Fayoum
Oasis Population History Antiquities Location
Fayoum is a wonderful area of Egypt with a rich and
interesting history. It is an area where Egyptians often
vacation and which is constantly growing more popular among
Europeans. This 692 sq. mile depression was a lush paradise
during prehistoric times. It's water level was eighty-five
meters higher than today (currently 45 meters below sea
level) and the Nile regularly flooded through the low
mountains separating it from the Fayoum. At 215 square km,
the current lake Qaroun remains Egypt's largest salt water
lake. The prehistoric people who lived here were, at first,
nomadic hunters and gatherers, but later began harvesting
plants near the lake. This developed into what is said to be
the earliest agricultural area in the world, where fences
were erected and guarded warehouses built. It has remained
an agriculture center, well known for it's fruits,
vegetables and chickens.
But agriculture is not the Fayoums only claim for being
first. The Greek mummy portraits found in the Fayoum are
said to be the worlds first true life portraits, and
examples can be found in area museums. In addition, a paved
road, which has been noted as a landmark of engineering by
engineering societies along side the Eiffel Tower and Statue
of Liberty, is said to be possibly the first paved road in
the world and dates to over 4,500 years. And finally, the
worlds first dam was probably built here in order to control
the Nile floods into the area.
The peacefulness of the area is a relief from the hustle
and bustle of Cairo, from which it is a brief trip. Bird
life still abounds around Lake Qaroun, bordered by
semi-nomadic Bedouin settlements and fishing villages. Here,
on the edge of the desert, you can sail, windsurf, swim and
fish. Other places of outstanding natural beauty near Fayoum
are the hot springs at Ain al-Siliyin, where you can bath
and the waterfalls at Wadi al-Rayan, 40km towards Bahariyya,
also suitable for swimming and picnics.
Fayoum is not a true oasis since it depends on Nile water
instead of underground springs or wells. The ancient Bahr
Yussef canal runs through the center of the city and
irrigates the land. Only two hours from Cairo by road,
Fayoum is renouned for its year-round warm climate, numerous
water wheels (introduced by the Ptolemies in the 3rd
century) and lush agricultural land. Cotton, clover,
tomatoes, medicinal plants and fruit are all grown here. The
local Souk (market) in Fayoum City sells copperware, spices
and gold jewelry and there is a special pottery market once
a week.
Other small villages in the area too small to document
independently include Qasr Qarun at the western end of
Birket Qarun and Shakshuk also by the lake on a bay.
Fayoum History
TheFayoum, sometimes
referred to as the Fayoum Oasis, even though it is not a
true Oasis, is situated not too far south of Cairo. It takes
its name from the Coptic word, Phiom or Payomj, meaning lake
or sea. During very ancient times, it was actually a sea,
and today is well known for the finds of great, ancient
whales.
During prehistory, more people lived in the
Fayoum than in the Nile Valley. The land here was
lush, and there was an abundance of water. Between 7200 and
6000 BC, a time known as the Qarunian period, Southwest
Asians, whom we call Epi-Paleolithic Qarunians, migrated to
the area and settled it, making hunting and fishing their
main occupations. At the time, plants and animals were just
beginning to be domesticated. All of this took place around
a much larger lake than is there now.
Later, during Neolithic times (5500 to 4000 BC), two
distinct groups of people existed around the lake shores.
These were the early Neolithic Fayumian and Late Neolithic
Moerian. It was during this period that the first
agricultural communities sprang forth. These people dined on
gazelle, hartebeests or catfish, cooked in rough faced bowls
or cooking pots, and served their friends and family on red
polished rectangular earthenware dishes.
However, around 4000 BC, the climate of the Fayoum began to
dry up, and over a period of many years, the people left
their drought stricken homes and migrated closer to the
Nile. By about 3500 BC, some were living east of the Nile in
what is now Maadi-Digla, a modern suburb south of Cairo.
From their ancient sites, we know that they had grain silos,
made pottery and used sickles. Once the Nile Valley became
dominant, the Fayoum was all but abandoned, because life
along the river was much easier. The Fayoum became a hunting
and fishing paradise, as well as a place to be mined for its
salts, limestone and chert.
