For the
ancient
Egyptians
civilization
began
and
ended
with the
Nile
Valley
and the
Delta,
known as
the "Black
Land"
for the
colour
of its
rich
alluvial
deposits.
Beyond
lay the
"Red
Land" or
desert,
whose
significance
was
either
practical
or
mystical.
East of
the Nile
it held
mineral
wealth
and
routes
to the
Red Sea
Coast;
west of
the
river
lay the
Kingdom
of
Osiris,
Lord of
the Dead
- the
deceased
were
said to
"go west"
to meet
him. But
once it
was
realized
that
human
settlements
existed
out
there,
Egypt's
rulers
had to
reckon
with the
Western
Desert
Oases
as
sources
of
exotic
commodities
and
potential
staging
posts
for
invaders.
Though
linked
to the
civilization
of the
Nile
Valley
since
antiquity,
they
have
always
been
different
- and
remain
so.
Siwa
Oasis
, far
out near
the
Libyan
border,
is the
most
striking
example:
its
people
speak
another
language
and have
customs
unknown
in the
rest of
Egypt.
Its
ruined
citadels,
lush
palm
groves,
limpid
pools
and
golden
sand
dunes
epitomize
the
allure
of the
oases.
The
four "inner"
oases of
Bahariya
,
Farafra
,
Dakhla
and
Kharga
lie on
the "
Great
Desert
Circuit
" that
begins
in Cairo
or
Assyut -
a Long
March
through
the New
Valley
Governorate,
where
modernization
has
affected
each
oasis to
a
greater
or
lesser
extent.
While
Bahariya
and
Farafra
remain
basically
desert
villages,
living
off
their
traditional
crops of
dates
and
olives,
Dakhla
and
Kharga
have
full-blown
modern
towns.
The
appeal
of the
latter
two is
stronger
in the
journeying
- across
hundreds
of miles
of
awesome
barrenness,
most of
it
gravel
pans
rather
than
pure "sand
desert".
Much
nearer
to Cairo
(and
suitable
for day
excursions)
are two
quasi-oases:
the
Fayoum
and Wadi
Natrun.
The
Fayoum
is more
akin to
the Nile
Valley
than the
Western
Desert,
with
many
ancient
ruins to
prove
its
importance
since
the
Middle
Kingdom.
Though a
popular
holiday
spot for
Cairenes,
it
doesn't
attract
many
foreign
tourists
except
for
hunters
and
ornithologists.
Wadi
Natrun
is
significant
mainly
for its
Coptic
monasteries,
which
draw
hordes
of
Egyptian
pilgrims
but
comparatively
few
foreigners.