Newsletter, Number 54 (JUNE, 1965)

During three months spent in Egypt early this year, I had an opportunity to visit the sites at which the Center is sponsoring excavations: Fustat, Gebel Adda, and Mendes. It is hard unless one has seen them, to imagine three localities so widely different in character. Fustat is and has been for ce...

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spelling oai:localhost:123456789-1322022-03-26T23:13:21Z Newsletter, Number 54 (JUNE, 1965) During three months spent in Egypt early this year, I had an opportunity to visit the sites at which the Center is sponsoring excavations: Fustat, Gebel Adda, and Mendes. It is hard unless one has seen them, to imagine three localities so widely different in character. Fustat is and has been for centuries, a vast city dump, a desert wasteland bordered by the slums of Old Cairo and haunted by scavengers, humans, and canines. It is a windy, dusty, and malodorous site, cold and sometimes wet in winter, hot and fly-ridden in spring, never a very pleasant place in which to dig. It was, however, the place in which the first Arab conquerors of Egypt established their capital, and the excavators feel rewarded for discomfort by the discoveries they are makîng concernîng the old city and the way of life followed by the people who lived in it. They are working against time, for Fustat is being engulfed by modern Cairo. The area is being reclaimed to provide housing for some of the millions who live in the modem capital of Egypt. One is always aware, at Fustat, of those crowding millions, avid of present needs, knowing and caring little, if anything, of the past. 2021-12-24T09:48:13Z 2021-12-24T09:48:13Z 1965-06 Journal https://library.arce.org/handle/123456789/132 en application/pdf American Research Center in Egypt
institution My University
collection DSpace
language English
description During three months spent in Egypt early this year, I had an opportunity to visit the sites at which the Center is sponsoring excavations: Fustat, Gebel Adda, and Mendes. It is hard unless one has seen them, to imagine three localities so widely different in character. Fustat is and has been for centuries, a vast city dump, a desert wasteland bordered by the slums of Old Cairo and haunted by scavengers, humans, and canines. It is a windy, dusty, and malodorous site, cold and sometimes wet in winter, hot and fly-ridden in spring, never a very pleasant place in which to dig. It was, however, the place in which the first Arab conquerors of Egypt established their capital, and the excavators feel rewarded for discomfort by the discoveries they are makîng concernîng the old city and the way of life followed by the people who lived in it. They are working against time, for Fustat is being engulfed by modern Cairo. The area is being reclaimed to provide housing for some of the millions who live in the modem capital of Egypt. One is always aware, at Fustat, of those crowding millions, avid of present needs, knowing and caring little, if anything, of the past.
format Journal
title Newsletter, Number 54 (JUNE, 1965)
spellingShingle Newsletter, Number 54 (JUNE, 1965)
title_short Newsletter, Number 54 (JUNE, 1965)
title_full Newsletter, Number 54 (JUNE, 1965)
title_fullStr Newsletter, Number 54 (JUNE, 1965)
title_full_unstemmed Newsletter, Number 54 (JUNE, 1965)
title_sort newsletter, number 54 (june, 1965)
publisher American Research Center in Egypt
publishDate 2021
url https://library.arce.org/handle/123456789/132
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