The Fayoum Oasis has come in and out of favor with tourists
to Egypt over the years. Only a few years ago, it remained a
hunter's paradise but hunting also has its more ancient
legends in the Fayoum. It was here, Diodorus tells us, that
King Menes, the uniter of Upper and Lower Egypt, went on a
hunting trip and almost lost his life when his own dogs
attacked him near the lake. However, this legend records
that his life was saved by a crocodile which carried him
across the water to safety. As a reward, he declared the
lake a sanctuary for crocodiles and founded the city of
Shedet, known to the Greeks as Crocodilopolis but today
called Kiman Faris. His city became the cult center of the
crocodile god Sobek, Though the Fayoum was identified with
Nun, the primeval ocean, the origin of all life in ancient
mythology, Sobek remained the chief deity of the region
throughout dynastic and Greek times and into the Roman era.
All the known temples were dedicated, or at least
co-dedicated, to one or another of his aspects. A sacred
crocodile kept at the main temple at Crocodilopolis was seen
and described by both Herodotus and Strabo.
Nevertheless, during the early dynastic times, the Fayoum
remained mostly undeveloped, much of it probably marsh and
swamp, though it was a favored hunting ground for the
Egyptian elite. During the Old Kingdom, it was known as
Ta-she, or She-resy (the Southern Lake).
Then in the 12th Dynasty, numerous Egyptian kings brought
new life to the area. They took up residence at Lisht,
nearby in the Nile Valley. It was probably the
founder of this dynasty, Amenemhat I, who, during the first
half of the 20th century BC, flooded the Fayoum to create
the famous Lake Moeris, which was described 1,500 years
later by Herodotus. He also built his pyramid at Lisht. His
successor, Senusret I, erected an obelisk of Abgig, and
later, the Lahun pyramid was built for Senusret II.
Amenemhat III, who had a long, peaceful reign towards the
end of the 19th century BC, added a number of monuments to
the region, including the colossi of Biahmu (al Sanam), the
temples at Madinat Madi and Kiman Faris, and at Hawara he
built the famous Labyrinth and his own pyramid, the only one
to be built away from the Nile Valley. His successor,
Amenemhat IV, also worked at the temple of Madinat Madi.
However, after these Middle Kingdom kings, interest dropped
off once again until the Ptolemies and their Greek rule
(after the death of Alexander the Great in 323 BC). Really,
very little is known about the Fayoum during Egypt's New
Kingdom.
We actually have considerable information about the Fayoum
during Greek times because of the many hundreds of papyri
that were discovered throughout the area during the past
century. Mummies were wrapped in old papyrus scrolls, so old
cemeteries were and continue to be excellent libraries of
information about the Fayoum.
These documents are diverse, revealing census records,
household accounts, fictional stories and details about the
army. So extensive are they that we not only know the names
of towns, but also their districts and street names. We know
that men married at around eighteen to twenty years of age,
and women around fifteen. We also know that the Greeks
practiced infanticide, especially if the child was female.
Under Greek rule, there were 114 villages in the Fayoum,
with sixty-six of them taking Greek names. There was
considerable rivalry between these villages, sometimes
resulting in open hostility. They stole crops, soil and
water rights from each other.
We also know that there was a thriving tourist trade even
then, when pilgrims would come to feed the sacred crocodiles
with fried fish and honey cakes.
The first Greek ruler, Ptolemy I began a process of
improving the region by draining a part of Lake Moeris, and
thus reclaiming about 1,200 square kilometers of excellent
land. His work was continued by his son, Ptolemy II
Philadelphus, who gave parcels of the new and very fertile
land to his Greek and Macedonian veterans, which provided
the region with a fresh profusion of humanity. With these
efforts, the Fayoum blossomed into probably the richest and
most productive area of the country. These new settlers made
the Fayoum into the "Garden of Egypt" with new innovations
such as the water propelled saqya, or water wheel, now a
well known feature of the region.
During the Ptolemaic Period, settlers in the Fayoum were
mostly Greeks and Macedonians, but there were also groups of
Jews, Persians, Arabs, Syrians, Thracians and Samaritans.
Here, an interesting process took place for, unlike the
Greeks in Alexandria who remained mostly a homogeneous
community for many years, the Greeks of the Fayoum
intermarried with native Egyptians, as did the other
nationalities. Hence, the Fayoum became a great melting pot
in which racial purity did not long survive.
Ptolemy II named one of the new settlements on the eastern
fringe Philadelphia, meaning "brotherly love", in reference
to the sister that he married, Arsinoe. In fact, he also
renamed the whole province in her honor, calling it the
Arsinoite nome. Prior to this, the Greeks had simply known
it as "the Marsh". Now, it was divided into a number of
districts (merides), which included Heracleides in the
north, Themistos in the west and Polemon in the south. Upon
her death, Arsinoe was deified by the Fayoum populous, and
there was a great Arsinoeia festival held annually in the
Fayoum during the month of Misra (August).
