Rosetta
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| Nineteenth-century
cannons in a
mid-town square in Rosetta |
Rosetta is a port city on the Mediterranean coast
in Egypt. It is located 65 km (40 miles) east of Alexandria,
at 31°24'N 30°25'E, in al-Buhayrah governorate. It was founded
around 800 AD. With the decline of Alexandria following the
Ottoman conquest of Egypt in the 16th century, Rosetta boomed,
only to wane in importance after Alexandria's revival. During
the 19th century it was a popular British tourist destination,
known for its charming Ottoman mansions, citrus groves and
cleanliness. It is famous as the site where the Rosetta Stone
was found by French soldiers in 1799.
History
It is the modern representative of the ancient
Bolbitine, which lay a little farther north. In the Middle
Ages, Rosetta was a place of considerable commercial importance,
and it continued to flourish until the construction of the
Mahmudiyeh Canal and the improvement of the harbour at Alexandria
diverted most of its trade to the latter city.
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