Synonyms, Related Subjects, Ideas for Travel Photos Egyptian ChildrenAustralian Children, Chilean Children, Danish Children, Mexican Children, Panamanian Children, Polish Children, Slovenian Children, Taiwanese Children, Tanzanian Children, |
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Egyptian Children Travel Photos from Danita Delimont |
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Africa - Egypt - Cairo - Islamic family walking along the streets of Cairo |
![]() Women carrying baskets on their head, Takaungu, Kenya. |
![]() At nightfall, a Turkana man fishes for tilapia and Nile perch off a spit on the barren eastern shoreline of Lake Turkana. He must be on constant lookout for crocodiles, which abound. |
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Egyptian Children Travel Photos from National Geographic Images |
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Egyptian girls tie knots in rugs and cut the yarn evenly with knives. |
Mary Rockefeller plays ball with children in a family day camp. |
Portrait of a local egyptian boy at Abu Simbel. |
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Egyptian Children Travel Photos from IPNstock |
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Digital Archive Japan / DAJ, Ancient Egyptian cosmos, c1025 BC. Nut (heaven), stretches over the Earth, represented by her brother Geb, who lies below her. The toes of the goddess are at the eastern horizon, and her fingertips at the western horizon. Her father Shu (air), holds her up with both hands, separating her from Geb. Despite this Geb and Nut had four children: Osiris, Isis, Seth and Nephthys. The myths surrounding these four deities relate to the emergence of human society; the separation of earth and sky constitutes the creation of the world. This scene is part of the Greenfield papyrus, the Book of the Dead of the priestess Nesitanebtashru. It is one of the best surviving examples of a funerary papyrus; the original document was over thirty-seven metres long and is from the burial of Nesitanebtashru at Deir el-Bahari, Thebes, Egypt. |
Barry Iverson / Woodfin Camp, The four canopic jars contained the entrails of the human body, removed in the process of mummification to prevent the body from decomposing during the weeks between death and burial. Canopic jars of the Old Kingdom (about 2686-2181 BC) are almost never inscribed inscribed, and have a plain lid. In the Middle Kingdom (about 2025-1700 BC) canopic jars are often inscribed, and the lids are often human headed. In the Nineteenth Dynasty and later each of the four lids takes the form of a different head: Lungs Hapi (baboon), Stomach Duamutefla (dog) Liver Imseti (human) Intestines Qebehsenuef (falcon) (denoting the four children of Horus). Egyptian Museum, Cairo, Egypt. |
Ed Kashi, Women celebrate a coiffure as they prepare for a wedding. |
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Egyptian Children Travel Photos from Omniphoto |
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EGYPT, GIZA. EGYPTIAN BOY AND GIRL. |
EGYPT. GIRLS WITH LAMB. |
EGYPT, LUXOR. EGYPTIAN FAMILY |
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more rights-managed egyptian children travel photos by Omniphoto >>> |
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