Despite the ravages of time during a few thousand years – they have not robbed this royal statue of her beauty, her youth or her smile – a smile really is forever!
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Egyptian Water Carrier circa 1880

If you don’t like crowds and want to avoid being one of a group pushing along through Luxor Temple, making it difficult to see well, or anything at all, you have to go and visit soon.
I know first hand what it feels like to be part of that crowd ( I took the picture). But on another trip, which I made after the 2011 revolution which started to keep tourist away, I could see and really feel the magic of Egypt.

If Egypt was always on your bucket list, don’t miss being one of only a few visiting the pharaohs now.
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When this mother standing on the banks of the Nile saw our boat come closer she send her two boys in a rowing boat to meet us and offer us some fruit and a few trinkets .
We didn’t want fruit or souvenirs, but it was hard to resist those hopeful, and yet confident little faces. 
We bought some of the trinkets and some bananas, but by the look of admiration in the eyes of the boy for his older brother one could have thought he just sold us a pyramid!
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Brigitte
What do you think she wants to tell us? Please leave a comment
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It is well known and well documented that the Ancient Egyptians mummified their pharaohs in preparation for the afterlife. The process, including 40 days of soaking the body in natron, could take up to 70 days before it was ready to be wrapped with thin strips of linen, the last step before being placed in an elaborate coffin.
In many museums, as in the Mammy Room in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo, the shrunken and dark bodies of dead pharaohs are devoid of any clothing or wrappings. A cloth covers them partly because, as one guide told us, many people were uncomfortable seeing the naked, dried-up, often twisted forms of what once was a human being.
But in the British Museum, which has a beautiful and large collection of Egyptian artifacts, (if you love Egypt don’t miss it when you go to London) there are mummies still wrapped in narrow linen strips. These photos I took on my last visit will show how artfully it was done, and one can marble at how well-preserved they are after thousand of years. The tree resin or sap they used to hold the strips stay in place certainly helped.
One can’t help but to be reminded of bandages and rightly so, because that what they are!
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It has no nationality or country but speaks the same language – it’s called the iPhone!
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When a month ago I was telling you how excited I was to go and visit the exhibition at the British Museum of Egypt’s sunken cities, I can now say that I was not disappointed, but blown away by what I saw.
Over the last 20 years a team of marine archaeologists, led my Frank Goddio have explored the submerged land off the Mediterranean coast, discovering the ancient cities of Thonis-Heracleion and Canopus. And some of their finds are shown for the first time in UK.
The exhibition space was dimly lit with spot lights illuminating the artifacts brought up from the sea. While standing in front of the beautifully displayed and DRY statues and objects it was hard to imagine that they had been submerged under water for thousand of years. But to help the public to understand this, as well as giving a hint of the difficulties of bringing these finds out of the water, there was a video close to each object showing it still laying on the ocean floor.
These two pictures show a statue when it was first discovered and now standing proudly for all to see in the museum.
The following photos were taken when these artifacts were first found.
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And not to let anybody forget where the objects came from, the soft sound of running water could be heard during the visit.
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The exhibition runs through November 27, 2016

Recently two lost cities of Ancient Egypt, which had vanished under the water of the Mediterranean were discovered and the British Museum in London is telling the story.
I am on my way to London tomorrow and so looking forward to visit this exhibition and to tell you all about it when I come back.
Signing off for a few weeks, but please check in at the end of the month. Wishing everyone a Happy July
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