Tag: Alexandria

  • Egypt Pours €360 Million into Renewing Alexandria’s Tram Network

    Egypt Pours €360 Million into Renewing Alexandria’s Tram Network

    Egypt is set to start the renovation and modernization of the prominent Al-Raml Tram network in Alexandria in a project that will cost €360 million.

    Egypt’s Ministry of Investment and International Cooperation signed a €100 million loan agreement with the French Development Agency (AFD), which will partially finance the project.

    The upgrading process of the 13.7 kilometers tramline will take up to three years. It aims at increasing the capacity of the tram from 100,000 passengers per day to 230,000. The renovations will also help cut the time needed for the tram to take a complete round from one hour to half an hour, also the facilities will be improved.

    Al-Raml tram network is the oldest tram line in Africa, it connects Alexandria’s western and eastern areas. It is also one of the oldest lines in the world.

    According to a statement released by the Ministry of Investments and International Cooperation, the European Investment Bank expressed its interest to co-finance the new project.

    Minister of Investments and International Cooperation Sahar Nasr said in press statements that Egypt is keen on improving the transportation sector, be it subways or railways. She further added that the presence of an insightful strategy to improve the transportation sector eased up the negotiations with sponsors.

    (egyptianstreets.com)

  • 6 archeological missions to resume underwater excavations in Egypt

    6 archeological missions to resume underwater excavations in Egypt

    Six local and international excavation missions have obtained the necessary approvals to resume their underwater archeological excavations for antiquities along the shores of Alexandria and Red Sea governorates, according to the Department of Underwater Antiquities in the Ministry of Antiquities.

    The head of the department, Mohamed Abdel Maguid, said the missions submitted their papers for approval in December in an effort to be ready before April. Only two of the six missions will resume work next month, he added.

    The first of these two missions is the French Le Centre d’études Alexandrines (CEAlex), headed by Isabelle Hairy. This mission will complete its work in Fort Qaitbay by May 20. The second is the Egyptian mission which will work along Red Sea coasts from April 15 until May 7, headed by Mohamed Mostafa.

    Maguid said the other four missions have asked for the commencement of their work to be delayed until fall. These include Frank Goddio with the European Institute of Underwater Antiquities in France; Harry E. Tzalas with the Institute of Hellenic Underwater Archaeology in Greece; Galina A. Belova with the Russian Institute for Archaeology and Egyptology Studies; and Paolo Gallo with Turin University in Italy.

    (www.egyptindependent.com)

  • The website of E.K.A. now “speaks” English and Arabic

    The website of E.K.A. now “speaks” English and Arabic

    The new website www.ekalexandria.org of the Greek Community of Alexandria, which has been operating for about a year and a half, having high online traffic and visibility, now “speaks” English and Arabic, in addition to Greek, since March 24.

    One of the main pillars of the Greek Community of Alexandria is the promotion of its activities and its vast history. Based on this axis, the Press and Public Relations Committee clearly planned to promote and highlight the important role the Greek Community of Alexandria can play as a bridge of cooperation between institutions located in Greece and Egypt, and that will confidently raise the visibility of the Alexandrian Greeks and their heritage.

    As part of the continuous improvement of communication tools, the Greek Community of Alexandria has gone through with this very important step; launching the website in additional two languages, English and Arabic, thus honoring non-Greek speaking friends, and especially the Alexandrians, and the local community of Egypt, in which it coexists.

    The aim of the Greek Community of Alexandria is to showcase the activities and the history of the Greek Community, but also to include news related to economic, political and cultural themes related to our city but also to Greece and Egypt. Making the website a bridge between the Egyptiot-Greeks with Greek, Egyptian and international audience.

    The official launch of the website in the two new languages took place on Friday, March 24, in the presence of members of the Greek Community. The launch of the two editions made by the Special Secretary of Communication Planning Immigration & Refugee Policy, the Alexandrian, Mr. Giorgos Florentis and the Deputy Director General of the General Secretariat for Greeks Abroad Mr. Dimitris Plevrakis.

