reflected genetic abnormalities from all that inbreeding and this is how the king really looked?!


This is Akhenaten's desecrated royal coffin. It seems the priests were NOT happy that this guy tried to change Egyptian religion/worship while king. So once Akhenaten was safely dead, they removed all of the gold from the head piece as a sign of dishonor in the afterlife.


Below is the topmost point from a pyramid, now housed in the museum.


Lastly, this was our fearless Egyptologist who shared his vast stores of wisdom. He's standing in front of a slab of rock with hieroglyphics chiseled into it. Down near the bottom, he told us it mentions how the Israelites had been run out of Egypt. This was just the beginning of several historical Bible moments-places-things we were able to see on this trip. It really whetted my appetite to go on a Holy Lands tour sooner rather than later.


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