|
Kharga used to be the last but one stop on The Forty Days Road, the infamous slave-trade route
between North Africa and the tropical south. Today, it is the biggest New Valley oasis and its
modern city houses 60,000 people, including 1,000 Nubians who moved here after the cration of
lake Nasser. Outside the main centre is the Temple of Hibis, built on the site of an 18th
dynasty settlement of Saites, persians and ptolemies One ot the few persian monuments in Egypt,
the 6th century BC temple is well-preserved with painted vultures and huge reliefs of Darius
greeting Egyptian gods on the outer walls. Ten kilometres away, the Necropolis of al-Bagawat
contains 263 mud-brick chapels with Coptic murals, including the Chapel of Peace with images
of Adam and Eve and the Ark on its dome and the Chapel of the Exodus with frescoes of pharaonic
troops pursuing the Jews led by Moses, out of Egypt. Pharaonic monuments include the
al-Hhuwaytah Temple which dates from 522 BC and the Temple of
Amenebis.
 The thermal springs at Bulaq and Nasser villages to the south, are famous for water temperatures
of up to 43 C and reputed to be suitable for the treatment of rheumtism and allergies. Camping
facilities are available near both villages. Further south is Baris Oasis, the second largest
settlement in Kharga. Houses designed in traditional Nubian style by Hassan Fathy remain
uninhabited- local people refused to live in them because of their similarity to tombs
and building stopped in the late 1960s. Ancient monuments include the Temple of Dush,
dedicated to Isis and Serapis. Its name derives from Kush, the ancient Sudanese capital
which traded with Egypt along the Nile. Arcgeologists are still unearthing the ancient city of
Kysis with wgucg tge temple is associated; and elaborate system of clay pipes and and abandoned
Christian churcg, suggest that Kysis was abandoned when its underground springs dried up but
the exact date remains a mystery.
|