  • Alexandria: locals adapt to floods as coastal waters inch closer

    Alexandria: locals adapt to floods as coastal waters inch closer

    “Before we were flooded a couple of years ago, we didn’t imagine the water could reach this level,” said cafe manager Samir Gaber, gesturing at a cluster of tables overlooking the Mediterranean. 

    Gaber has managed the Latino cafe in Alexandria for six years, during which time the business has had to adapt to increasingly dramatic winter storms. With the storms come the floods, crashing waves engulfing large chunks of the many cafes nestled on the coastline. 

    “There was another wall here before the flooding, but the steel bars [supporting it] were destroyed,” explained Gaber. “Now we’ve constructed a drain to absorb floodwater,” he said, gesturing below the new stone wall running along the outside edge of the cafe.

    Many of the cafes and businesses on the Alexandria coast have begun adjusting to extreme weather without making the link to climate change.

    On the southern tip of the Mediterranean, the coastal waters are inching closer to buildings and flooded ancient structures, including the Greco-Roman tombs at Anfushi. Seawater seeping into the groundwater has also made the fragile ground more unstable, resulting in the alarming collapse of some of the city’s buildings. 

    The UN estimates that global sea levels will rise between 13cm and 68cm by 2050, and say that the Mediterranean is particularly vulnerable – by 2080, up to 120,000 people living near the sea could be affected by rising waters if no action is taken to protect them. 

    Rising sea levels and seawater temperatures will also increase the salinity of the Nile, Egypt’s primary water source, and increasingly salty water sources could destroy farmland across the Nile Delta. In 2007, the World Bank estimated that 10.5% of Egypt’s population could be displaced by rising waters caused by climate change.

    An hour to the east from Alexandria, the quiet of the town of Rosetta ignores the urgency of the lapping waters. Life in the town, famed for the discovery of the Rosetta stone, is at one with the sea. 

    “You have to do what you have to do, and don’t think about the bad weather – the good weather comes from God,” said fisherman Ahmed Mohamed Gowayed, reciting a local saying. 

    Storms annually disrupt the calm of this low-lying town where houses sit at sea level, many only separated from the coast by a winding coast road. But in recent years the weather has been more violent.

    “Last year the storm destroyed palm trees, buildings, cars – older people in their seventies said they’d never seen anything like it in their lives,” said Gowayed. The storm also destroyed barges and kiosks that local fishermen rely on for their livelihoods. 

    “If the weather continues like this I will build a stronger kiosk,” smiled Gowayed, undeterred by the prospect of the next storm.

    Mohamed El Raey, professor of environmental studies at Alexandria University, believes that climate change is contributing to an increase in “extreme events”, across Egypt. “The government needs to increase awareness among the population,” he said.

    They also need to be more stringent about urban planning, he added. “If people don’t find places to live that they like, they build houses wherever they find an area.” 

    In 2011, the government released a report detailing how the country must adapt to climate change, estimating that about 13% of Egypt’s northern coastline was at risk. 

    Political and economic upheavals have since diverted their attention elsewhere, but in Alexandria and Rosetta the impact of climate change is becoming increasingly hard to ignore.

    (www.theguardian.com)

  • The Alexandria International Conference on Maritime and Underwater Archaeology

    The Alexandria International Conference on Maritime and Underwater Archaeology

    ΓενικάEgypt has provided humanity with a majestic concrete civilization that continued for thousands of years since the break of dawn. Historians and archaeologists have been interested in studying this civilization and its endlessly creative, accomplished legacy. Marine archaeology is considered one of the new sciences that studies the Ancient Egyptian Civilization throughout its different ages through archaeological findings, either underground or underwater. Egypt witnessed an attention paid to underwater and marine archaeology for many years, since several institutes and individuals were keen on finding underwater antiquities and affiliating marine cities and active and obliterated harbors, and getting to know the old navigation methods, and the related trade and marine activity. Consequently, researchers delved in this infinite science full of mystery and joy of discovering.

