Alexandria Part I --- December 29, 2008
Alexandria Part II --- Tuesday, December 30, 2008
It’s 9:30 in the morning and all is well after several cups of coffee and a fortifying breakfast from the smorgasbord offering at the elegant Cecil Hotel. It’s a buffet set up and your choices include fresh squeezed juices (orange, strawberry, honeydew, lime, watermelon), cheeses and meats (you know, like in German-speaking countries), German-style sausages, kofta, hummus, more hummus, croissants, cream-filled pastries, 14 other types of pastries, at least, crepes and their condiments, omelettes made to order, several varieties of fruit salad, more fruit, yogurt, cereals, potato-cheese ball things, falafel-y type things, and sweeping views of the Mediterranean sea. Not a bad way to start the day.
Tim and Katy are off to the search for the catacombs for an hour or two and I am staying here at the hotel to write a bit. It’s a hotel with a bit of a literary history itself: Lawrence Durrell, author of Alexandria Quartet, took a room here in 1942. Winston Churchill stayed here, and during the British occupation of Egypt, the British Secret Service operated out of a suite on the first floor here. It’s an elegant place built in the 1930s, and our rooms have good views of the Corniche and the Eastern Harbor. And did I mention the breakfast? Delightful and fortifying.
And as for the sightseeing: we arrived in the wee hours of Sunday the 28th, and after getting through the airport with remarkable ease and fluidity we took a slightly nerve-wracking taxi ride to our hotel. Three-quarter’s of a night’s sleep later, we arose, breakfasted, and set out in search of exhibits of the glorious past. We made our way to the Graeco-Roman museum, which Lonely Planet bills as “dusty but wonderful.” We found the building which we believed to be the museum (it lacked a sign, so we had to use our circumstantial evidence skills --- it appeared to be of Graeco-Roman architectural style, unlike its neighbors, it had what appeared to be a ticket office, and they were hauling out what appeared to be museum cases). We walked around the building a couple times looking for what might be an (open) entrance or place to purchase tickets, but were forced to deduce that it was closed today for renovation or moving of museum cases or something. Anyway, from the outside it did appear to be “dusty but wonderful” and we, undaunted, set out in search of the Alexandria National Museum.
Here we did indeed find a wonderful museum, inside of an old Italianate villa that had been museum-fied. We started in the basement, the Pharonic Age, and saw a host of artifacts from this period in Egypt (about 3100 BC – 332 BC). We saw some great stone representations, for example, of the lioness goddess Sekhmet, of the Eye of Re, of Thutmose I and II and III (standing, kneeling, sphinx, respectively) and Queen Hatshepsut. And we moved over to another room and saw Cleopatra VII (the very one who Shakespeare wrote about!) and then up a flight of stairs was an exhibition on the current underwater archaeological digs currently going on near Alexandria. (The Alexandria of yore is largely underwater; so even though it’s an ancient city, most of the buildings here today are relatively recent.)
From the museum we wondered along the bustling Tariq al-Horreyya, past the university and over to Sharia Fuad to lunch at the Coffee Roastery, a western-style cafĂ© frequented by students and youthful Alexandrians. Sufficiently fueled up, we braced ourselves for the kamikaze crossing of the streets and made our way to the Kom al-Dikka (Mound of Rubble), a Roman amphitheater discovered just recently when the area was being dug up to put in a new apartment building. The theater somehow was marvelously preserved under all that dirt for all those years, and after paying admission you’re free to walk right into the ruins and take a seat on any of the 13 white marble terraces that form a semi circle around the main stage area. They’ve also discovered colorful mosaics and the remains of Roman baths, and they are still at work excavating the rest (in fact, we saw the end of a column stuck under dirt that they are in the process of extricating.) Dozens of stray cats roam the grounds (and one well-fed one tried rather successfully to befriend Katy, who’s heartstrings were still being tugged by a tiny stray sickly-looking kitty that gave her a pitiful look on the way in). Anyway, the amphitheater was very cool, and there were neat patterns, amazingly well-preserved, carved into some of the surrounding walls (photos to come).
From the amphitheater we hiked along the Corniche all the way out to the western edge of the Eastern Harbor, out on a dock near Fort Qaitbey. The location was once the site of a tower-turned-lighthouse first built in 283BC (and later added to) at the behest of Ptolemy I. It stood for 17 centuries before being destroyed by an earthquake. Anyway, we didn’t actually go up to the fort, but walked along the harbor and back to have dinner at the Fish Market. It sits right on the water, on a jetty or on a dock (it was dark and we weren’t sure which) and seemed to be exceedingly popular with locals. While we were waiting for a table downstairs, we started chatting with a guy also waiting, a second year med student in the U.S. backpacking through Egypt solo on his winter break, and he joined us for dinner. We were all sort of confused by the ordering process, but eventually learned that you go up to a fish bar and point at what you want (grouper for Tim and me, shrimp for Katy, and sea bass for the med student) and then they ask how you want it prepared (grilled, fried) and bring it to you like that at the table, head and tail and all. It was very good and very very fresh and we got some good tips from our company (take a taxi to the catacombs, he suggested, rather than walking through the slums). Gelato on the way home and turned in fairly early after a full day.