Cairo
reveals
its
history
in a
succession
of
sights
and
quarters
and it's
in the
descriptions
of these
areas
that
we've
provided
the
relevant
background.
Cairo
is an
agglomeration
of half
a dozen
cities,
the
earliest
of which
came
into
existence
2500
years
after
ancient
Memphis
, the
first
capital
of
pharaonic
Egypt,
was
founded
(c.3100
BC)
across
the
river
and to
the
south.
During
the
heyday
of the
Old
Kingdom,
vast
necropolises
developed
along
the
desert's
edge as
the
pharaohs
erected
ever
greater
funerary
monuments,
from the
first
Step
Pyramid
at
Saqqara
to the
unsurpassable
Pyramids
of Giza
.
Meanwhile,
across
the Nile,
there
flourished
a sister-city
of
priests
and
solar
cults
known to
posterity
as
Ancient
Heliopolis
.
It
took
centuries
of
Persian,
Greek
and
Roman
rule to
efface
both
cities,
by which
time a
new
fortified
town had
developed
on the
opposite
bank.
Babylon-in-Egypt
was the
beginning
of the
tale of
cities
that
culminates
in
modern
Cairo,
the
first
chapter
of which
is
described
under "Old
Cairo".
Oppressed
by
foreign
overlords,
Babylon's
citizens
almost
welcomed
the army
of Islam
that
conquered
Egypt in
641. For
strategic
and
spiritual
reasons,
their
general,
Amr,
chose to
found a
new
settlement
beyond
the
walls of
Babylon
-
Fustat
, the "City
of the
Tent" (see
"Old
Cairo"),
which
evolved
into a
sophisticated
metropolis
while
Europe
was in
the Dark
Ages.
Under
successive
dynasties
of
khalifs
who
ruled
the
Islamic
Empire
from
Iraq,
three
more
cities
were
founded,
each to
the
northeast
of the
previous
one,
which
itself
was
either
spurned
or
devastated.
When the
schismatic
Fatimids
won the
khalifate
in 969,
they
created
an
entirely
new
walled
city -
Al-Qahira
- beyond
this
teeming,
half-derelict
conurbation.
Fatimid
Cairo
formed
the
nucleus
of the
later,
vastly
expanded
and
consolidated
capital
that
Salah
al-Din (Saladin)
left to
the
Ayyubid
dynasty
in 1193.
But
their
reliance
on
imported
slave-warriors
caused
power to
ebb to
these
Mamlukes,
ushering
in a new
era.
Mamluke
Cairo
encompassed
all the
previous
cities,
Salah
al-Din's
Citadel
(where
the
sultans
dwelt),
the
northern
port of
Bulaq
and vast
cemeteries
and
rubbish
tips
beyond
the city
walls.
Mamluke
sultans
like
Beybars,
Qalaoun,
Barquq
and
Qaitbey
erected
mosques,
mausoleums
and
caravanserais
that
still
ennoble
what is
now
called "Islamic
Cairo".
The like-named
page of
this
section
relates
their
stories,
the
Turkish
takeover,
the
decline
of
Ottoman
Cairo
and the
rise of
Mohammed
Ali, who
began
the
modernization
of the
city.
Under
Ismail,
the most
profligate
of his
successors,
a new,
increasingly
European
Cairo
arose
beside
the Nile
(see
"Central
Cairo").
By 1920,
the
city's
area was
six
times
greater
than
that of
medieval
Cairo,
and
since
then its
residential
suburbs
have
expanded
relentlessly,
swallowing
up
farmland
and
desert.
The
emergence
of this
Greater
Cairo
is
charted
under "Gezira
and the
West
Bank"
and "The
northern
suburbs".