Egyptian city and village life around 1900 in color.

Egyptian city and village life around 1900 in color. Collector. Restoring old cards and pictures. Images that give an impression of Egypt around the 19th. Welcome to my page. Greetings Natalie ten Hoeve.

Since 1994 I have been working as a commissioned graphic designer. Assignments such as making a business card, websites, logo, house style, brochure, cards, flyer or booklets. Assignments can be completely taken care of from concept to execution and always in good consultation. In addition to designing, I also prepare the printed matter for printing and supervise it. I myself like working with col

ours, restoring old prints and using them in different types of work. Keywords are; beautiful, surprising, simple, clear and captivating. In addition to my commissioned work, I also do assignments for companies as a freelancer.

Egypt CPA Lehnert  Landrock Egyptian Lady around 1900.Colorized & Restored.Een kleurrijke reis door het Egypte van rond ...
25/10/2025

Egypt CPA Lehnert Landrock
Egyptian Lady around 1900.
Colorized & Restored.

Een kleurrijke reis door het Egypte van rond 1900 — volledig gerestaureerd en ingekleurd. 🌴✨

Eine farbenprächtige Zeitreise durch das Ägypten um 1900 – restauriert und koloriert.

A vivid journey through Egypt around 1900 – restored and colorized.







Philae, the temple of Isis.The Temples of Philae on Agilika Island, Part I:Before the High DamBy Marie Parsons and Jimmy...
27/05/2025

Philae, the temple of Isis.

The Temples of Philae on Agilika Island, Part I:
Before the High Dam
By Marie Parsons and Jimmy Dunn.

One of the main sites visited by almost every tour to Egypt is what is billed as Philae, but Philae is actually a nonexistent island now buried beneath Lake Nasser. The island was sometimes visible and sometimes not after the Old Aswan Dam was built, but was permanently submerged by the High Dam.

Philae is an approximate Greek rendering of the local name "Pilak" known from hieroglyphic texts and which may be Nubian in origin. The ancient Egyptians saw in their name for Philae an etymology with the meaning "island of the time [of Ra]", i.e. creation, but the islands history is later than that.

What we refer to today as Philae is the main temple complex relocated from that island, after the High Dam was built, to the island of Agilika. It was the center of the cult of the goddess Isis and her connection with Osiris, Horus, and the Kingship, during the Ptolemaic period of Egyptian History.

Today, there are two dams at Aswan but of course, in ancient times, there were none. Prior to the dams, Philae Island occupied a position at the beginning or southern end of the First Nile Cataract, where the river gathered speed, dropping sixteen feet in swirling eddies and turbulent falls of white water for a distance of three miles. Various pharaohs attempted to calm or at least provide better passage around these rapids. Pepi I built at least one canal, as did Merenre, as early as the Old Kingdom, but later kings would also, such as Senusret III.

There were numerous islands in the region, Amelia Edwards says hundreds, including Biggeh, the temple's current location of Agilika, a group of small islands at Awad and El Hasa, and below the Cataract (north), Siheil and Elephantine.

During early times, the priests of Philae claimed that the source of the Nile was bottomless and lay beneath the rocks of Biggeh, where half the river rose to flow north and half to flow south. Their rivals were the priests of Elephantine, who made the same claim. Indeed, the river around these islands was even then over one hundred feet deep in places, with confusing waters that could twist and turn in all directions.

This trek of water was hazardous in ancient times, a fact that escapes the modern visitor to Agilika Island. Amelia Edwards, the fearless Victorian Egyptologist saw it differently than we do today. She recounts:

"At Assuan, one bids good-bye to Egypt and enters Nubia through the gates of the Cataract - which is, in truth, no cataract, but a succession of rapids extending over two thirds of the distance between Elephantine and Philae. The Nile - diverted from its original course by some unrecorded catastrophe, the nature of which has given rise to much scientific conjecture - here spreads itself over a rocky basin bounded by sand-slopes on the one side, and by granite cliffs on the other. Studded with numberless islets, divided into numberless channels, foaming over sunken rocks, eddying among water-worn boulders, now shallow, now deep, now loitering, now hurrying, here sleeping in the ribbed hollow of a tiny sand-drift, there circling above the vortex of a hidden whirlpool, the river, whether looked upon from the deck of a dahabeeyah or the heights along the shore, is seen everywhere to be fighting its way through a labyrinth, the paths of which have never yet been mapped or sounded."

