Ezbet el-Borg

Ezbet el-Borg
عزبة البرج
city

Map showing Izbat al-Burj in relation to the city of Damietta
Ezbet el-Borg

Location in Egypt

Coordinates: EG 31°30′11″N 31°50′28″E / 31.50306°N 31.84111°E / 31.50306; 31.84111Coordinates: EG 31°30′11″N 31°50′28″E / 31.50306°N 31.84111°E / 31.50306; 31.84111
Country  Egypt
Governorate Damietta
Population
  Total 70,000
Time zone EST (UTC+2)

Ezbet el-Borg (Arabic: عزبة البرج ʿEzbet el-Borg, IPA: [ˈʕezbet elˈboɾɡ]; also transliterated ʻIzbat al-Burj) is a coastal city with a large fishing industry in Damietta Governorate, Egypt. It is 15 km (9 mi) northeast of Damietta, and 210 km (130 mi) from Cairo. Its population is approximately 70,000.[1]

The city is situated on the northern coast of Egypt at the mouth of the Damietta river, a distributary of the Nile, opposite Ras El Bar.

History

The Ras Elbar lighthouse seen from Ezbet el-Borg.

The city was named in reference to the defensive tower that once stood there ("Burj" in Arabic means tower). In 1869, a 180-foot (55 m) minaret was built to guide ships in the Mediterranean Sea, but this location is now just a shallow spot in the Nile riverbed. The town was historically granted to the Syrian Kahil family by Muhammad Ali of Egypt.[2]

In recent history, there were accusations of ballot stuffing at the local voting station during the 2007 Shura Council election. The August 2009 Egyptian hostage escape from Somali pirates mostly involved sailors from the town.

Economy

The city is home to approximately 10,000 fishermen (1% of Egypt's total), and the base of Egypt's largest fishing boat fleet, including boats of the traditional felucca type. The city is also home to a sardine-canning factory operated by the Edfina Company.[3] The fishing sector provides the main source of income for the locals.[4] Many of the fishing boats venture far along the Eastern Mediterranean and the Red Sea. It is also a center for ship and yacht-building in Egypt.[5]

References

  1. مدينة عزبة البرج (in Arabic). Retrieved 13 July 2012.
  2. Philipp, Thomas (1985). The Syrians in Egypt, 1725–1975. Steiner. p. 93. ISBN 978-3-515-04031-0. Retrieved 13 July 2012.
  3. The New Encyclopædia Britannica: Micropædia. Encyclopædia Britannica. 1993. p. 867. ISBN 978-0-85229-571-7. Retrieved 13 July 2012.
  4. United States. Foreign Broadcast Information Service; United States. Joint Publications Research Service. Near East/South Asia report. Foreign Broadcast Information Service. Retrieved 13 July 2012.
  5. Hopkins, Harry (1969). Egypt, the Crucible: The Unfinished Revolution in the Arab World. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company. ISBN 9780436201516.

External links

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