Though the Fayoum probably began to decline during the late
Greek Period and even as early as the reign of Ptolemy II,
after the fall of Cleopatra to Augustus in 30 BC, the
prosperity continued for some time. What the Romans found in
the Fayoum was a Hellenized landowner gentry in the towns,
while the Egyptians worked and lived in the more rural
areas. They also found clogged canals and broken dikes, and
Augustus ordered the Roman army into the Fayoum to clean and
repair the water system.
But as that great empire became unstable and began to
disintegrate, so too did the Fayoum. Under a corrupt local
government and mismanagement, along with an atmosphere of
general economic depression, the successful Ptolemaic
irrigation system once again gradually fell into disrepair,
and much good land was lost, some forever, to the desert.
Between the 3rd and 5th centuries AD, the towns of Karanis,
Bacchias, Philadelphia, Tebtunis and Dionysias declined and
were eventually abandoned.
In addition, while the income of the people in the Fayoum
was relatively high, the average poll tax was twice that of
any other place in Egypt. Finally, Rome exacted too much
from the Fayoum, and the population, which was always
rebellious, began to decline. The region was also hit hard
by plague.
In 395 AD, the Roman Empire was partitioned, and Egypt came
under the rule of the eastern emperor, ruling from
Byzantium. Christianity had become the official religion of
the empire, and in the Fayoum their was once as many as
thirty-five monasteries. But the Egyptian church split with
the Byzantine in 451 due to a doctrinal issue. For much of
Egypt, the Byzantine rule was not popular, and when the
Arabs came in 640, they were generally welcomed. By then,
many Egyptians believed that the new regime could not be
more repressive than the old.
However, the Fayoum held out against the Arab armies, and
this was one of the last provinces of the country to fall to
the new rulers of Egypt. The Fayoum was defended by a
Byzantine garrison and a native Egyptian force led by John
of Maros, who was stationed at Lahun. When the Arabs
threatened Bahnasa (Oxyrhynchus), south of Beni Suef, John
met them and at first managed to repulse them. However, the
Arabs soon returned with reinforcements and took the town.
John and his men fled further south to Asyut, but there they
were finally routed and killed. Nevertheless, a man named
Theodorus continued to use the Fayoum as a base for
unsuccessful sorties against Bahnasa.
Now, the main Byzantine forces retired to the fortress of
Babylon (now in Old Cairo) leaving much of the remainder of
Egypt in Arab hands. During April of 641, Babylon also fell,
and this marked the end of the resistance from the Fayoum as
well. Upon
hearing the news of the fall of Babylon, Domentianus, who
was the prefect of the Fayoum, fled with his troops during
the night, leaving only a token garrison behind. At the
time, Theodorus was away in Middle Egypt, and the Arabs
easily took the Fayoum, killing the few troops left behind.
Interestingly however, under the Arabs, their first governor
of the Fayoum was a Coptic Christian named Philoxenos.
Yet, despite the decline of the Fayoum during Roman times,
it remained famed at the beginning of the Early Islamic
Period as a very rich province. Even then, legend credits
the Fayoum with some 360 villages, and it was said that each
of these could provide the whole of Egypt with food for one
day. Unfortunately though, the region continued its downward
course.
When the Fatimid army invaded Egypt, they reached the Fayoum
in 914, invading and devastating it, before finally being
driven out of the country. The Fatimids made a second
attempt to invade Egypt five years later when they pushed
into Upper Egypt as far as al-Ashmunein (hermopolis), south
of al-Minya. This time, they sacked Alexandria, as well as
the Fayoum. However, in the Fayoum, the invaders succumbed
to famine and plague, and were consequently unable to gain
the upper hand in a crucial battle at Giza. Though some
forty-nine years later they would return and finally take
the country, the Fatimids were again sent packing back home
in the spring of 920.
The Fayoum continued to decline, however. At the end of the
10th century, the annual fiscal return of the Fayoum was
620,000 dinars, but by the reign of Salah al-Din, during the
latter half of the 12 century, this figure had dropped to a
mere 145,162 dinars. Yet, Salah al-Din, known to Europeans
as Saladin, granted land in the Fayoum to some of his
Kurdish and Turkish officers, and even owned land in the
province himself. In 1245, Abu 'Uthman al-Nabulsi, a Syrian
Amir who was then governor of the Fayoum, wrote a book about
the province which focused on its famous irrigation system.
