Evidently, a Memphian temple to the God Ptah gave us our name for Egypt. The Ptolemaic Egyptologist Manetho transliterated the Egyptian phrase for "Place of the life-force of Ptah" into the Greek syllables "Ai-gy-ptos", and that name stuck for the country as a whole.
The main site we visited in Memphis was an open air museum. It has many statues, including a sphinx. The big draw, however, is the 30 ft. alabaster Colossus of Ramses II, found in 1820, which is located in a small building on the site. For more of my pictures of the open air museum, click here.
*"Upper" and "Lower" Egypt are in reference to the flow of the Nile. The sources of the Nile -- the Ehtiopian Plateau (Blue Nile) and the Central African highlands (White Nile) -- are south of Egypt. So Upper Egypt is south of Lower Egypt (the Nile Delta).
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