Be immersed in the art, archaeology, language and culture of ancient and modern Egypt on a wondrous journey of discovery through 4,500 years of history.

At a Glance

  • Go behind the scenes at archaeological sites and discover the majestic, newly-opened Grand Egyptian Museum in Giza
  • Explore seldom-visited sites of Middle Egypt, including the Ptolemaic town of Karanis and the pyramid of Pharaoh Amenemhat III, the last pyramid built during the Middle Kingdom
  • Cruise up the Nile from Aswan to Luxor, visiting the temples of Horus, Sobek and Isis along the way
  • Delve into the Islamic and Coptic history of Cairo, the thriving metropolis of Egypt

In the company of Egyptologist and museum curator Melanie Pitkin, visit the major sites of Giza, Luxor and Abu Simbel, including the majestic, newly-opened Grand Egyptian Museum, and explore the lesser-known treasures of Middle Egypt, from Faiyum and Amarna to Abydos. Gain special access to ongoing dig sites led by international teams of Egyptologists and enjoy a cruise up the Nile into New Kingdom and Ptolemaic history.

In Cairo, learn about the artisanal crafts that have kept Egyptian culture alive for nearly five millennia.

 

This tour is part of the World Art Tours program organised by the Art Gallery Society of NSW in partnership with Renaissance Tours.

Dates

08 – 26 January 2027 (19 days)

Tour leader

Melanie Pitkin

Tour Status

Available

Book now

Itinerary

Arrive in Cairo on suggested flights and transfer to the hotel (transfer included in tour price). Renaissance Tours or your travel agent can assist you with your flights and other travel arrangements including travel insurance (a condition of travel), accommodation before or after the tour and a room category upgrade.

At 18:00, join your tour leader Melanie Pitkin and fellow travellers for a welcome briefing at the hotel followed by dinner.

(D)

After a talk by Melanie, discover Cairo with a special tour of the highlights of the Egyptian Museum in Tahrir Square. Housing a large collection of antiquities from all periods of Egyptian history, the museum includes finds from recent discoveries in Egypt to the spectacular burial assemblage of Yuya and Thuya.

After lunch, visit the oldest well-preserved mosque in Egypt, the Ibn Tulun Mosque. Built between 876 and 879 CE by Ahmad Ibn Tulun, the governor of Egypt, it has a unique spiral minaret. Continue to the Cave Church of the Zabbaleen. Located in the Mokattam Mountains, this impressive monastery is one of the largest churches in Egypt.

In the evening, visit the Khan el-Khalili souk, one of the country’s most lively bazaars, where goldsmiths, lampmakers, cobblers and coffee sellers still ply their trade. Then, enjoy dinner at a local restaurant.

(BLD)

This morning, explore the outdoor museum at Memphis, the first capital city of Egypt, including its colossal statue of King Ramesses II.

Continue to Saqqara to explore the tombs of Mereruka and Kagemni, the Unas Causeway, Serapeum and the Step Pyramid of Djoser. The Step Pyramid, designed for King Djoser in the 27th century BC by his polymath vizier Imhotep, is the oldest extant pyramid in Egypt. Also, explore the New Kingdom tombs including those of Horemheb and Maya.

Later, visit the Bent and Red Pyramids in Dahshur before returning to the hotel in the late afternoon. Enjoy the evening at leisure.

(BL)

After breakfast, explore the Museum of Islamic Art, containing thousands of ceramics, textiles and artefacts rendered in crystal, glass, metal and plaster, from all over the Islamic world.

Continue with a tour of Coptic Cairo, to discover the distinctive form of Christianity with its own language, rites and culture stretching back to the 1st century CE, and gain a glimpse into the thousand-year-old Jewish heritage of Cairo.

After lunch, visit the medieval fortification of the Citadel and the Mosque of Mohammad Ali, a Khedivate-era mosque and one of the capital’s landmarks.

(BD)

In the morning, visit the National Museum of Egyptian Civilisation, which displays a wealth of art and artefacts, and traces the history of Egypt from the archaic period through the pharaonic dynasties and Coptic and Islamic Egypt, right up to the modern day.

In the afternoon, visit the Grand Egyptian Museum in Giza, inaugurated in November 2025 and now the largest museum in the world dedicated to one civilisation. Overlooking the pyramids, the museum houses an unparalleled collection of ancient Egyptian antiquities, including the complete treasures of Tutankhamun, displayed for the first time in one place.

(BLD)

Enjoy the morning at leisure at the hotel, which offers a panoramic view of the pyramids of the Giza Plateau.

Then, after a talk by Melanie, explore the mighty Pyramids of Khufu, Khafre and Menkaure, three generations of 26th-century BCE rulers, and the Great Sphinx. Also, visit the mastaba tombs of the Old Kingdom officials.

