The greatest tour, which is approximately eight hours long and is available daily from 7:00 am to 4:00 pm, is a private one that doesn’t include extras like gratuity or access to King Tutankhamun’s tomb.
It also excludes lunch at a top-notch restaurant, any additional costs, and transportation to and from
your hotel in Luxor.
Languages that tour guides speak (live)
English,Spanish,German
details of the trip
around 8 hours
Type:
Private Tour
Every day is available
Private full day to explore Luxor’s West Bank at the customer hotel A certified tour guide will pick you up from your Luxor hotel or Nile cruise at 7:00 am and take you to the West Bank, where you will see the Valley of the monarchs, an exquisitely designed building that served as a place of burial and was inhabited by numerous monarchs.
The most well-known tombs are those of King Tutmosis I, King Tutmosis III, Tut-Ankh-Amon, King RamsesVI, King Mrenptah, and Amonhotep II.
Queen Hatshepsut, the only female pharaoh to rule ancient Egypt, constructed the Temple of Queen Hatshepsut, also known as El Dir El Bahari.
During the 18th Dynasty (about 1490–1469 B.C.), she governed Egypt for nearly 20 years as Thutmosis I’s daughter.
Visit Medinat Habu, a historical landmark on the West Bank of the Nile, which is situated opposite the modern Egyptian city of Luxor.
It is not far from where the Theban Hills begin.
Then The Valley of the Worker, also known as Deir el Medina, is the next stop on your day trip.
The artisans who built the tombs in the Valley of the Kings resided in Deir el Medina in ancient Egypt
from the 18th to the 20th dynasties of the New Kingdom period (about 1550–1080 BC).
The paintings appear to be very recent.
Afterwards pay a visit to the Valley of the Queens, which is the location of the tombs of the former pharaohs’ wives.
It was known in antiquity as Ta-Set-Neferu, or “the place of the Children of the Pharaoh,” along with the queens of the 18th, 19th, and 20th dynasties (1550-1070 BCE), because several princes and princesses were buried there alongside various aristocracy members.
Then The Colossi of Memnon, which are the remains of Amenhotep III’s mortuary temple, are the next
stop on your day’s trip.
At the conclusion, have a vehicle take you back to your hotel or Luxor Nile Cruise.