Of course, one can still get a glimpse of these cataracts north of the Old Aswan Dam. In ancient times, travelers made their devotions at Philae before continuing through the dangerous territory of the south to the "Land of Ghosts".

On the island of Sehel are more than 250 inscriptions from pilgrims and travelers coming to and going through the area, dating from the fourth dynasty down to the Ptolemaic period. Pepi I cut canals through the cataract to assist boat crews on their way to the calm water above Philae. Harkhuf passed through here on his way to Nubia during the reign of Pepi II. Also here on Sehel is the so-called Famine Stela, inscribed during Ptolemaic times but related to the reign of King Djoser in the 3rd Dynasty. It states that the king decreed that large tracts of land on both sides of the river stretching from Elephantine south should be given to Khnums temple, along with one-tenth of all produce and livestock raised as well as taxes on caravans and gold mining. There is an identical decree in the temple of Philae, carved at the base of the eastern tower of the second Great Pylon.

Such was the power of the gods, or at least the belief therein, that according to an inscription on the base of the eastern obelisk standing in front of the Great Pylon, during the reign of Ptolemy VIII, Euergetes II, and Cleopatra III his second wife, the priests complained that they were being forced to refund the expenses of civil and military authorities incurred during their stay at Philae. The priests were not being left enough resources with which to continue sacrifices and libations for the welfare of the royal family. Euergetes II released the priests from further payments.

The Island of Philae lied about four miles south of modern Elephantine, just to the other side of the Old Aswan Dam. It only measured about 500 yards from north to south and 160 yards from east to west, which meant that it was almost entirely covered with temples and other monuments. These were protected from the Nile Flood during ancient times by high walls, quays and terraces. In fact, before the building of the first dam, the Island always stayed clear of the river, safe on its granite foundation against the turbulent rush of the flood with its abrasive silt.

Prior to the building of the Aswan Dam, the engineer in charge, Captain Henry Lyon, was asked to underpin the monuments of Philae so that they could withstand the submersion, which he did. He also excavated part of the site where he discovered the remains of some Christian churches.

After the Old Dam was built, it created a lake extending south some 140 miles back to the Sudanese border. In fact, the height of the dam was at first restricted because of the protests made by people interested in preserving Philae and the other temples and monuments from submersion. Winston Churchill cared little for this. He remarked that:

"This offering of 1,500 millions of cubic feet of water to Hathor by the Wise Men of the West is the most cruel, the most wicked and the most senseless sacrifice ever offered on the altar of a false religion. The State must struggle and the people starve, in order that the professors may exult and the tourists find some place to scratch their names."

So the water level was raised, and the temples and structures on Philae were flooded each year from December to about March, and had to be visited during this time by boat, passing through the Kiosk of Trajan and into the court of the Temple of Isis.

All did not turn out as badly as thought, however. The water ended up saving the temples from erosion by sand storms and helped to remove salt deposits which were damaging to the stonework. Regular inspections of the site showed that it suffered less damage than might have been expected, save for the paintwork that was washed away by the new lake created by the Old English Dam.

Then, construction on the High Dam began and, as with a number of other monuments south of Aswan, the temple and other monuments had to either be moved or lost beneath the waters

In reality, Philae would not have been lost under the water of Lake Nasser itself, but rather the lake that was formed between the High Dam and the Old Dam. It was the only major monument located in this region. it would have been almost permanently submerged, but worse, this small lake is subject to a daily rise and fall of several yards, which would have inevitably eroded the temples completely.

