Cairo Top Tours' professionally guided representative will be waiting for you at your hotel in Cairo to take you in a private air-conditioned car to accompany you on your full-day excursion to the Wadi El Natrun Monasteries.
Your day begins with an impressive visit to Wadi El Natrun, also known as The Salt Field, Shehit, Esqet, and Hooker's Well. It was a major location for the extraction of Natron salt during Pharaonic times, used to embalm the dead, and gained sanctity in Christianity as a result of the Holy Family's passage through the region.
Your trip to Wadi El Natrun starts with a must-see visit to the Anba Bishoy Monastery, the biggest of the four monasteries. It was founded by Anba Bishoy, a follower of Anba Makar the Great, who led a group of monks there in the late 4. Covering roughly two hectares, it has five churches, the biggest of which is the "Church of Bishop Bishoy," the biggest church in Wadi al-Natrun. There are also several villages where the monks reside, a guest house, a large garden, a library, the ancient table, and the well of the martyrs.
After that, you will go to the Monastery of Baramous, which is named after the Romans Maximus, Domadius, and the Virgin Mary. The name Baramous means "the one of the Romans." The 6th century AD saw its founding. The monastery occupies 880 acres in the northernmost region of Wadi El Natrun, on the desert road between Cairo and Alexandria, approximately 12 kilometers from the Rust lodge rest lodge. The monastery includes a fortress, a hotel, a bakery, a few shops, a library with hundreds of manuscripts in various languages, and five archaeological churches.
Visiting and exploring the Anba Makar Monastery near Wadi El Natrun will provide you with a unique experience. As a follower of Anba Anthony the Great, the founder of Christian monastic schools, Anba Makar the Great is credited with founding this monastery.
We will drop you off at your Cairo hotel after your trip is over.