Al Mansurah

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For other places with the same name, see Al Mansurah (disambiguation).
Al Mansurah

Location of Al Mansurah

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Al Mansurah (also spelled as Mansoura) (Arabic: المنصورة al-manṣūrah), with a population of 420,000. It is the capital of Ad Daqahliyah Governorate

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[edit] Location

Mansurah lies on the east bank of the Damietta branch of River Nile, in the delta region. Mansurah is about 120 km northeast of Cairo and 40 km north of the town of Mit Ghamr. Across from Al Mansurah, on the opposite bank of the Nile, is the town of Talkha.

[edit] History

Mansurah was established in 1219 by Al Malek Al Adel Ayoub. After the Muslims defeated the Crusaders on its land during the Seventh Crusade it was named Al Mansurah—" The Victorious").

Main article: Seventh Crusade

In the Seventh Crusade, the French were defeated and put to flight; between fifteen and thirty thousand of their men fell on the battlefield. Upwards of one hundred thousand horsemen, infantry, trades-people, and others, were made slaves. Louis IX of France was captured in the main battle and confined in the house of Ibrahim­ben Lokman, secretary to the sultan, and under the guard of the eunuch Sahil. The king's brother was made prisoner at the same time, and carried to the same house. The sultan provided for their subsistence. The house in now the only museum in Al Mansoura, is open to the public and houses articles that used to belong to the French royals, including his personal thirteenth century toilet.

The Al Mansura air battle on 14 October 1973 occurred during the Yom Kippur War, also known as the Ramadan War or the October War. Israeli Air Force fighters attacking Egyptian air bases were intercepted by the Egyptian Air Force. In fifty minutes, outnumbered EAF pilots shot down between fifteen and twenty IAF fighters (although Israeli sources place the number at seven or lower). Only six Egyptian planes were lost, just three to Israeli fire, making Al Mansura the greatest and most storied victory of Arab fighter pilots against the IAF.

[edit] Culture

Dakahliya province is famous for producing some of the most acclaimed Egyptians in the fields of science, engineering, medicine and arts. Most famous among them is the chanteuse Umm Kolthoum. There is a square bearing her name in the city, where her statue stands.

The Egyptian Arabic dialect spoken by Mansurah's population is, broadly speaking, northern Egyptian Arabic but with a noticeable influence from the surrounding rural villages, each of which have, over the years, contributed to the city's population. There are some similarities to Alexandrian Egyptian Arabic in some aspects of pronunciation.

Like Cairo and Alexandria, Mansurah was home to a flourishing Greek community until the Nasser era, when many were forced to leave. Many of the older and best established shops and businesses around the city still bear their original Greek names. The first English school in the city was established on the site of the old Greek school in the Toriel area, one of the traditionally relatively affluent residential districts of the city.

[edit] Education and sports

Mansoura University
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Mansoura University

Mansurah University was founded in 1962, initially as a branch of Cairo University. The Urology and Nephrology center of Mansoura University is considered by many as the best kidney center in the Middle East and Africa, as well as one of the best in the world[citation needed] to some respect (also known as the Mohamed Ghoneim Center). Besides being a major commercial and administrative center in the, largely rural, Dakahliya district, it could be described as primarily a 'university town'.

Mansurah also has a sports stadium which is home to its football team. Despite the city's ranking as the 'third Egyptian city' [citation needed], none of the African Nations Cup 2006 games were played there when Egypt hosted the tournament. Mansurah's beach, Gamasa, is to the north of the city.

Coordinates: 31°03′00″N, 31°23′00″E

[edit] Famous From Al Mansourah

[edit] External links