Siwa Oasis, Egypt
     

The oasis of Siwa is more than the gateway to the Great Sand Sea. This once sleepy frontier town, less than 50 kilometers from the border of Libya, has a rich cultural history. Siwa is home to Egypt’s only native Berber population as well as the famed Temple of the Oracle. Alexander the Great traveled here and obtained the confirmation he sought. The priests addressed him as deity and established his right to rule Egypt. Famous for its olives and dates, Siwa was once an important stop on the Caravan Route. But to protect the oasis from hostile invaders the Siwans built the Fortress of Shali in the 12th century and for hundreds of years no one went in. And while Siwa first appeared on an Egyptian map in the 26th dynasty, it was likely settled long before that. Flints found in the area suggest that Siwa was inhabited during the Paleolithic and Neolithic eras when the barren desert was a lush savannah. But before you brave the long trek across the desert from Bahariya or south from Marsa Matruh on Egypt’s Mediterranean coast, take note. This difficult to reach destination is no longer solitary. In the peak season tourists and tour buses can give Egypt’s most picturesque oasis an amusement park feel. Visit off peak but don’t stay home.

Siwa Oasis Photo Gallery
 
Siwa Oasis Photo Gallery
 
Siwa Oasis Photo Gallery
Plan
Getting there
Travel to Siwa Oasis is a challenge as well as an experience. Until the new road from Bahariya is complete, families traveling to this corner of the Western Desert have two choices: travel north from Cairo to Alexandria and then west along the Mediterranean coast to Marsa Matruh or hire a 4x4 and a driver and navigate the sand covered stretches of old road across the desert. The trip along the sea offers the opportunity to play in the waves, the desert trek a chance to tour one or more of the five Abandoned Oases found along the route. Either way the trip from Cairo is at least two days.
Maps It!
 Google Maps
 Tehuti Research Foundation
 MSN Encarta
Getting around
The only speed in Siwa is slow and the best way to experience the oasis is to fall into pace. Walk, rent a bike, or hire a careta, as the local donkey carts are known, and take a journey through time.
Siwa Oasis Maps
 Siwa Oasis
 Egypt Travel Guide
When to travel
The best time of year to visit Siwa is from October to April. The average daytime high exceeds 40°C (104°F) from June to August making desert expeditions and cultural touring all but unbearable. Late evening and early morning temperatures are significantly lower than the daytime high throughout the year and in December and January can plummet to freezing. The peak tourist season is Christmas, New Year and Easter.
Weather Forecast & Climate History
 Weather Underground
Travel health & child safety
Heat exhaustion, dehydration and sunburn are the most common aliments afflicting tourists to Egypt's Western Desert. Families traveling to Siwa should add drinking water to the list. Salt seep in local wells makes the tap water undrinkable. Apply high factor sunscreen to all exposed areas, including your child's nose, ears, and toes, before you set out and repeat applications throughout the day. Buy bottled water and encourage the children to drink regularly.
Travel Health in Egypt
 MD Travel Health
Heat Related Illnesses
 Children's Hospital Boston
Things to keep in mind
Siwa Oasis is a great place to shop for traditional handicrafts. Palm frond baskets, silver jewelry, simple pottery and embroidered shirts and shawls as well as excellent dates and olives can all be purchased here. Take note, prices are often fixed and not negotiable.
Explore
History & Culture
Family travel to Siwa Oasis provides an opportunity to introduce the kids to life in a desert oasis. Learn about the history of the oasis and follow the ebb and flow of Siwa's fortunes throughout ancient and modern Egyptian history. Discover the Oracle of Amun and find out why Alexander the Great and other leaders of the classical world attempted the trek this once important religious center. Learn about the Berber people, Siwa is Egypt's only Berber enclave, and find out why Siwa's cultural ties are to the west rather than the east.
History of Siwa
 Tour Egypt
 The Siwa Oasis
Oracle of Amun & Alexander The Great
 Tour Egypt
Berber People
 Wikipedia
Maps
Online maps are a great travel planning resource and a great way to get the kids involved in a family vacation. Use online maps to pinpoint family vacation destinations and create a travel itinerary. Map the Western Desert and identify points of interest from Siwa south to Sudan. Plot your route along the caravan route and discover Egypt's desert oases. And when maps fail use no-maps such as waypoints and satellite images to get a lay of the land and find your way in remote and poorly mapped places. You may find that your children are innate navigators.
Map of Egypt
 Tehuti Research Foundation
Siwa Map
 Siwa Oasis
Bahariya Map
 MyWay Travel
Saharan No-Maps
 Sahara Navigators
Books
Books are a great way to introduce younger children to a new adventure and get teens and tweens ready for a family trip. Learn more about Egypt through guidebooks, novels and historical fiction and embark on a different kind of family journey. Find recommended reading lists for adults and kids.
Egypt Reading Lists for Adults & Kids
kids can travel recommends
 Longitude Books
Music & Sound
The ancient Egyptians invented writing and were the first culture to erect a stone monument. And they were the first people to incorporate music and dance into religious ceremonies and everyday life. While little is known of the rhythm and sound, the importance of music is evidenced in wall paintings and the evolution in the instruments played can be followed overtime. Harps, flutes and double clarinets were played in the Old Kingdom. Percussion instruments, lyres and lutes, likely borrowed from neighboring cultures, were incorporated into ancient Egyptian song during the Middle Kingdom. But whether ancient Egyptian music is a precursor to modern Egyptian song remains a mystery. The Arabic music played in Egypt today is believed to be rooted in the courts of Islam between the 7th and 13th centuries. Sufi and Greek influence is noted in the music of that time but the hand of the ancient Egyptians is, as of yet, unproved.
Egyptian Music
 Tour Egypt
Listen to Music Online
 The Egyptian Castle
Children’s Songs & Nursery Rhymes
 Mama Lisa’s World
News
Read Egypt newspapers online and brush up on Egyptian current events from politics to economics and sports to entertainment before you depart on a trip with kids. Get Egypt news and discover what Egyptians are reading. Daily Egypt News is only independent source for Egyptian news. Al-Ahram Weekly is a widely circulated government affiliated newspaper. Egypt Daily News aggregates the local news.
Egypt Newspapers in English
 Egypt Daily News
 Al-Ahram Weekly
 Daily News Egypt
Kids' stuff
Online resources make learning about Siwa lots of fun. Did you know that Siwans are Berbers and not Egyptians? Not only do they speak a different language they have different customs and traditions.
Berber People
 Wikipedia
Forkids
Siwa's Berber Culture

