A Little History.
Alexandria was founded in 332 BC by Alexander the Great. He planned for it to be one of the finest ports of the ancient world. A breakwater made of large stones or masonry (known as a "Mole")nearly 1.6 km (1 mile) in length, called the Heptastadium was built to the island of Pharos, enclosing a spacious harbor.
A famous lighthouse, considered to be one of the Seven Wonders of the World, was also built on Pharos.
The ancient city was about 6.4 km (about 4 miles)long, and regularly built, with streets crossing at right angles and colonnades adorning the principal streets. The most magnificent quarter of the city, called the Brucheium, was situated on the eastern harbor. Farther west was....
* The Serapeion, or temple of the Egyptian deity Serapis
* The Soma (mausoleum) of Alexander and the Ptolemies
* The Poseidonium, or temple of Poseidon, god of the sea
* The museum
* The great theater
* and the emporium, or exchange
The northeastern quarter was occupied by the Jews.
In Alexandria the Jews came into contact with Greek learning, which profoundly influenced the religious thoughts of the world to this day.
The Greek translation of the Old Testament, called the Septuagint, was made before AD 100. Later philosophers attempted to fuse the doctrines of Christianity with the ideals of Greek philosophy.
Soon after the city was founded, the population, consisting chiefly of Greeks, Jews, and Egyptians, numbered 300,000 not including slaves and foreigners.
* Alexandria was made the capital of Egypt
* Many palaces were built by the Ptolemies
* The Alexandrian Library and Museum were founded
* Influential schools of philosophy, rhetoric,and other branches of ancient learning were established.
During the early 3rd century BC, the Alexandria Library had almost 500,000 books, the largest collection of books in the ancient world. However, the collection was destroyed over several centuries.
Under the Ptolemies, the city became the literary and scientific center of the ancient world.
The founding of Constantinople(known as Istanbul today)further eclipsed the Egyptian metropolis.
The Muslims under the General Amr ibn-al-As besieged, captured,
and almost destroyed the city in 638 and again about 646.
Under Muslim rule the city declined, particularly after the rise of Cairo and the opening of the sea route to India in the 15th century.
Alexandria was captured and held from 1798 to 1801 by Napoleon I.
"Alexandria today"
The modern city, on the portion of the mainland immediately south of the eastern harbor, is situated mainly on a peninsula about the mole, reaching to and including the island of Pharos.
The part of the modern city on the peninsula is a characteristically Egyptian town.
The European quarter is on the mainland.
Alexandria, has had since ancient times, two harbors, of which the western one is the chief commercial center and the site of the customs house and many warehouses for cotton, grain, sugar, and wool. More than 80 percent of the imports and exports of the country pass through the city. In 1992 the population was estimated at 3,380,000.
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Click on the globe above to see a map of Alexandria. |
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Click on the globe above to see some photos of the beautiful city, Alexandria. |