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Kom Ombo - Temple and Crocodiles With Viking River Cruises

Shirley's Journeys - Videos
Shirley's Journeys - Videos
🥈Expert
👁️ 320 views📅 4 months ago⏱️ 8:30
What This Creator Said
Creator RecommendsCabin / Ship Tour🥈Expert Creator
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Source: Our analysis of the creator's lived experience, based on what they said in this video.

Creator's Key Takeaways

We've got this place relatively to ourselves, which is a very unique experience.

It's neat coming here in the evening. It's nice that they've got it lit up where you can see it.

The temple is actually two temples in one: Half in honor of the crocodile-headed god, Sobek and half to the raven-headed god, Horus.

Our guide has told us that the best way to avoid the hassles is just to completely ignore them and keep walking.

Creator's Tips & Advice

Ignore vendors to avoid hassles unless interested in buying.
Visit the temple in the evening to see it lit up.

Questions This Creator Answers

QWhat is there to see at Kom Ombo temple?
QHow can tourists avoid vendor hassles?

Topics Covered

Port Destination2 Happy Bacon

Port Highlights

Kom Ombo2 Happy Bacon
Top: Kom Ombo Temple and Crocodile Museum
How to read the Trip Bacon Score
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Scale: 0–5 strips in half-step increments. 0 = “meh”, 5 = “bacon bliss”. Aggregated from creator-review sentiment, weighted by channel expertise.

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YouTube Video Description

A visit to Kom Ombo to see the temple and crocodiles. The temple is a short walk from where the ship docks in Kom Ombo. This temple is actually two temples in one: Half in honor of the crocodile-headed god, Sobek and half to the raven-headed god, Horus, and it has one of the oldest known pylons from the Ptolemy Empire. There is also a small temple to Hathor on the temple grounds. The temple has incredibly intact deep relief and raised relief carvings. There is a detailed Egyptian calendar at perfect viewing height inside. The temple was owned by physicians, and there are carvings that show many of the medical instruments of the time. There is a heavy representation of Roman carvings showing the aggressiveness of the Roman empire. After the temple tour, we visited the crocodile museum next door to see mummified crocodiles and bronze sculptures of crocodiles that would probably have been offerings to Sobek. :20 walk to the temple and hints for handling the hustlers 2:07 entering the temple complex 2:58 small temple to Hathor 4:20 Egyptian calendar explained 5:15 The god, Horus and the god Sobek 5:36 Carvings of Egyptian medical instruments 5:40 Roman Aggressiveness shown in temple carvings 6:35 To the Crocodile museum