This was accomplished during the 1970s, when the Philae monuments were moved to Agilkia northwest of Philae Island. Since waters already engulfed the monuments at Philae, a coffer dam had to be built around the island and then the water pumped out. This work began in 1972 and was finished in 1980 as a cooperative effort of UNESCO and the Egyptian Antiquity Organization. The new location was carefully landscaped to make it resemble Philae as much as possible. Some 40,000 blocks, weighing about 20,000 tons were moved to the new location.

https://www.etsy.com/nl/listing/1605647549/ebook-egypteinkleur-rond-1900-deel-1-o-e?ref=listings_manager_grid€4,15eBook ...
07/11/2023

https://www.etsy.com/nl/listing/1605647549/ebook-egypteinkleur-rond-1900-deel-1-o-e?ref=listings_manager_grid
€4,15

eBook Egypte in kleur rond 1900 Deel 1 | E-book Fotoboek Postkaarten album

Een prachtig e-book in Egyptische stijl, met een uitgebreide selectie illustraties van toen.
Het e_Book bestaat uit een unieke collectie oude postkaarten en foto’s. Beelden van rond de eeuwwisseling 1900. Die dateren uit de eind periode van de 19de en vroege begin 20ste eeuw. Schitterende illustraties die de wereld van toen naar binnen halen. In al haar schoonheid en met haar rauwe kanten.

Foto’s die vroeger door mensen met veel plezier gemaakt zijn. 55 foto’s die tonen hoe men woonde, leefde en werkte en benoemen wat men voelde en dacht in die tijd. Dat zie je terug in de beelden en dat maakt nieuwsgierig.
De beelden helpen om emoties te verwoorden en belevingen te delen. Veel postkaarten zijn met de tijd verouderd en versleten en spreken niet altijd tot de verbeelding. Deze gerestoreerde set wel!
Veel beelden uit die tijd bestaan niet meer en heden ten dagen hebben we vaak alleen nog deze kaarten die nog een zicht op het verleden geven.

Het e-book met afbeeldingen met hoge resolutie kunnen tevens worden afgedrukt en ingelijst, of worden gebruikt als wanddecoratie om een vrolijke en uitnodigende sfeer te creëren.

Dit e-book is perfect voor iedereen die houdt van de tijdloze aantrekkingskracht van vervlogen tijden.
Prachtige gerestaureerde historische beelden over Egypte die plaats en tijd overstijgt.

LET OP: DIT IS EEN DIGITAAL ITEM.

Artikelinformatie:
Digitale download Soort(en) digitaal bestand(en): 1 x PDF

Ansichtkaarten van 6 x 4 inch en 4 x 6
Ansichtkaarten van 15 x 10 cm en 10 x 15

Hoe uw e-book afdrukken: Geen printer? Geen zorgen! onduidelijk vindt u enkele afdrukopties:
- Freeprintsnow.com
- Shutterfly. com
- Cvs.com/foto
- Foto.walgreens.com
- Photos3.Walmart.com

De foto's kunnen op veel verschillende interessante manieren worden gestileerd en gebruikt, zodat u nieuwe composities creëert wanneer u uw kamer een nieuwe look wilt geven!
De mogelijkheden zijn eindeloos met dit unieke en aanpasbare wanddecor.
De prints kunnen aan de muur worden bevestigd met washi-tape, blauwe tac of dubbelzijdige muurtape. Wij adviseren om tape/tac op elke hoek van elke afdruk te plaatsen.

LET OP:
- Dit is een DIGITALE DOWNLOAD, er wordt geen fysiek item naar u verzonden.
- Uw aankoop bevat 300dpi JPG-afbeeldingen.
- Door verschillende monitor-/printerkalibratie-instellingen kunnen de kleuren op het scherm afwijkend van de effectieve afdruk.
- Vanwege de aard van directe downloads zijn er geen terugbetalingen of retourzendingen.
- Alleen voor persoonlijk gebruik.

Deze bestanden zijn beschikbaar als INSTANT DOWNLOAD. Nadat uw aankoop en betaling zijn verwerkt, ontvang u een e-mail met een link naar uw digitale bestanden. Er staat: "Bekijk je bestanden op Etsy". Klik op de link en u krijgt toegang tot uw digitale dossier. Je hebt ook toegang tot je digitale items door in te loggen op je Etsy-account, rechtsboven op "Jij" te klikken, "Aankopen en recensies" te kiezen en vervolgens naar de besloten bestelling te gaan. Klik op Bestanden downloaden.

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Voor vragen of opmerkingen, aarzel dan niet om contact op te nemen. Zo streven wij naar klantentevredenheid om onze klanten voor de volle 100% tevreden te stellen en te houden.

