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Egypt
is probably the world's oldest
civilization having emerged from
the Nile Valley around 3,100
years ago, historically. Egypt
links two continents, stretching
across the northeastern corner
of Africa and the southwestern
edge of Asia. The country is
approximately 626,000 square
miles (1,000,000 square km) in
size. Its longest distance
north-south is 640 miles (1,025
km) and widest distance
east-west is about 775 miles
(1,240 km).
The northern border is the
Mediterranean Sea and the
southern boundary is with Sudan.
On the northeastern border are
Israel, Jordan, Palestine and
Saudi Arabia. The Red Sea flanks
the eastern border, while the
whole of the western border is
with Libya. Egypt’s 60 million
people live primarily in the
Nile Valley, leaving the rest of
the land sparsely populated.
Cairo, the largest city in
Egypt, is estimated to have a
population of over 15 million
people, which is growing at an
alarming rate. The deserts of
Egypt comprise over 90 percent
of the land surface but are
inhabited by around 5 percent of
the population. The deserts are
part of an arid region that
stretches from the Atlantic
coast in the west to Central
Asia in the east.
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The
local currency unit is the
Egyptian Pound. Modern Egyptian
currency (specifically paper
money) ranges from the 25
Piastres (quarter pound note) up
to a 1,000 pound note. Unlike,
for example, American bills,
Egyptian currency is not the
same size. The smaller the
denomination of the note, the
smaller its physical size.
Egyptian coins duplicate the
value of some of the Egyptian
bills. There are 25 Piastres and
50 Piastres coins, but because
of this duplication, many
establishments in Egypt rarely
have coins. Travelers can
exchange their currency for
Egyptian Pounds at Cairo
International Airport and at
commercial banks in most
commercial and tourist centers.
Banks are open Monday to Friday
8:30am to 2:00pm daily, but are
closed Friday, Saturday, and
most holidays. Credit cards
(Visa, MasterCard) are only
accepted in major cities and
tourist areas. Foreign currency
may be imported and exported
without restriction provided it
is declared on arrival. |
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Bottled
water (mayyama'daniyya) is
available in all areas
frequented by tourists; both
large and small bottles are sold
on the street and from ice
buckets at most of the
antiquities sites. Be sure the
cap is sealed. Mayyashurb or
mayyaahday (drinking water) is
safe in most metropolitan areas. |
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Egypt
lies between the Mediterranean
and the 23rd Parallel north of
the Equator and is sunny for all
but a few days of the year. Rain
does not fall on more than 40
days a year and then only in a
few places. Within Egypt, there
is the contrast between the
coastal Mediterranean climate
and the hot dryness of the
interior. In the desert areas
there is a sharp contrast
between day And night
temperatures. The weather is
predictably dry, sunny and warm
most of the year with very
little rainfall. The winter
temperatures are similar to the
European and USA spring. June,
July and August are rather hot,
but the evenings are
refreshingly Cooler due to the
desert breezes that blow into
the Nile Valley. |
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Don’t
wear anything too showy around
most places in Egypt. Make it
conservative unless you want to
grab all the eyes around. People
in some cities and rural areas
are not used to seeing that much
skin, so cover up unless you’re
on the beach somewhere. There
won’t be a problem in some
tourist areas such as Sharm El
Sheikh or Hurghada where this is
only normal. But in areas like
Islamic Cairo, and Coptic Cairo
you should wear something
conservative. Of course you
don’t always have to stick to
that, wear anything you like if
you’re going out somewhere. Just
avoid walking in the streets
with anything attractive |
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Copyright
2016 - 2017 , Holidays at Egypt
© CO.
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