The Founding of Alexandria
Alexander the Great founded Alexandria in 331 BCE during his military campaign against the Persian Empire. Rather than pursuing the Persian King, Darius III, into the Persian heartlands, Alexander well understood he needed to neutralize Persian power along the shores of the Mediterranean. After taking over Phoenician cities in Syria and Palestine that had in the past provided Persia with its fleets, he turned his targets to Egypt. Egypt had at that point been ruled by a Persian satrap for nearly 200 years.
Alexander swept down into Egypt and captured the Satrapy in April 331 BCE. He then decided to found a city on the northernmost edge of Egypt, on a limestone spur separated form the alluvial lands of the interior by a freshwater lake. Bearing his name, Alexandria would be the capital of his new Egyptian dominion, replacing Neucratis as the Hellenistic centre in ancient Egypt. It would serve as a naval base to control the Mediterranean and link Greece with the rich Nile valley.
Alexander chose the ancient settlement of Rhakotis as the site for the city. Here he could make use of the abundance of water from Lake Maryūṭ and the good anchorage provided offshore by the island of Pharos. With this, he envisioned the building of a causeway from Alexandria to Pharos that would generate two great natural harbours.
Upon its founding, Alexandria was exceptionally large. It measured three miles (five kilometres) from west to east, and about a half from north to south. As in other new cities of the Mediterranean world, the streets were laid out in a grid pattern that still survive to a significant extent. The broad avenues of early Alexandria, however, have narrowed greatly, and little survives of the ancient city above the water line.
Only a few months after the city’s foundation, Alexander left Egypt to continue his conquest of Persia. He would die in Babylon eight years later at the age of only thirty-two, having never returned to Alexandria.
Upon his death, his empire was divided up among three competing generals, in Macedonia and Greece, Syria and the East, and Egypt. General Ptolemy Ladiges took over control of Egypt, bringing Alexander’s body with him, helping to cement his legitimacy. He buried the body in Memphis, before it was later transferred to Alexandria.
In 305 BCE, Ptolemy declared himself Pharoah of Egypt as Ptolemy I Soter (“the Saviour”) and moved his capital to Alexandria. Ptolemy’s family (the Ptolemaic Dynasty) then ruled Egypt until the Roman conquest of 30 BCE. Under the Dynasty, Alexandria grew into the greatest city of its time, serving as a centre of reinvigorated Greek culture that spread across the Mediterranean.
A Centre of Trade
Before the establishment of Alexandria, the Phoenician city of Tyre was the preeminent city for trade and commerce in the region. However, the city was destroyed by Alexander during his Persian campaign, and Alexandria was able to take its place.
Alexandria looked two ways, linking Egypt to the Mediterranean and Europe in one instance, and to Arabia and India through the Red Sea and Indian Ocean in the other. As such, the city quickly grew to prominence, gaining control of massive resources and attracting lucrative trade from all over. In less than a generation it was larger than Carthage, and within a century of its founding it had become the largest city in the world.
With a flourishing metal industry in Egypt, exports of gold, silver, and bonze plate became one of the strengths of Alexandria. These were accompanied by the export of textiles, pottery, and glass – a particular speciality. Papyrus was another Egyptian speciality in high demand in both neighbouring lands and more widely across the Mediterranean.
Meanwhile, various other European goods were traded through the city’s ports, including nuts from the Black Sea, cheese from Chios, olive oil, figs, honey, sponges, wool, wild boar meat, venison, goat’s meat, and of course wine, amongst other items.
The Ptolemies enforced a tight system of control of trade. Ships’ cargoes were closely examined at designated ports, and taxes were levied not just at the ports but at internal custom stations along the Nile as goods moved up to Alexandria. Taxes represented a percentage of the estimated value of the cargo, reaching as much as 50 per cent on some items (such as wine and oil) and sometimes only a third or a quarter.
Large profits also came to the Alexandrians serving as middlemen in the trade linking the Indian Ocean to the Mediterranean. Gold, frankincense, and myrrh were prized items carried up the Red Sea. Meanwhile Indian goods and spices also became familiar in Alexandria, and the Ptolemies profited from access to African and Indian elephants for their army.
