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Abu Simbel is a village lying 280 km south of Aswan and only 40 km north of the Sudanese border. It is a very small settlement with very little to attract visitors other than its great temples for which it is famous. Few tourists linger for more than a few hours, although there are 5 hotels to attract visitors to stay the night.

The temples at Abu Simbel were formerly located further down the hillside, facing the Nile in the same relative positions, but due to the rising waters of Lake Nasser, the original locations are underwater. In the 1960's, each temple was carefully sawed into numbered stone cubes, moved uphill, and reassembled before the water rose.

The Great Temple of Ramses II was reassembled fronting a fake mountain, built like a domed basketball court, where the stone cubes occupy a section under the dome; from outside, the fake mountain looks like solid rock.

Archaeologists have concluded that the immense sizes of the statues in the Great Temple were intended to scare potential enemies approaching Egypt's southern region, as they travelled down the Nile from out of Africa. ​

​At the Temple of Abu Simbel stand the colossal monuments built by King Ramses II that are a testimonial to Pharaoh's engineering ingenuity. Originally carved out of sandstone cliffs, the temples were threatened by the rising waters of lake Nasser due to construction of the High Dam.

At Egyptian and Sudanese request, UNESCO launched a rescue operation, with the temples being dismantled in huge blocks and moved to a higher location by an international consortium
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Abu Simbel

David Tours &​

Travel

Plan to spend a good time in Egypt

Plan to spend a good time in Egypt.

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