Return to the hotel for an evening at leisure.

 (B)

Depart Giza and travel south into the lesser-visited region of Middle Egypt, a gentle stretch of the Nile Valley which lies between Cairo in the north and Luxor in the south. Visit the archaeological site of Karanis near the Faiyum, the site of ancient Crocodilopolis.

In the afternoon, explore Beni Hasan, an ancient Egyptian cemetery site located south of modern-day Minya. Walk up the hill to visit the rock-cut tombs of regional governors, surrounded by detailed painted scenes on the walls, and enjoy panoramic views of the Nile Valley.

(BLD)

Today, discover the archaeological site of Tell el-Amarna, the ruins of the city built in the reign of Akhenaten, and enjoy specialist talks by members of the Amarna Project’s archaeological team. During his 17-year rule in the mid-14th century BCE, King Akhenaten shifted his capital to Amarna, instituted religious reforms to centralise worship on the solar deity Aten rather than the pantheon of various gods and pioneered a distinctive elongated but somewhat informal artistic style.

In the afternoon, visit the catacombs of Tuna el-Gebel, the largest known Greco-Roman necropolis in Egypt, and the tomb of the High Priest Petosiris.

(BL)

Depart Minya and travel south to Dendera, an oasis on the banks of the Nile, to see the impressive Hathor Temple, one of the best preserved in all of Egypt. The Dendera Temple was constructed over many eras and at its peak was inhabited by thousands, with its Hathor Temple dedicated to the cow goddess of love, music, fertility and motherhood. The temple features hidden crypts, exceptional acoustics, which allowed ancient priestesses to give responses to worshippers’ prayers, and astronomical depictions.

Arrive in Luxor in the late afternoon and enjoy dinner at the hotel’s restaurant.

(BLD)

After a morning talk with Melanie, discover the Valley of the Nobles to see the beautifully decorated private tombs of the New Kingdom officials. Then, visit the Mortuary Temple of Ramesses III at Medinet Habu, before continuing to Deir el-Medina, the workers’ village where the craftsmen who constructed these royal tombs lived. The most significant village of its kind ever discovered, Deir el-Medina provides a unique glimpse into the life of relatively ordinary ancient Egyptians.

(BL)

This morning, check out of the hotel and explore Luxor, the ancient city of Thebes and capital of Egypt during most of the Middle and New Kingdom periods. Visit the Luxor Museum, housing a large display of objects from the Theban region and the famous statue of Thutmose III.

Then, board an elegant cruise ship and enjoy lunch on board before exploring the Temples of Karnak and Luxor, cultic centres for the gods Amun, Mut and Khonsu and important sites for the annual Opet Festival, which celebrated these gods, and often the site of the coronation of the king.

(BLD)

In the morning, visit some of the most celebrated sites of New Kingdom Egypt in the Valley of the Kings and the Valley of the Queens.

Then, depart Luxor and sail south up the Nile River towards Aswan. The longest river in Africa (and arguably the world), the Nile has been the lifeblood of Egypt for as long as humans have inhabited the land. So few are the alternative sources of water in Egypt that the ancient Egyptians divided their country into two parts: the ‘Black Land’ of fertile soils on the banks of the river, and the ‘Red Land’ of uninhabitable desert wastes that comprise the remainder of the country. Even today, about 95 per cent of Egypt’s population live on the banks of the Nile.

(BLD)

Tracing the Nile along its sinuous course, visit Edfu, site of the Hellenistic Temple of Horus built between 237 and 57 BCE, the most well-preserved temple of its kind still extant.

Then, see the unique Temple of Kom Ombo, a ‘double-temple’ perfectly symmetrical along its main axis, with each half dedicated to a different set of gods. The north is dedicated to Horus the falcon god, deity of the sky and hunting, while the southern half is sacred to the crocodile-headed Sobek, the god of the Nile’s fertility.

(BLD)

Arrive in Aswan in the morning and travel via the colossal 1960s engineering marvel of the Aswan High Dam to Philae. Discover the double-colonnaded Temple of Isis, built on the banks of the Nile by Pharaoh Nectanebo I in the mid-4th century BCE and still elegantly presiding over the river’s gentle flow.

Then, explore Elephantine Island and take a felucca (a traditional wooden sailing boat) to the Botanical Garden on El Nabatat Island.

(BLD)

In the morning, disembark the ship and discover the unfinished obelisk of Hatshepsut. Commissioned by Hatshepsut in the 15th century BCE, the obelisk, which would have been by far the largest ever constructed, was being carved out of a natural granite outcropping when cracks developed and the project was abandoned. It remains there still, a work of art forever half-emerged from nature, even after 3,500 years.