Siwa's Berber Culture Photo Gallery

The early Siwans believed in life after death and even worshiped several Egyptian gods such as Osiris, Isis and Amun. Yet this desert oasis is today more North African than Egyptian. The majority of Siwans are Berbers not Egyptians. Their first language is Siwi, a Berber dialect, rather than Arabic. Their food, crafts and customs reflect Berber traditions. So how do you explain a similar mythology but a different cultural history? Siwa was part of Libya for most of its history and was likely unknown to the ancient Egyptians until the 26th Dynasty. The Siwans, like other peoples, were influenced by their neighbors and over time adopted some foreign customs as their own. Siwa's remote location has helped it to retain a strong Berber culture.

Review
Egypt's most idyllic oasis
Submitted on 20 March 2008 by snowedunder from Monza, Italy

When our guide suggested that we would be spending the better part of the day at Siwa Oasis I was a bit miffed. Apart from the mummies and tombs, our brief stop in Bahariya two days earlier had been wholly disappointing. I bit my tongue and was glad I did. Siwa is the antithesis of Bahariya. It has a rich cultural history. Caretas (donkey carts) provide local charm. This oasis lends to relaxed strolling. Siwa is the gateway to the rarely visited Great Sand Sea (compared to the tourist trodden White Desert). And the kids enjoyed every aspect of the day.

 
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Last modified June 2006


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