The Pearl of the Mediterranean
The second largest city in Egypt, Alexandria has an atmosphere that
is more Mediterranean than Middle Eastern; its ambience and cultural
heritage distance it from the rest of the country although it is
actually only 225 km. from Cairo.
Founded by Alexander the Great in 331 BC, Alexandria became the
capital of Greek-Roman Egypt, its status as a beacon of culture
symbolized by Pharos, the legendary lighthouse that was one of the
Seven Wonders of the World. The setting for the stormy relationship
between Cleopatra and Mark Anthony, Alexandria was also the center
of learning in the ancient world. But ancient Alexandria declined,
and when Napoleon landed, he found, a sparsely populated fishing
village.
From the 19th century Alexandria took a new role, as a focus for
Egypt's commercial and maritime expansion. Writers such as E-M-
Forster and Cavafy have immortalized this Alexandria.
Generations of immigrants from Greece, Italy and the Levant settled
here and made the city synonymous with commerce, cosmopolitanism and
bohemian culture; awrence Durrell described it as 'the capital city
of Asiatic Europe, if such a thing could exist".