Leggi le migliori domande frequenti sui tour in Egitto
Gli operatori turistici di Cairo Top Tours personalizzeranno i vostri tour in base al vostro budget e ai vostri interessi. Con noi non dovrete preoccuparvi di nulla perché ci occuperemo di tutti i dettagli della vostra vacanza. Per questo motivo vi offriamo una varietà di alternative di viaggio che sono convenienti e allo stesso tempo offrono un'esperienza di vacanza straordinaria. Lavoreremo direttamente con voi per assicurarci che rimaniate all'interno del vostro budget pur godendo di esperienze meravigliose. Contattateci subito per saperne di più sulle nostre alternative di viaggio a basso costo!
L'Egitto è considerato uno dei Paesi più sicuri non solo del mondo arabo, ma anche del mondo intero, perché dispone di uno dei servizi di sicurezza più forti. Il governo egiziano è interessato ad adottare tutte le misure di sicurezza necessarie per assicurare i viaggi turistici in Egitto, quindi non dovete assolutamente preoccuparvi.
Il governo egiziano ha annunciato la splendida notizia che i turisti di tutto il mondo stavano aspettando, ovvero l'avvicinarsi della data di apertura del prossimo Museo Egizio. Questo museo è considerato attualmente il più famoso al mondo perché comprende una vasta collezione di rari monumenti faraonici.
In caso di cancellazione del viaggio da parte del cliente, in base alle date di inizio del viaggio, verranno addebitati i seguenti costi:
15% del costo totale del viaggio, con cancellazione dalla data di prenotazione fino a 61 giorni prima della data di inizio del viaggio
25% del costo totale del viaggio, con cancellazione da 60 a 31 giorni prima della data di inizio del viaggio
35% del costo totale del viaggio, con cancellazione da 30 a 15 giorni prima della data di inizio del viaggio

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Serapide era adorato come un dio della guarigione e dell'altro mondo, ed era sempre raffigurato come un uomo barbuto con i capelli ricci, con vestiti in cima alla testa. Il suo tempio, il "Serapeum", nella città di Alessandria era il più importante. I pazienti erano soliti andare a questo tempio da ogni dove per ottenere la guarigione.
Dio Serapide
Serapis was usually depicted as the sun, fertility, and afterlife. His companion was Isis, the wife of Osiris, and one of the most popular deities according to religion in ancient Egypt during the Ptolemaic Period. Serapis was represented as a man with an elaborate Greek hairstyle wearing Greek-style robes and a full beard. He often wears a basket on his head. Sometimes he is depicted as a serpent in honor of his connection with the underworld and fertility.
Antiche divinità egizie
The cult of Serapis was a huge success for the Ptolemaic dynasty, and various temples were built in Egypt for his worship. The main temple was in the Ptolemaic capital, Alexandria. According to the geographer Strabo, the Serapeum in Alexandria stood in the west of the city. Although it was an important site throughout the Mediterranean.
The Gods of ancient Egypt were very much like humans they loved and hated, they felt jealous and fought, they took revenge, killed and also died during an amazing myth full of joyful, action and dramatic events that inspired modern movie directors and producers to create world-famous movies about the grandeur of the Pharaohs and the Gods they worshipped.
