Alexandria Travel Information
With all the commotion of
Cairo and the calming, salty breeze of the
Med, Alexandria is a city like no where else in Egypt .
Founded by Alexander the Great in
331 B.C. Alexander who is purported to be buried here, famously never made it to Alexandria within
his own life time.
Upon completion
Alexandria was the Capital of Graeco-Roman Egypt, the backdrop for the romance of
Mark Anthony and Cleopatra, and the home of the Pharos lighthouse, one of the
seven wonders of the ancient world.
The city thrived once more in the
19th century as a centre of culture and the arts, and was popular with the ‘creatives’ of
Europe .
Fashionable with native tourists, foreign visitors often fail to make it to the Egypt's
second city.
Just two hours on a comfortable, ventilated train from
the capital, if you’re visiting
Cairo ,
it's well worth putting an afternoon or two aside to visit Alexandria , or
"Alex", as she is known to her friends.
Alexandria
has beaches, but be
advised that the good ones are far from town and remain relatively
under developed.
Likewise it also has a number of
historical ruins, but little to
challenge the mighty structures of the Pharoahnic south.
The Citadel at
Fort Qaitbey sits on the rocks once occupied by the lighthouse of Alexandria . The Roman's left behind an
amphitheatre, catacombs, and most famously a single, solitary column known as Pompey's Pillar.
And 20 Km from town one can wander
through the magical gardens of Montazah palace, the former residence of Egypt ’s Royal
Family.
But the real treasure of Alexandria
is much less tangible. It
lies in the all consuming flurry of everyday life, the endless
coastal vista, and the lazy café
culture that allows one to absorb it all. Click here for
Alexandria Itineraries
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