The product that came to dominate the business of Alexandria was, however, grain. It was produced both to feed the city and for export markets. Rhodes was a particularly keen customer of Egyptian wheat for itself and for many of its trading partners. Further export markets then later opened up following a series of Celtic and Scythian tribe invasions of the Black Sea region. With their sources and supply routes of food endangered, Athens and other Greek cities turned to the Alexandrian trade.
Religion in Alexandria
Immigrants from the eastern Mediterranean and even further afield were attracted to the wealth of the relatively new city of Ptolemaic Egypt. In a short time, Alexandria became truly cosmopolitan city. As Egypt’s main Greek city, it was home to people with diverse backgrounds from across the Greek world. But it also drew significant populations of Egyptians, and Jews, as well as thousands of Syrians, Persians, Moroccans, Turks, and Asiatics.
The urban Jewish community in Alexandria was the largest in the world, having its own separate quarter in the city known as Delta. This was in fact the first large Jewish settlement on the shores of the Mediterranean. The ancient Israelites had mainly been a landlocked rural people, enclosed by the Philistines and other peoples who lived along the coast. But with the founding of Alexandria, their beliefs and culture began to slowly spread out of Israel and across the Mediterranean.
In the first two centuries of Alexandria, Greeks and Jews lived side by side in harmony. The Jews were able to integrate fully with the Hellenistic secular life of the city, partaking in activities such as attending games and learning Greek philosophy. They integrated so well that Greek became their first language and soon many of them no longer understood Hebrew.
As such, the first translation of the Bible, from Hebrew to Greek, was produced here. Known as the Septuagint, the translation emerged gradually over several decades, with the support and approval of the Ptolemies. This was one of the great contributions of Alexandria to the cultural history of the Mediterranean, later adopted by the Christians of Constantinople as the text of the Old Testament.
For the rest of the population, the early Ptolemies offered a new cult of the god Serapis, successfully blending the religions of ancient Egypt and Greece. Serapis was a combination of the Egyptian bull god Apis and the resurrected god Osiris. But it acquired many of the characteristics of Greek gods as well, with elements of Dionysus, Zeus, and even Hades, the god of the Underworld. He was also linked to the Greek god of healing, Asklepios.
The Greeks were able to accept Serapis as they did not regard their own gods as exclusively Hellenic and believed their manifested themselves in different guises to different peoples. The eclectic nature of Serapis also reflected the sense that there were no sharp boundaries between the twelve Olympian gods.
A Centre of Greek Scholarship
The Ptolemies used their wealth gained from trade to good effect, investing in institutions that reflected a deep dedication to scholarship. Linked to the massive palace complex on the northern side of the city were the buildings of the Mouseion, or ‘museum’. Founded by Ptolemy I Soter and his son Ptolemy II Philadelphus, this was a temple for the Muses, the nine Greek goddesses of artistic, scientific, and poetic inspiration.
The Mouseion was different to modern museums though in the sense that it did not have a collection of sculpture and painting presented as works of art. Instead, it was in effect a university, an institution of learning where scholars could devote themselves to fully to literature, science, and philosophy.
This great institute attracted a great deal of remarkable Greek scholars, scientists, philosophers, mathematicians, artists, and historians. Famous historical figures to have studied there include the mathematician Euclid, the inventor Archimedes, the physician Galen, the philosophers Philo and Plotinus, the geographers Eratosthenes and Claudius Ptolemy, and the engineer Heron of Alexandria (also called Hero).
Abulafia comments on the significant discoveries and contributions of these scholars: “Alexandrian science was of more than local interest. The discoveries and inventions of many of these figures were of lasting importance, and provide further proof of the great vitality of Hellenistic culture, of which Alexandria established itself as the capital.”
The Library of Alexandria
Part of the Mouseion was the Library of Alexandria. This was the greatest library in the ancient world, with estimates that it held up to 500,000 books in its collection, although no one knows how many for certain. The gigantic structure had various spatial features, such as specific reading and dining rooms, lecture halls, gardens, colonnaded walkways, and as its main attraction the great hall holding a vast array or organised bookshelves. A ‘daughter library’ also served as an annex to the main library at the Serapion (a temple to Serapis).
Alexandria Library’s origins lay in a decision by Ptolemy I to collect all the serious writings of all nations. It is believed likely that the whole corpus of Greek literature was amassed in the library, but also many non-Greek texts were collected – including the chronicles of the Egyptian Pharaohs, the Hebrew Bible, and Indian tales. Most of these were likely translated to Greek before they were deposited though.
