Beyond Cairo, the delta spreads out
like a giant flower head segmented by branches and channels of the Nile.
The delta plain is fertilised by tons of alluvial deposits from the
river and is cultivated with such care that it looks like a vast kitchen
garden.
The
city of Alexandria was born and for several centuries its lighthouse,
the first ever in the world, cast its light over the Mediterranean Sea.
Beyond Cairo, the delta spreads out
like a giant flower head segmented by branches and channels of the Nile.
The delta plain is fertilised by tons of alluvial deposits from the
river and is cultivated with such care that it looks like a vast kitchen
garden. Cotton, rice, fruit, vegetables and flowers constitute the
wealth of this region. At the edge of the desert, extensive cultivation
is developing on land stolen from the sand. The ancient capitals of Sais
and Tanis have disappeared without trace giving way to villages and
towns crowned with mosques and bustling with life from morning until
dusk.
This
was the site of the small fishing village of Rakotis when the glory of
the pharaohs was at its height. Alexander the Great, on his arrival in
Egypt, wanted to make it his capital and to leave a lasting imprint on
Egypt’s coast. The city of Alexandria was born and for several centuries
its lighthouse, the first ever in the world, cast its light over the
Mediterranean Sea. Capital of arts and learning and favoured by kings,
queens, scholars and men of letters, Alexandria provided a refuge for
one of the most famous passionate love affairs of all time, that of
Anthony and Cleopatra.
Following the Arab conquest, when
Alexandria lost is status as capital in favour of Cairo, the city
retained its distinctive habit of looking more towards the Mediterranean
than towards Egypt. With its wealth of Greek, Jewish and Armenian
communities and as the preferred haunt of foreigners, Alexandria seemed
to turn her back on the hinterland.
Although few descendants of these
communities still remain today, the city has retained a special
atmosphere from that period in its history.
A walk along the corniche is not to be
missed. The Egyptian crowds have regained possession of Alexandria from
foreigners. The city is now the preferred holiday destination of city
dwellers from Cairo. Families and sweethearts stroll along the sweeping
curve of the corniche enjoying an ice cream. Baskets of freshly caught
fish and shellfish are on display. Old men mend their nets dreaming of
Marseille “where the fish jump out of the water of their own accord”. In
short, everyone in their own way makes the most of life along the
corniche.
The cafes of Alexandria :
Featuring vast rooms hung
with old-fashioned paintings and large tarnished mirrors and grand
terraces facing the sea, Alexandria’s cafes are classics of their sort,
almost a trademark of the Mediterranean city. Old Alexandrians, who
assert that they are the “real thing” as their family has been here (at
the very least) since the time of Alexander the Great, pass the time
smoking and watching the sea, indifferent to the hubbub. When the wind
blows too strongly, they go inside and begin endless games of backgammon
or dominoes. Either that or they spend hours immersed in the newspaper.
In the meantime, their wives enjoy the delights of tea and cream cakes
in the patisseries on Saad Zaghloul Square. It is enough to make one
wonder whether the English ever left Alexandria.
Qaitbay
Fort : At the far end of the corniche
rise the crenellated walls of the Mameluk fortress built in 1480 on the
site of the Alexandria lighthouse which was itself destroyed following
two earthquakes in the eleventh and fourteenth centuries. The fort has
for centuries stood guard over the bay and endured the battering of the
White Sea, the Arabic name for the Mediterranean.
Ras al-Tin Palace :
To the west of the fortress is where one
of the most important events in the history of modern Egypt took place.
It was here that Farouk signed his abdication papers bringing the
monarchy to an end. Along nearby beaches lie small boatyards where
craftsmen build luxury wooden boats for rich Gulf emirs using little in
the way of tools.
Anfoushi Quarter :
Situated between the fort and the palace,
this area was formerly the seamen’s quarter particularly notorious for
its brothels. These have now closed but visitors strolling through the
popular narrow streets can seek out pleasant cafes decorated with
ceramic tiling and excellent fish restaurants where diners choose the
very fish they wish to eat.
Roman theatre (Kom el Dikka) :
Situated close to the city centre
station, this site has been under excavation since the start of the
1960s. Successive phases have revealed various public monuments situated
at the heart of the ancient city – a theatre, public baths, water tanks
and a residential quarter. At the entrance to the site can be seen the
statues fished from the sea beside Qaitbay Fort by the archaeologists
under Frenchman, Jean-Yves Empereur.
A new
museum, devoted to mosaics, has been under construction since 2002.
Pompeii
Column and Kom el-Shuqafa Catacombs :
Thirty metres high and built from Aswan pink granite, the Pompeii Column
is thought to have been a present from the people of Alexandria to
Emperor Diocletian who renounced his intention to destroy the city and
slaughter the inhabitants following a rebellion. The majority of the
remains found around the column can be seen at the Graeco-Roman Museum.
At
the top of the hill lies the entrance to the Kom al-Shuqafa Catacombs
dating from the first and second centuries AD. They were discovered by
chance at the start of the twentieth century when the ground gave way
under the weight of a donkey and the poor creature fell more than ten
metres into a hole. History does not relate whether the animal survived
but its fall did lead to the uncovering of more than three hundred tombs
laid out along an underground network organised around a vast rotunda.
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