Verkrijgbaar in deze reeks:
• Egypte in kleur rond 1900 Deel 1.
• Egypte in kleur rond 1900 Deel 2.
• Egypte in kleur rond 1900 Deel 3.
• Egypte in kleur rond 1900 Deel 4.
• Egypte in kleur rond 1900 Deel 1, 2, 3 en 4.

Egypte in kleur rond 1900 is een serie die bestaat uit een uniek 4 delig verzameling in kleur. Prachtige gerestaureerde historische beelden die plaats en tijd overstijgt.

De volledige 4-delige serie e-books in één bundel?
De 4 delige serie van Egypte in kleur rond 1900, is ook verkrijgbaar in één bundel.
Bestel nu online de complete 4-delige series in één e-book samen in één bundel.
De serie bestaande uit 4 delen over, Egypte in kleur rond 1900, is nu ook verkrijgbaar in één complete bundel.

https://www.etsy.com/nl/listing/1605657373/ebook-egyptincolor-around-1900-part-1-o?ref=listings_manager_grid€4,15eBook E...
07/11/2023

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€4,15

eBook Egypt in color around 1900 Part 1 | E-book Photo book Postcard album

A beautiful e-book in Egyptian style, with an extensive selection of illustrations from that time.
The e_Book consists of a unique collection of old postcards and photos. Images from around the turn of the century, 1900. They date from the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Beautiful illustrations that bring the world of that time inside. In all her beauty and with her raw edges.

Photos that people used to take with great pleasure. 55 photos that show how people lived and worked and name what they felt and thought at that time. You can see that in the images and it makes you curious.
The images help to express emotions and share experiences. Many postcards become outdated and worn over time and do not always appeal to the imagination. This restored set does!
Many images from that time no longer exist and today we often only have these maps that provide a view of the past.

The e-book with high-resolution images can also be printed and framed, or used as wall decorations to create a cheerful and inviting atmosphere.

This e-book is perfect for anyone who loves the timeless appeal of a bygone era.
Beautifully restored historical images of Egypt that transcend place and time.

PLEASE NOTE: THIS IS A DIGITAL ITEM.

Item information:
Digital download Type(s) of digital file(s): 1 x PDF

6x4 inch and 4x6 postcards
Postcards of 15 x 10 cm and 10 x 15

How to print your e-book: No printer? No problem! unclear you will find some printing options:
- Freeprintsnow.com
- Shutterfly. com
- Cvs.com/photo
- Photo.walgreens.com
- Photos3.Walmart.com

The photos can be styled and used in many different interesting ways, allowing you to create new compositions whenever you want to give your room a new look!
The possibilities are endless with this unique and customizable wall decor.
The prints can be attached to the wall with washi tape, blue tac or double-sided wall tape. We recommend placing tape/tac on each corner of each print.

NB:
- This is a DIGITAL DOWNLOAD, no physical item will be shipped to you.
- Your purchase includes 300dpi JPG images.
- Due to different monitor/printer calibration settings, the colors on the screen may differ from the actual print.
- Due to the nature of instant downloads, there are no refunds or returns.
- For personal use only.

These files are available as INSTANT DOWNLOAD. After your purchase and payment has been processed, you will receive an email with a link to your digital files. It says: "View your files on Etsy". Click on the link and you will have access to your digital file. You can also access your digital items by logging into your Etsy account, clicking "You" in the top right, choosing "Purchases & Reviews" and then going to private order. Click Download Files.

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For any questions or comments, please do not hesitate to contact us. We strive for customer satisfaction in order to satisfy and keep our customers 100% satisfied.

Available in this series:
• Egypt in color around 1900 Part 1.
• Egypt in color around 1900 Part 2.
• Egypt in color around 1900 Part 3.
• Egypt in color around 1900 Part 4.
• Egypt in color around 1900 Parts 1, 2, 3 and 4.

Egypt in color around 1900 is a series that consists of a unique 4-piece collection in color. Beautifully restored historical images that transcend place and time.

The entire 4-part series of e-books in one bundle?
The 4-part series of Egypt in color around 1900 is also available in one bundle.
Order the complete 4-part series in one e-book online now in one bundle.
The series consisting of 4 parts about Egypt in color around 1900, is now also available in one complete bundle.

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