Prøve GULL - Gratis
NILE HIGH club
Western Daily Press
|February 28, 2026
KIRSTY MASTERMAN FINDS A WEALTH OF HISTORY IN CAIRO
-
Kirsty takes in the river
"KEEP moving" orders a voice deep from the abyss, as a length of people try to avoid bashing their heads on the ancient rocks above them, me included.
Sweat dripping from my brow, there's no chance of stopping to catch my breath.
A few moments ago, I'd joined the crowds to marvel at the oldest of the Seven Wonders of the World, the Great Pyramid of Giza. Now I am actually inside the colossal structure.
Standing at over 140 metres high, I clearly hadn't thought what going inside what was once the tallest man-made structure in the world, would entail. However, crawling up the narrow, clammy shaft, where crowd control clearly isn't a thing, I am beginning to have second thoughts-it's intense!
Despite only being about 100 metres from the entrance to the King's Chamber, it takes a good 15 minutes to reach it.
When I do finally make it, I remain at ground level as I try to catch my breath and look around at basically... nothing. Aside from the stone sarcophagus of Khufu (a stone coffin) the only other inhabitants of this tiny room are my fellow travellers.
I'm not sure what I expected; lavish, gold treasures, maybe a genie bursting from a lamp ready to grant me three wishes, but alas, these were ransacked many millennia ago.
Cairo, for me, has always been a bucket-list destination. However, it's one of those places that have always seemed a little too daunting to take on by myself. I've learnt that sprawling, chaotic cities require some sort of professional navigation. Coupled with its vast, complex history, this only cemented that feeling. So I joined a whistlestop tour of Egypt's ancient city, with expert-led small-group tour company Jules Verne.
Cairo is not just one city, it is many cities stacked on top of each other. A city where pharaonic monuments sit beside medieval mosques, colonial-era buildings and modern apartment blocks.
Denne historien er fra February 28, 2026-utgaven av Western Daily Press.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA Western Daily Press
Western Daily Press
The world is incomplete without love
The stars of You, Me & Tuscany Halle Bailey and Rege-Jean Page tell YOLANTHE FAWEHINMI about reviving the rom-com
3 mins
April 11, 2026
Western Daily Press
Promotion campaign motivates boss Evans
SINCE returning to the dugout in mid-December, Steve Evans has done an impressive job at Bristol Rovers - picking up 35 points from 22 Sky Bet League
2 mins
April 11, 2026
Western Daily Press
Clayton wins in Brighton
JONNY
1 min
April 11, 2026
Western Daily Press
Brave Todd free at last
HE OPENS UP ABOUT ABUSE AFTER ESCAPING THEO'S CLUTCHES
1 mins
April 11, 2026
Western Daily Press
Rolls-Royce boss wins support for £18m pay
THE chief executive of Rolls-Royce appears to have secured shareholder support for a multi-million-pound pay bump.
1 mins
April 11, 2026
Western Daily Press
It feels very true to the experience of mental health
STARS NICOLA COUGHLAN AND LYDIA WEST TALK TO YOLANTHE FAWEHINMI ABOUT PORTRAYING BIPOLAR DISORDER AS BIG MOOD RETURNS TO CHANNEL 4
4 mins
April 11, 2026
Western Daily Press
Trio charged over string of rural burglaries targeting car keys
THREE men from South Bristol have been charged following a series of burglaries at homes across the rural West Country where car keys were stolen.
1 min
April 11, 2026
Western Daily Press
Ex-Hereford FC star 'to give back to club' by saving pitch
WEST Ham's Jarrod Bowen will help pay for a new drainage system at non-league Hereford FC - the club at which he started his career in 2014.
1 min
April 11, 2026
Western Daily Press
GRIFT RAPPED
JAMES MCAVOY'S DEBUT AS A DIRECTOR IS AN ASSURED AND ENJOYABLE UNDERDOG STORY
2 mins
April 11, 2026
Western Daily Press
Negotiators prepare for US-Iran ceasefire talks
NEGOTIATORS from Iran and the US were preparing for high-level talks with the ceasefire still shaky yesterday, as Israel and Hezbollah traded fire and Tehran maintained its stranglehold on the Strait of Hormuz.
2 mins
April 11, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
