After the Valley of the Kings it’s onward to Deir al Bahiri to see the memorial Temple of Queen Hatshepsut, a woman who declared herself pharaoh. To support her authority to reign she had herself depicted as a man in temple art. The temple structure itself is oriented to identify the pharaonic Hatshepsut with the sun god.
»» Wikipedia: Luxor (the modern city) »»
KNEE/HIP/MOBILITY ALERT: Regrettably there are no accommodations for people with mobility issues at the sites we visit today. Some of the sites we visit are reached via a long steep flight of stone steps up a hillside or down into hillsides. Or both! You need to think of the status of your joints, your sense of balance, and your mobility skills as you contemplate today’s adventure.
»» Planetware: Exploring The Temples of Karnak »»
»» Planetware: Exploring the Valley of the Kings »»
»» UNESCO: Ancient Thebes with its Necropolis »»
»» Wikipedia: Ancient Egyptian religion »»
»» Wikipedia: Chapelle Rouge (of Hatshepsut) »»
»» Wikipedia: Deir el-Bahari »»
»» Wikipedia: Egyptian chronology »»
»» Wikipedia: KV 17: Tomb of Seti I »»
»» Wikipedia: List of Pharaohs »»
»» Wikipedia: Mortuary Temple of Hatshepsut »»
»» Wikipedia: Precinct of Amun-Re »»
»» Wikipedia: Ptolemaic Dynasty »»
»» Wikipedia: Sekhmet, an Ancient Egyptian Deity »»
»» Wikipedia: Thebes (the ancient city whose ruins lie within Luxor) »»
»» Wikipedia: Valley of the Kings »»
»» esri Australia: Hatshepsut — From Queen to King »»
»» The Geography and Geology of the Valley of the Kings »»
»» The Geological Society of London: Faults of the Pharaohs »»
»» Univ. of Oxford: Tutankhamun: Anatomy of an Excavation »»
»» Smithsonian Magazine: The Queen Who Would Be King »»
»» Cleopatra Egypt Tours: Map of Valley of the Kings »»