The quality of the books was of upmost importance, with the Ptolemies determined to lay their hands on the best possible texts of the great authors. To acquire various rare specimens of literary works, royal members of Egypt would go on sponsored trips to well-known book fairs in places like Athens and Rhodes. Many of the items in the library were bought, while rulers and scholars were also invited to contribute their books to the collection.
Other, less cordial, means were also used to obtain items. Every commercial ship entering Alexandria’s harbour were searched for books and papyrus rolls, for example. Those found were then either confiscated or returned after copies were made. The Ptolemies also conned the Athenians into sending their master copies of the plays of Aeschylus, Sophocles and Euripides for copying and then never returned them.
Sadly, no original material from this great library now survives, with the library destroyed multiple times over a period of 700 years. It was first burned in 48 BCE by Julius Caesar intervening in the civil war between Cleopatra and Ptolemy XIII. Then later again it was burned by the newly dominant Christians in the city under Pope Theophilus of Alexandria’s papacy (385-412 CE). A final blow came in 642 CE, following the Arab invasion of Alexandria. The Muslim ruler Caliph Omar ibn Al-Khattab declared the contents of the library as heresy and burned them as tinder in the city’s bathhouses.
Lighthouse of Alexandria
The second important innovation under Ptolemy I and II was the building of their great lighthouse on the island of Pharos at the entrance to the harbour. This was by far the most impressive lighthouse of antiquity, and one of the tallest structures, standing 135 metres (440 feet) above the waves. It was accordingly classed as one of the great ancient wonders of the world, the only with a practical, secular use.
In part, the lighthouse was built out of necessity, with shoals close to the shore invisible at night and hard to track by day. Its purpose was to make approaches to Alexandria safer, which was necessary for the city to achieve its potential as a centre for trade across the Mediterranean.
The building was constructed in three tiers. The lowermost part was a broad square section with four huge facades. On this platform stood the second level – an octagonal tower. And crowning the building on the upper-most, slimmest section was a circular colonnade, with a massive statue of Zeus at the very top.
Scholars believe great metal mirrors on the top platform reflected light during the daytime and fire during the night, both which could be seen many miles out to sea.
It is believed the top tier of the lighthouse had collapsed by 796 CE, while the rest was destroyed by devastating earthquakes at the end of the 14th century. Today the remains lay underwater, near where it once stood, by Fort Oait Bey.
Tour of Alexandria Egypt
Odyssey Traveller conducts a tour of Alexandria as part of our 17-day Escorted Small Group History & Cultural Tour of Egypt for mature and senior travellers. During our Alexandria city tour, we visit the Catacomb (Kom El Shoafa), which is a remarkable example of the Alexandrian blend of Greco-Roman and Egyptian styles, carved into 100 feet of solid rock and the Roman Amphitheatre. Next, we visit the Alexandria Library, which was reopened in April 2002, with the ambition of reclaiming its former glory and prestige. We then continue to the Montazah gardens of the Montazah Palace. Originally built in 1892, the palace was the summer home of the Egyptian royal family. All this and more can be experienced as part of the Alexandria day trip on our Egypt tour.
Other highlights of our Egypt tour include:
- The Oasis of Wadi El Seboua, Alexandria, and El Alamein.
- A cruise down the Nile River, with shore excursions to Luxor, the Valley of Kings, and Kom Ombo.
- The Red Pyramid, the Great Pyramid, the Valley Temple, and the Great Sphinx.
- The Temple of Philae, the 3000 year old Abu Simbel, and Lake Nasser.
Other tour operators or tour companies may simply survey the archaeological sites and monuments to the Pharaohs and the Giza pyramids. Our Egypt tours, however, also visits contemporary feats such as the Aswan Dam and lets us witness landmarks of the contemporary Egyptian experience, such as Tahrir Square. These sites show that Egypt’s role as the pivot of civilisation is far from ended.
Odyssey Traveller has been serving global travellers since 1983 with educational tours of the history, culture, and architecture of our destinations designed for mature and senior travellers. We specialise in offering small group tours partnering with a local tour guide at each destination to provide a relaxed and comfortable pace and atmosphere that sets us apart from larger tour groups. Tours consist of small groups of between 6 and 12 people and are cost inclusive of all entrances, tipping and majority of meals. For more information, click here, and head to this page to make a booking.
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