|
|
Visit Cairo.
Cairo – largest
city in Africa, in the entire Arab world in fact, and entry to Egypt
ancient and modern – Cairo lives comfortably poised between past glories
and 21st Century sensibilities. Once known as the “Mother of the
World,” Cairo has been surpassing visitors’ expectations since the 14th
Century and has only gotten better and better at it.
To see and do all the
highlights would exhaust a well-packed two weeks. Most excursions, and ours are
no exception, allocate 3 – 4 days. In that time you can comfortably take in the
premier destinations, capture the city’s unique flavor and leave a lot for the
return visit you’re going to want to make. All of our tours offer a free day
here so, with the services of your knowledgeable driver/guide, you’ll be able to
pursue some unscheduled special interest visits. We always recommend the
purchase of a good guide book (“Insight Guides” is an excellent choice with 48
pages devoted to Cairo alone) not only to explain what you’re seeing but to put
it all in historical and cultural perspective.
With that said, let’s
talk specifics. We schedule Cairo both at the beginning and end of our tours
because, like seeing New York City, it IS and ISN’T typically “Egyptian.”
Cairo is an Islamic city, founded not far from the most massive Antiquity
structures, the Pyramids in nearby Giza. The Giza Plateau and the incredible
Egyptian Museum are the two top “must see” sites. Incidentally, there are plans
to build a new, larger Egyptian Museum – this comes as wonderful news as the
existing 1902 structure has priceless objects literally stuffed into every nook
and cranny. The 12th Century Citadel, begun by Salah-ad-Din (the “Saladin” of
Crusades’ fame) was the home of virtually all of Egypt’s rulers, seat of
government and powerful military fortress until the mid-19th Century. Look out
over its ramparts and see all of Cairo at your feet and imagine how intoxicating
absolute power must have been. Yet Cairo has always been diversified and
multi-cultural. Coptic Cairo recaptures the ancient roots of one of the
earliest branches of Christianity, while the Ben Ezra Synagogue fostered the
Sephardic Rabbinical tradition.
Cairo bazaars or “souks”
are famous worldwide and none more so than the Khan al-Khalili. A mecca for
tourists with every conceivable souvenir to be haggled over, it borders the
possibly more interesting native souks where modern Cairenes trade, eat and
gossip as they have for centuries.
As Egyptian cities go
Cairo is a youngster, dating only from its 641 CE founding as the conquering
Arabs’ capital. Multi-millennia older, yet now almost swallowed by Cairo’s
western sprawl, is the last remaining Wonder of the Ancient World. The Pyramids
and Sphinx complex, Egypt’s #1 attraction, never fail to mesmerize and with so
much written about them through history we will only say that seeing them leaves
an indelible impression. Just a short drive south are the remnants of Memphis,
Egypt’s first capital founded, legend has it, by Menes, first ruler of the First
Dynasty. Its enormous necropolis, Saqqarah, contains tombs, pyramids, a
mausoleum for the holy Apis bulls and massive architecture, including the Step
Pyramid, the world’s first stone monument.
And through it all the
Nile’s constant presence reminds each visitor that without the mighty river,
nothing here would have ever come to exist. The Nile, always believed to be
eternal, always in reality was life. The many lives the river has seen you’ll
see in Cairo.
|
For more information
please
e-mail
us or phone:
1-888-575-6941
(toll-free in the
US) or
+1-352-402-0412
(worldwide)
|
|