Saturday, March 25, 2006

Maarch 26, 2006

Welcome to Alexandria, Egypt

Alexandria is at the western extremity of the Nile River delta, situated on a narrow isthmus between the Mediterranean Sea and Lake Mareotis. The city is Egypt’s leading port, a commercial and transportation center, and the heart of a major industrial area where refined petroleum, asphalt, cotton textiles, processed food, paper and plastics are produced. Much of ancient Alexandria is covered by modern buildings or is underwater; only a few landmarks are readily accessible, including ruins of the emporium and the Serapeum and a granite shaft called Pompey’s Pillar. Nothing remains of the lighthouse on the Pharos, which was one of the Seven Wonders of the World, and the site of the royal palace lies under the older (east) harbor. Alexandria was founded in 332 BC by Alexander the Great and was the capital of the Ptolemies. The city took over the trade of Tyre (sacked by Alexander the Great), outgrew Carthage by 250 BC, and became the largest city in the Mediterranean basin. It was the greatest center of Hellenistic civilization and Jewish culture. The Septuagint, a translation of the Old Testament into Greek, was prepared there. Alexandria had two celebrated royal libraries, one in a temple of Zeus and the other in a museum. The collections were said to contain 700,000 rolls. A great university grew around the museum and attracted many scholars, including Aristarchus of Samothrace, the collator of the Homeric texts; Euclid, the mathematician; and Herophilus, the anatomist, who founded a medical school there.

Alexandria’s History

Julius Caesar temporarily occupied the city in 47 BC while pursuing Pompey, and Octavian (later Augustus) entered it in 30 BC after the suicide of Antony and Cleopatra. Alexandria formally became part of the Roman Empire in 30 BC. It was the greatest of the Roman provincial capitals, with a population of about 300,000 free persons and numerous slaves. In the later centuries of Roman rule and under the Byzantine Empire, Alexandria rivaled Rome and Constantinople as a center of Christian learning. It was (and remains today) the seat of a patriarch of the Eastern Orthodox Church. The libraries, however, were gradually destroyed from the time of Caesar’s invasion, and suffered especially in 391 AD, when Theodosius I had pagan temples and other structures razed. When the Muslim Arabs took Alexandria in 642, its prosperity had withered, largely because of a decline in shipping, but the city still had about 300,000 inhabitants. The Arabs moved the capital of Egypt to Cairo in 969 and Alexandria’s decline continued, accelerating in the 14th century, when the canal to the Nile silted up. During his Egyptian campaign, Napoleon I took the city in 1798, but it fell to the British in 1801. At that time Alexandria’s population was only about 4,000. The city gradually regained importance after 1819, when Muhammad Ali, who developed Alexandria as a deepwater port and a naval station, completed the Mahmudiyah Canal to the Nile. During the 19th century many foreigners settled in Alexandria, and in 1907 they made up about 25% of the population. In 1882, during a nationalist uprising in Egypt, there were anti-foreign riots in Alexandria, which was subsequently bombarded by the British. During World War II, as the chief Allied naval base in the east Mediterranean, the Germans bombed Alexandria.

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