| Pompey's
Pillar
An approximately 25m red Aswan granite column with a
circumference of 9m, was constructed in honor of the
Emperor Diocletain. Originally from the temple of the
Serapis, it was once a magnificent structure rivaling the
Soma and the Caesareum. Nearby are subterranean galleries
where sacred Apis bulls were
buried, and three sphinxes. After his defeat by Julius
Caesar in the civil war, Pompey fled to Egypt where he
was murdered in 48 BC; mediaeval travelers later believed
he must be buried here, and that the capital atop the corner served as
a container for his head. In fact, the pillar was raised
in honor of Diocletain at the
very end of the 4th century. Diocletain captured Alexandria after it had been under
siege. The Arabs called it "Amoud el-Sawari",
Column of the Horsemen. The Pillar is the tallest ancient
monument in Alexandria.
Design, Layout and Graphic Art by Jimmy
Dunn, an InterCity
Oz, Inc. Employee |