He found it to be so neglected that it was hardly
functioning at all. The Bahr Munha canal, better known now
as Bahr Yusuf, was so silted up that water only flowed
through it during the Nile Flood, a period lasting about
four months of the year, and the smaller canals were in no
better state. He discovered that nothing had been spent on
canal maintenance during the previous hundred years. He did
set about making improvements during his governorship by
cutting new channels and clearing old ones. Shortly after
his brief governorship, there were also two great
hydrological works commissioned, including the now ruined
wall of Shidmoh, and a new regulator at Lahun, which was
still in use until the middle of the 20th century.
However, the Fayoum continued its decline, particularly
during the Ottoman Period. They controlled Egypt for over
200 years, between 1517 and 1798. During this time, the
Fayoum was governed by a qadi sent once a year from
Istanbul. During the remainder of the year, the qadi's
deputy held a divan twice a week, attended by sixty Arab
Sheikhs. In 1634, the annual revenue of the Fayoum is
reported to have dropped to a mere 56,000 dinars. The region
had many problems during this period, partly due to its
remote location, which was difficult to access particularly
during the flood season. It was also especially vulnerable
to Bedouin and Berber attacks, a problem that was not
completely brought under control until the middle of the
19th century. But another reason for the regions continued
decline was the discovery of the Cape route to India, which
seriously affected the Egyptian economy as a whole
Then, in 1798, the French army of Napoleon invaded Egypt and
defeated the two Mamluk Period Beys, Murad and Ibrahim, who
then controlled Egypt. This was the famous Battle of the
Pyramids, and afterwards Ibrahim Bey fled to Syria. However,
Murad Bey retreated only as far as Middle Egypt, where a
force of 5,000 men under General Louis Charles Antoine
Desaix de Veygoux was sent to rout him. The French, however,
never really succeeded in doing so.
The two armies battled all around Middle Egypt and the
Fayoum. First, Desaix tried to surprise Murad's camp at
Bahnasa, but Murad was forewarned by local farmers and
managed to slip away. Desaix pursued Murad to Beni Suef,
where after another battle Murad once again escaped.
Afterwards, they fought the next battle at Sidmant, just a
little southwest of Lahun, but this confrontation was once
again indecisive. Desaix camped at Lahun and then at Fayoum
Town, where he was held up for a month by an epidemic of
conjunctivitis. Yet, when Murad attacked the debilitated
Garrison in the Fayoum on November 8th, he was repulsed.
Desaix regrouped at Beni Suef and followed Murad into Upper
Egypt, and finally Murad retreated to Nubia, leaving Desaix
in control of Upper Egypt.
Then, in 1799, Murad reappeared in the Fayoum, though by
now, Bonaparte had retired from Egypt, leaving his deputy,
Kleber, to negotiate a French evacuation. Part of the
pressure on Kleber was Murad's activities in and around the
Fayoum. In October, Desaix once again assembled two camel
columns to march on Murad in the Fayoum. They met at
Sidmant, but Murad took the offensive, was repelled and
pursued, but once again managed to escape.
In fact, peace was eventually made between Murad and the
French. He was appointed governor of Upper Egypt for the
Republic of France on May 30, 1800. However, it was a short
governorship, for he died of the plague in Upper Egypt on
April 22, 1801.
When the French abandoned Egypt in 1801, a power struggle
was created between the Turks and the Mamluks. Between these
two powers was a brilliant Albanian coffee dealer from
Macedonian named Muhammad Ali. Once again, the Fayoum would
suffer. In September 1806, Fayoum town was taken and sacked
by the Mamluk Yasin Bey, and a large part of its population
was massacred for its support of Muhammad Ali. Yasin managed
to hold on to the Fayoum for almost four years, until
Muhammad retook it in 1810. That following year, Muhammad
consolidated his power with the famous massacre of the
Mamluks at the Cairo Citadel.
Muhammad Ali, often known as the father of modern Egypt,
revived the failing economy of the country with agricultural
reforms, promoting cotton as a cash crop in areas such as
the Fayoum. He also managed to largely subdue the nomadic
tribes who raided the Fayoum, first by force, but when that
did not work, by political appointments and large land
grants. This approach was particularly successful in the
Fayoum, where the problem had been most serious.
In the more modern era, transport and communications
improved in the Fayoum with the railway system that
connected it to the Nile Valley in 1874, and the network of
light (small gauge) railways that ran throughout the
province. Around the turn of the 20th century, the British
built good roads and revised the irrigation system, reclaim