    Not only had the Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities paid attention to afford the opportunity to excavations in Egypt by foreign missions specialized in underwater and marine archaeology and collaborated in their scientific and archaeological work, but also founded the Department of Underwater Antiquities in Alexandria in 1996 to be the specialized annex of the Ministry entrusted with enriching Egyptian archaeological and scientific research in the field, and the section responsible for revealing the secrets of this amazing, deep world of Egyptian legacy. This was until the Department became a central department of underwater antiquities, thus in charge of more practical and scientific responsibilities including the organization of archaeological work and specialized scientific collaboration in the field of underwater and marine archaeology, not only in Alexandria, but all over Egypt, whether in the Mediterranean, the Red Sea, or the River Nile. The Bibliotheca Alexandrina, since its foundation, also paid attention to reviving the rich Egyptian civilizational legacy represented in the Ancient Bibliotheca Alexandrina. It paid attention to archaeology in general, and marine and underwater antiquities specifically. Thus, galleries, meetings, workshops, and others were organized; books and prints tackling this important subject were published, either via Alexandria Project, which documents the Ancient Bibliotheca Alexandrina and its legacy, or other activities of the New Bibliotheca Alexandrina and its research centers.

    The Bibliotheca Alexandrina, represented in the Alexandria Project, and the Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities, represented in the central Department of Underwater Antiquities, celebrating the 20th anniversary of the foundation of the central Department of Underwater Antiquities, realized that together Underwater and Marine Archaeology should be celebrated through calling for holding the Alexandria International Conference for Underwater and Marine Antiquities, 31 October – 2 November 2016, in Alexandria, Egypt, to present the different aspects of this field, and to study the latest specialized archaeological findings. The three-day Conference tackles the following topics:

    1. Archaeological harbors:
      • Marine ports and harbors
    2. Ancient shipbuilding:
      • Boats and ships in Ancient Egypt
      • Boats and ships in Ancient Mediterranean
      • Ships in the Islamic Era
    3. Underwater archaeological sites:
      • Archaeological findings in Egypt.

    Those in charge of the Conference were honored to participate with the European Institute for Underwater Archaeology (IEASM) headed by Professor Franck Goddio, and the Centre for Alexandrian Studies (CEAlex) headed by Archaeologist Mary Dominick Nina, in terms of financial support and organization.

    The Conference is honored to have an elite of Egyptian and international historians and archaeologists specialized in studying underwater and marine antiquities in several archaeological missions, inside and outside Egypt. Twenty-five scientists and archaeologists from Egypt, France, Greece, Italy, Japan, Poland, Russia, Tunisia, Turkey, United Kingdom, and United States of America, participated in the Conference.

    The Conference also honors pioneer individuals and institutions in underwater and marine archaeology, who exerted distinguished and distinct efforts, enriched this archaeological work in Egypt, and contributed in establishing its bases. The Conference honors the following:

    • Name of Prince Omar Tousson
    • Name of Mr. Kamel Abou el-Saadat
    • Name of Archaeologist Honor Frost
    • The Archaeological Society of Alexandria
    • Dr. Ibrahim Darwish

    (www.bibalex.org)

  • “The Decoration of the Temple of Repit in Athribis in Upper Egypt”

    “The Decoration of the Temple of Repit in Athribis in Upper Egypt”

    ΑρχαιολογίαAlexandria Center for Hellenistic Studies Cordially invites you to attend a lecture entitled:

    “The Decoration of the Temple of Repit in Athribis in Upper Egypt”

    By: Professor Christian Leitz, Director of the Institute of Ancient Near Eastern Studies (IANES),  
    University of Tübingen, Germany

    Tuesday, 4 October 2016; 4:00‒6:00 pm

    Bibliotheca Alexandrina Main Entrance, Auditorium.

