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Cairo Top Tours' tour operators will customize your tours according to your budget and interests. You shouldn't worry about anything with us because we will take care of all the details of your vacation. That is why we provide a variety of travel alternatives that are affordable while providing an amazing vacation experience. We will work directly with you to ensure that you stay within your budget while enjoying the wonderful experiences. Please contact us immediately to learn more about our budget-friendly travel choices!
Egypt is considered one of the safest countries not only in the Arab world but in the world because Egypt has one of the strongest security services. The Egyptian government is interested in taking all the necessary safety measures to secure tourist trips in Egypt, so you do not have to worry about that at all.
Yes, the Grand Egyptian Museum is officially open for visitors. Come and explore the world’s largest collection of Pharaonic treasures, from the majestic statues to the dazzling artifacts of ancient Egypt. Your unforgettable journey into history starts here.
In the case of cancellation of the trip by the customer, based on the start dates of the trip, the following costs will be charged:
15% of the total cost of the trip, with cancellation from the booking date up to 61 days before the start date of the trip
25% of the total cost of the trip, with cancellation from 60 to 31 days before the start date of the trip
35% of the total cost of the trip, with cancellation 30 to 15 days before the start date of the trip

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The Rams Road, a 2700-meter long road connecting Luxor Temple to Karnak Temple, is set to be completed soon. The road, which connects the two temples, has been meticulously prepared for its completion. The opening ceremony, attended by leaders and officials from around the world, is considered one of the greatest historical works. The Kabash Road project, a crucial national project, is being pursued by the Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities to expedite its completion and become a global tourist attraction.
Road of the Rams
The revival of the Pharaonic Kabash Road, with a length of 2,700 meters linking the temples of Luxor and Karnak, is the largest national archaeological project that is currently taking place within Luxor Governorate to serve the tourism movement during the coming period, as it is the most important project that takes place on the land of Luxor, and the work is followed up by Dr. Mostafa Waziri, Secretary General of the Supreme Council of Antiquities, which receives great support from the state and the government to continue work on this huge national project that President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi pays great attention to, to support the tourism movement in southern Egypt.
The Kabash Road project is one of the most important national projects, and the focus of the state, represented by the Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities, to speed up the completion of the project, to become a global tourist attraction, which is why follow-up is carried out periodically, explaining that about 97% of the development of the Kabash Road project has been completed.
The road connects Luxor Temple to Karnak Temple with a series of rams on both sides with a length of 2700 meters, and a great deal of progress has been made in preparation for its completion soon and the opening ceremony in a manner befitting Egypt in front of the whole world, in the presence of leaders and officials of countries and embassies from around the world, the rams road is one of the greatest historical works.
A ram is a symbol of the god Khnum, one of the main gods in the ancient Egyptian religion, which is the creator god who created humanity on the Fakharani wheel - according to the ancient Egyptian religion - these rams were surrounded by flower beds and streams of water to irrigate them and in the middle of a rectangular floor of 120 by 230 cm of sandstone to facilitate walking on it and between each statue and statue a gap estimated at 4 meters, in addition to what Queen Hatshepsut mentioned on the walls of her red palace in Karnak.
More than 5,000 years ago, the kings of Pharaonic Egypt in Thebes built the Road of the Rams (the Road of the Apocalypse), which connected the temples of Luxor and Karnak for the sacred processions of the kings and gods in the celebrations of the Opt festivals every year. The king was led by the high-ranking people of the ministers, high priests and statesmen behind the sacred boats that carried statues of the gods, while the people lined up on both sides of the road, dancing and playing in joy and happiness.
The construction of this road was started by King Amenhotep III, who started the construction of the Luxor Temple, but the largest share in the implementation of this road is due to King Nakhtinbo I, the founder of the Thirtieth Dynasty of the Pharaohs (the last dynasty of the Pharaohs era) There are 1,200 statues along the 2.72 km long and 700 meters wide road
These statues were carved from one block of sandstone and are held in two forms, the first takes the form of the body of a lion and the head of a human being, the lion is one of the symbols of the sun god, and the second in the form of a ram's body and a ram's head.
“There in Egyptian Thebes, where the heaps of gold shine, Thebes with a hundred doors, where four hundred men with their horses and chariots pass in a military march from each of its huge doors,” he said. It was the administrative capital of Upper Egypt during the reign of the sixth pharaonic dynasty (3000-2100 BC) and did not assume its high position that reached the sky, until the late twenty-first century BC, when the princes of Thebes were able to unify the country from the White Sea in the north to the first waterfall in the south.
And when Egypt was exposed to the invasions of the Hyksos coming from the north ... and united the two lands, Upper and Lower Egypt, and then the seat of government moved to Thebes and remained there for more than four centuries.