Marina, Egypt

Marina
Marina's lake in Summer
Marina
Location in Egypt
Coordinates:
Country  Egypt
Governorate Alexandria
Time zone EST (UTC+2)
 • Summer (DST) +3 (UTC)

Marina, also Marina El Alamein (Arabic: مارينا العلمين‎), ancient Leukaspis or Antiphrae, is a tourist village located on the northern coast of Egypt, with a 11 km long beach. It is situated about 300 km away from Cairo, in the El Alamein area. Marina Village is often recognized by Egyptians as an area which caters to the elite of Egypt.

Contents

History

Leukaspis was a large port town, with a population around 15,000. The center of the town featured a basilica and a town hall that was converted into a Christian church. It was probably an important trading center between Egypt and Libya, and appears to have been a major center for Cretian imports. The settlement was destroyed in 365, when an earthquake off the coast of Crete created a tsunami. The town was not rebuilt, partially due to the crumbling state of the Roman Empire. Leukaspis was lost until 1986, when a group of engineers who were building roads in Marina revealed ancient houses and tombs. 200 acres (81 ha) of surrounding land was designated an archeological area, and excavations began in the 1990s. Prior to the site's discovery, the port area of the settlement was destroyed to make a man-made lagoon for a resort.

The Egyptian government plans to open Leukaspis as an open-air museum in mid-September 2010. It is expected to bolster the economy of Marina, attracting tourists year-round. Officials also hope that it will increase tourism to the battlefield in nearby El-Alamein, the site of the First and Second Battle of El Alamein. Th Egyptian government is also working to convert nearby Taposiris Magna, the suspected burial place of Cleopatra and Mark Antony, into a museum.

Tourism

The village is a gated community only accessible to those who live inside. Spanning almost 15 miles, this beach resort is split into eight different sections named Marina 1-7. Limestone villas and chalets and landscaped greenery are what characterize this exclusive part of the Middle East.

Historical overlay

The resort was the site of a bustling Greco-Roman port two thousand years ago.

The area was ruined during that period by a tsunami that resulted from an earthquake that hit Crete to the northwest. [1]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Paul Schemm, "Where Egypt's elite now play, an ancient Roman port on Mediterranean once thrived," Minneapolis-St. Paul Star-Tribune Sept. 7, 2010 http://www.startribune.com/science/102333059.html

External links