 Hello everyone, this is Amit Dan of amitdan.com. You are watching one of my jeep travel videos and today I am taking to the Qam Ambo, the dual temple located in a pleasant every culture town overlooking the Nile. The temple of Qam Ambo is a two in one temple dedicated to not only one but two gods. The eastern half was dedicated to the crocodile headed god, god of the Nile and the creator of the world, Sobek and his family. The western half of the temple was dedicated to the falcon headed god, god of the sky and the protector of the king Horus and his family. Just before entering the complex you'll notice that it is made of two parallel temples and both are perfectly symmetrical. The temple was constructed mainly with limestone in a rectangles shape. The temple of Qam Ambo starts with the front courtyard and then you'll see 15 columns decorated with lotus floral capitals and sun images and also you'll see inner halls followed by two sanctuaries dedicated to Sobek and Horus. There are seven chambers, many anti chambers and smaller rooms that were used for different rituals and purposes located in the both east and west parts. Although the temple of Qam Ambo is the most preserved and complete temple that is 2000 years old, I saw lots of parts that are damaged or missing. The capers looked like modern-day alleyways but smaller on both sides of the walls. They had engravings describing stories. Our guide explained most of them, they are very fascinating. Thank you for watching this video, there will be more Egypt videos coming up so I'll see you shortly. Thank you. Do you remember the name of the engineer who built the first stone building in Egypt? Yes. He built the world for the king Joseph, the prince of Egypt, the king of Egypt. Excellent. So when the great evil invaded Egypt, how many fields did they have? How much of the taxes they would get from the farmers. So inside the temple we can see the design of Nile Meethu. It looks like a deep water well. This one actually connected directly to the Nile River through a small canal under the ground. If you look down you can see we have some stairs, some steps. They were numbered steps.