    Lecture: Open to the Public, The lecture will be in English

    Abstract

    This lecture represent the temple of the lion-goddess Repit and her husband Min-Re in Athribis is located about 15 km southwest of Sohag in Upper Egypt. In 2005 started a joint Egyptian-German mission with the documentation and restauration of this unique limestone monument. The lecture will focus on the decoration of the temple, presenting the highlights of the different rooms so far excavated and cleaned

  • New governors for Cairo, Alexandria appointed during reshuffle

    New governors for Cairo, Alexandria appointed during reshuffle

    ΑίγυπτοςPrime Minister Sherif Ismail announced on Wednesday the appointment of six new governors for Cairo, Alexandria, Qalubyia, Elminya, Fayoum, and Suez governorates, according to state-owned media.

    Maj Gen Ahmed Taymour has been standing in for the Cairo governor for the past six months, as the previous governor, Galal Al-Saeed, was appointed as minister of transportation. Former minister of transportation Atef Abdel Hamid was appointed as the new governor of the Cairo governorate.

    Maj Gen Ahmed Al-Hayatmi, governor of Suez, was dismissed from his position while he was attending an official meeting, according to the state-owned Al-Ahram. He resumed the meeting and did not return to the governorate headquarters.

    Ismail appointed Maj Gen Reda Farhat as the governor of Alexandria, after several altercations between previous governor Mohamed Abdel Zaher and Minister of National Development Ahmed Zaki Badr, as the former accused the latter of intervening in the affairs of the governorate. The dismissal decision included deputy governor of Alexandria Souad Al-Khouly.

    Al-Khouly acted as the interim governor of Alexandria following the dismissal of the previous governor, Hany Al-Messiry. When Abdel Zaher took over the post of governor, he was appointed as his deputy.

    The partial reshuffle that took place on Wednesday included five major generals and one university professor.

    (www.dailynewsegypt.com)

  • Archaeo Delta Photography Exhibition

    Archaeo Delta Photography Exhibition

    Βιβλιοθήκη ΑλεξανδρείαςThe exhibition is curated by the BA Alexandria Center for Hellenistic Studies in collaboration with the Ministry of Antiquities and Padua University and it will take place from 8 September until 30 September.

    The exhibition aims to document archaeological expeditions in various sites located in the Egyptian Delta in a rather unprecedented manner. The exhibition includes various photographs of archaeological sites and other landscapes, as well as photographs of two non-deltaic sites.

    The exhibition will also display pictures of the following archaeological expeditions:

    • Kom al-Ahmer and Kom Wasit in Beheira: Padova University, Italy.
    • Quesna, Sais- Mutubis in Kafr el-Sheikh: Durham University, United Kingdom.
    • Tell Timai, Daqahlyia: Hawaii University, USA.
    • Tell Murra, Sharqyia: Jagiellonian University in Poland.
    • Athribis, Sohag: Egyptian-German mission organized by the Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities and the University of Tübingen.
    • Demeit al-Sebba, Fayoum: Salento University, Italy.

      Contact Person: Randa Ahmed 
      Phone: 1942 
      Email: [email protected]

  • International Conference on Chemical Sciences & Applications

    International Conference on Chemical Sciences & Applications

    ΓενικάInternational Conference on Chemical Sciences & Applications (ICCSA-2016) which will be held in 6-9 August 2016  Alexandria – Egypt.

    The ICCSA-2016 aims to bring together leading academic scientists, researchers and research scholars to exchange and share their experiences and research results about all aspects of chemical sciences. It also provides the premier interdisciplinary forum for researchers, practitioners and educators to present and discuss the most recent innovations, trends, and concerns, practical challenges encountered and the solutions adopted in the field of chemical sciences.

    In addition the scientific sessions of our conference, there will be social activities which include city tours, cultural nights etc. We encourage you to bring your family, they also will enjoy of visiting one of the most important historical and coastal sites in Egypt and the world.

    We look forward to greeting you at the ICCSA-2016 conference in Egypt.