Ostrakine (Greek: Ὀστρακίνη or Latin: Ostracena) was an Ancient Egyptian city at a location that is known as El Felusiyat today.
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Ostrakine was located on the road between Alexandria and Gaza at Lake Bardawil, a saltwater lagoon near the Meditarranean coast of the northern Sinai.
Established as a harbour in the first century BC,[1] near Sirbonis, the longtime border between Egypt and Syria,[2] archaeological evidence suggests that Ostrakine was a centre of glass-making in the classical period.[3] A bishopric during the Byzantine period, there is evidence of three Byzantine churches,[4] and that the town remained important as a stop along the trade route in the early Muslim period.[5]
Ostrakine has traditionally been thought to be the site of the tomb of the prophet Habakkuk[6] and the martyrdom of James the Less [7]
Ostrakine is depicted on the Madaba map [3]