Would you like to live a journey through ancient Egyptian culture and mythology? you can make it happen and spend a day to visit Abydos, Giza, Luxor, Aswan to see the tombs of the Pharaohs adorned with very clear, detailed and beautifully painted scenes of the various deities of ancient Egypt as well as many other sites,
Il nostro team vi aiuterà a viaggiare in Egitto e sperimentare il tempo soleggiato del nostro bel paese durante la Pasqua 2026, grazie alla loro vasta conoscenza del turismo egiziano. Puoi personalizzare il tuo pacchetto selezionando uno dei nostri pacchetti di viaggio in Egitto o sfruttare al massimo il tuo tempo in una breve visita, imparando di più sulla storia egiziana e le sue affascinanti storie e vivendola attraverso tour privati al Cairo. Partecipa a uno dei nostri tour economici in Egitto attraverso il deserto del Sahara, come i tour di Siwa dal Cairo, per esempio, o preferibilmente i tour nel Deserto Bianco d'Egitto. Scoprite i nostri tour di un giorno ad Assuan, fate una gita di un giorno da Assuan ad Abu Simbel, o viaggiate via terra e godetevi i nostri tour di un giorno a Luxor per vedere gli incredibili templi di Karnak, il Tempio di Luxor, il Tempio di Hatshepsut, e vedete le meravigliose tombe splendidamente dipinte nella Valle dei Re, questo è il luogo dove i re e i governanti del nuovo regno riposano in pace e imparate i loro riti di mummificazione e sepoltura.
Serapis was usually depicted as the sun, fertility, and afterlife. His companion was Isis, the wife of Osiris, and one of the most popular deities according to religion in ancient Egypt during the Ptolemaic Period. Serapis was represented as a man with an elaborate Greek hairstyle wearing Greek-style robes and a full beard. He often wears a basket on his head. Sometimes he is depicted as a serpent in honor of his connection with the underworld and fertility.
The cult of Serapis was a huge success for the Ptolemaic dynasty, and various temples were built in Egypt for his worship. The main temple was in the Ptolemaic capital, Alexandria. According to the geographer Strabo, the Serapeum in Alexandria stood in the west of the city. Although it was an important site throughout the Mediterranean.
The marble head of the god Serapis was created. It was found in 1999 while excavating at the sea's bottom in Abu Qir, Alexandria. His temple in Alexandria, the Serapeum, was considered one of the most important temples, and Serapis was worshipped as the god of healing and the afterlife.
The god Serapis is depicted with curly hair and a thick beard. On the top of his head is a hole for the calathos, decorated with plants in relief, which Serapis was often depicted with and which was found far from the head on the seabed east of the city of Canopus.
The story began at the walls of the ancient city, where a muscular young man sent his men to the city of Pontus to bring a new god to Alexandria, the god "Serapis". This was what Ptolemy I (Soter) dreamed of, to include the worship of the god Serapis within the Alexandrian trinity in order to consolidate the rule of the Ptolemies in Egypt.
There are other opinions that this idol was a gift from the city of Sinope during the reign of Ptolemy II (Philadelphus) in response to Egypt's gift of wheat to that city.
Some historians believe that the idea started during the reign of Alexander the Great, when he saw Serapis in a dream and ordered the construction of a temple for him.
The Egyptians had been worshipping the same gods for thousands of years, and Ptolemy I knew they were unlikely to accept a new deity. So he took aspects of two of the most popular gods—Osiris and Apis—and mixed them with the Greek king of the gods, Zeus, building on the already established Egyptian cult of Osirapis, to create Serapis. The historian Plutarch (c. 45/46–120/125 CE)
The seven-pointed star was a symbol of the Egyptian god Serapis. This bust, possibly found in Egypt, shows a man wearing a diadem adorned with a seven-pointed star. Traces of paint are visible: Red on the hair and beard, and pale blue on the eyes. The wreath was once gold-plated, but little is left of it now.
A golden wreath depicting Serapis in front of a temple facade, found inside a pottery vessel in the village of Dosh in the Kharga Oasis. The artifact dates back to the Roman era and is housed in the National Museum of Egyptian Civilization, the first of its kind in Egypt and the Arab world. Serapis is the ancient Egyptian god of healing.
The most famous place of worship for the god Serapis in Alexandria is the Serapeum Temple... The history of the Serapeum Temple and its role in communication between the Egyptian and Greek civilizations, which constitute a historical extension of Greek civilization, are discussed.
How was Ptolemy I able to build bridges of brotherhood between the Egyptian and Greek civilizations, especially in the matter of religion, by unifying a common deity known as “Serapis,” which combined Egyptian deities such as Osiris and Apis, and Greek deities such as Dionysus and Asclepius.