Kom Ombo

Kom Ombo (كوم أمبو) is an agricultural town in Egypt famous for its temple. It was originally a Greek settlement called Ombos, from the Egyptian 'nubt', meaning City of Gold. The town's location on the Nile 50 km north of Aswan gave it some control over trade routes from Nubia to the Nile Valley, but its main rise to prominence came with the erection of the temple in the 2nd century BC. Today, irrigated sugar cane and corn account for most of the agricultural industry. Most of the 60,000 villagers are native Egyptians although there is a large population of Nubians who were displaced from their land upon the creation of Lake Nasser.

See also

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
new orleans regional transit authority
hank snow
helen clark
centrifuge
crater lake
classical latin
e.t. (video game)
ultracentrifuge
catecholamine
joint tactical information distribution system
rostock
scheveningen
cuvette
pointed suit
graduated cylinder
two suiter
minor suit
black suit
rounded suit
red suit
double squeeze
simultaneous double squeeze
prime minister of new zealand
mmabatho
the coup
black hawk down
ordinary people
coal miner's daughter
north american airlines
dagon
charibert
direct sum of groups
childeric ii
gustav heinemann
the elephant man
childeric iii
battle of mogadishu
chilperic i of the franks
tess
atlantic city (movie)
on golden pond
oamaru
brassica
missing