Alexandria
Alexandria is the second largest city and the second
largestmetropolitan area in Egypt after Greater Cairo by size and population,
extending about 32 km (20 mi) along the coast of the Mediterranean Sea in the
north central part of the country. It is also the largest city lying directly on
the Mediterranean coast. Alexandria is Egypt's largest seaport, serving
approximately 80% of Egypt's imports and exports. It is an important industrial
center because of its natural gas and oil pipelines from Suez. Alexandria is
also an important tourist resort.
Alexandria was founded around a small Ancient Egyptian town c. 331 BC by
Alexander the Great. It became an important center of the Hellenistic
civilization and remained the capital of Hellenistic and Roman & Byzantine
Egypt for almost 1000 years until the Muslim conquest of Egypt in AD 641, when a
new capital was founded at Fustat (later absorbed into Cairo). Hellenistic
Alexandria was best known for the Lighthouse of Alexandria (Pharos), one of the
Seven Wonders of the Ancient World; its Great Library (the largest in the
ancient world; now replaced by a modern one); and the Necropolis, one of the
Seven Wonders of the Middle Ages. Ongoing maritime archaeology in the harbor of
Alexandria, which began in 1994, is revealing details of Alexandria both before
the arrival of Alexander, when a city named Rhacotis existed there, and during
the Ptolemaic dynasty.
From the late 19th century, Alexandria became a major center of the
international shipping industry and one of the most important trading centers in
the world, both because it profited from the easy overland connection between
the Mediterranean Sea and the Red Sea, and the lucrative trade in Egyptian
cotton. Alexandria was the second most powerful city of the ancient world after
Rome.
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