Continue to the Nubian Museum, whose collection focuses on the relationship between ancient Egypt and its fertile but restive southern neighbour Nubia.

After lunch, enjoy the remainder of the afternoon to enjoy Aswan at your own pace before an early-evening talk by Melanie followed by dinner.

(BLD)

After breakfast, transfer to Aswan Airport for a flight to Abu Simbel (Economy class flight included in tour price).

Arrive in Abu Simbel and transfer to the Temples of Abu Simbel. These two imposing temples were originally carved into a rocky promontory during the 13th century BCE to honour King Ramesses II, so-called conqueror of the Hittites in the Battle of Kadesh, and his Queen Nefertari. In one of the 20th century’s great feats of engineering, the temples were dismantled and shifted, piece by piece, across 200 metres to their present location to make way for the flooding of their original site during the construction of the Aswan High Dam in the 1960s.

Then, return to Abu Simbel airport for a flight back to Aswan (Economy class flight included in tour price).

(BL)

In the morning, check out of the hotel and transfer to the archaeological site of the nobles’ tombs at Qubbet el-Hawa. Carved into limestone cliffs, the tombs contain well-preserved inscriptions and murals detailing daily life, military campaigns and travels to Africa.

Afterwards, transfer to the airport for an afternoon flight to Cairo (Economy class flight included in tour price).

Arrive in Cairo and transfer to the hotel, where the remainder of the evening is at leisure.

(BL)

Enjoy a full day at leisure to relax or to explore Cairo at your own pace.

Tonight, celebrate the conclusion of the tour with a special farewell dinner with Melanie and fellow travellers.

(BD)

Tour arrangements conclude with a private transfer (included in the tour price) to the airport for suggested flights to Australia or New Zealand. Renaissance Tours or your travel agent can assist you with your flights and other travel arrangements, including additional nights’ accommodation either before or after the tour and travel insurance (a condition of travel).

(B)

Prices

Per person, twin-share

AUD 18,650

Single supplement

AUD 3,950

Deposit per person (at time of booking)

AUD 3,000

Final payment due

11 November 2026

Room category upgrade available on request; please enquire with us.

Tour price includes

  • Accommodation in 4- and 5-star hotels with breakfast daily (B)
  • Meals as per itinerary (L = Lunch, D = Dinner), including wine with dinners
  • Comprehensive sightseeing, including local guides and entrance fees as per itinerary
  • Airport/hotel transfers on arrival and departure
  • Nile River cruise from Luxor to Aswan
  • Transportation throughout on comfortable, air-conditioned coaches
  • Return Economy class flights from Aswan to Abu Simbel (baggage allowance 23kg)
  • One-way Economy class flight from Abu Simbel to Cairo (baggage allowance 23kg)
  • Lectures and talks with your tour leader, Egyptologist Melanie Pitkin
  • Gratuities for local guides, drivers and wait staff
  • Hotel porterage (one piece per person)

Tour price does not include

  • International airfares (please contact Renaissance Tours or your travel agent for assistance)
  • Airport porterage
  • Visa for Egypt
  • Items of a personal nature (e.g. telephone, laundry, room service, minibar, taxis etc.)
  • Travel insurance (a condition of travel; please contact Renaissance Tours or your travel agent for assistance)

Hotel

Your hotels
Cairo – Sofitel Cairo Nile El Gezirah****
Giza – Marriott Mena House*****
Minya – Holy Family Hotel****
Luxor – Sonesta St. George Hotel*****
Nile River Cruise – Sonesta Nile Goddess****+
Aswan – Sonesta Nouba Hotel*****

N.B. Hotels of a similar standard may be substituted.

More Details

Tour code: AG2701

Fitness level: Above Moderate
Tour members must be able to:
•    negotiate airports and railway stations without wheelchair assistance
•    use combined shower/bath facilities (it is impossible to guarantee walk-in shower facilities)
•    undertake walking tours of 2-3 hours duration, including using stairs, walking over cobblestones and other uneven surfaces
•    climb staircases of 100 or more steps
•    stand for long periods in museums and other sites
•    embark / disembark coaches, trains and other methods of transportation without assistance
•    handle their own luggage

Please see Terms & Conditions for fitness level definitions here.

Suggested airline: Emirates/Qatar Airways
Please contact Renaissance Tours or your travel agent for current airfares and flight reservations.

Visa
Australian and New Zealand passport holders require a tourist visa for Egypt. An e-visa can be obtained online prior to departure or a visa on arrival can also be obtained.

Download booking form here.

At time of booking, please advise us of any special dietary requirements or allergies that we should be aware of.

Map

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