My pic from the bow, heading towards Aswan. Flags down for a bridge. Yeah, we did have some pirates to make it fun.
Women in the Valley of the Kings: The Untold Story of Women Egyptologists in the Gilded Age
In the1860s, the Egyptians didn't seem all that fascinated by the ancient history of their lands but the French, and especially the Brits, were.
At the time, Nile river cruises were already popular, especially for Brits escaping their winter weather. Some by sail, some by steamboat, up to the second cataract (which, due to the Aswan Dam, can not be done now).
Many of these travelers were women: lesbians, wives bored with their wealthy husbands, hypochondriacs and neurasthenics needing "rest and fresh air," etc. Sometimes their excavations were sponsored by people like Lord Carnavor of Downton Abbey familiarity. Cairo had a nice Brit hotel: Shepheards. Luxor had a nice hotel for Europeans.
Unsurprisingly, the riverboats then made the same stops that we did last week. Cook's Tours was the agent then.
Those women, God forbid, did not dig or get dirty but they did hire laborers and archeologists. They helped reveal the half-buried treasures of ancient Egypt that the tourists love today. They also naughtily bought and stole all sorts of artifacts - including mummies - and shipped them back home.
They were not "Egyptologists," but just curious tourists with money, no rules, and no knowledge. They rode donkeys and did not walk much, and took recuperative rests often. Laborers were happy to work and did not care about old stuff. They did hire some young eccentric archeologists.
At their times, the famous temples and ruins were lived in, some filled with pigeon coops, most half-buried by Nile floods, some transformed into Christian churches, etc.
Despite my interests in history, I still feel I was more interested in how Egyptians live today than 4000 years ago. They sure made some art, though. We term it "art." They did not have a concept of art but artisans for sure.
Those Brit ladies uncovered the 2-mile Alley of Sphinxes between the Karnak Temple to the Luxor Temple. Good for them: