Lighthouse Alexandria
Also known as: Александрийский маяк, Фаросский, Φάρος της Αλεξάνδρειας
inactive · Tower 140 m
Published as a public-ready text record; documentary media remains under attribution review.
Map
At a glance
Place
- Country
- Egypt
Structure
- Status
- inactive Legacy archive claim · Александрийский (Фаросский) маяк
- Construction date
- -283 Multiple lighthouse phases Александрийский (Фаросский) маяк archive
- Tower height
- 140 Legacy archive claim · Александрийский (Фаросский) маяк
Signal
- Visibility
- 50 Legacy archive claim · Александрийский (Фаросский) маяк Last known light information Last known light information. The record is marked inactive, so this value needs date/status review before it is read as a current operating signal.
Light Signature
No accepted light signature claims yet.
Signal pattern, color, period, visibility, optics, and operating context appear here after field-level review.
Light signature JSON will appear here after review.
Names & naming history
Some source names have not yet been assigned a reviewed language; script labels preserve provenance without hiding the row.
EN · Common
- Lighthouse Alexandria
- Mayachnik Drupal export Field: multi_fields.eng_name.field_eng_name_value
- Википедия Record-level source link
- Семь чудес света Record-level source link
Greek script · Local
- Φάρος της Αλεξάνδρειας
- Mayachnik Drupal export Field: multi_fields.local_name.field_local_name_value
- Википедия Record-level source link
- Семь чудес света Record-level source link
RU · Alternative
- Фаросский
- Mayachnik Drupal export Field: title.variant
- Википедия Record-level source link
- Семь чудес света Record-level source link
RU · Official
- Александрийский маяк
- Mayachnik Drupal export Field: title.variant
- Википедия Record-level source link
- Семь чудес света Record-level source link
(autotranslated, could have mistakes)
one of the 7 wonders of the world, was built in the 3rd century BC. e. in the Egyptian city of Alexandria, so that ships could safely pass the reefs on the way to the Alexandria Bay. At night they were helped in this by the reflection of flames, and during the day by a column of smoke. It was the world's first lighthouse and stood for almost a thousand years, but in 796 AD. e. was severely damaged by the earthquake. Subsequently, the Arabs who came to Egypt tried to restore it, and by the 14th century. the height of the lighthouse was about 30 m. At the end of the 15th century. Sultan Qait Bey erected a fortress on the site of the lighthouse, which still stands today.
Year started: approximately 283 BC.
Coordinates:
31°12′51″ n. w. 29°53′06″
Buy at OZON.ru - DVD | Discovery: Seven Wonders of the World. Alexandria Lighthouse. Mausoleum in Halicarnassus | The Seven Wonders Of The World | PAL | DVD: 164
- Model (photo and video)
- Alexandria (Faros) lighthouse, see in the program “I want to believe
- About the lighthouse in the Ukrainian program
During the time of the first Ptolemies, a lighthouse was built on the island of Pharos. According to ancient and medieval authors, it was taller than the tallest pyramid. But at the time Strabo visited it, the lighthouse was no longer very different from other structures. It was half destroyed. Its highest part had collapsed, and its remains lay near the tower, which had been covered with a temporary wooden roof, "and lived in it several watchmen."
The construction of lighthouses began in ancient times and was connected, first of all, with the development of navigation. At first these were just fires located on high banks. Then there are artificial structures. The Alexandria Lighthouse was built in 283 BC. e., the construction of this gigantic, for those times, structure lasted only 5 years. But before we begin to describe this wonder of the world, we should learn a little about the geography and history of the area where it was built.
Alexandria
Alexandria, founded in 332 BC, is located in the Nile Delta, on the site of the Egyptian town of Rakotis. It was one of the first cities of the Hellenistic era, built according to a single plan. In Alexandria there was a sarcophagus of Alexander the Great, there was also a museum - the abode of muses, a center of arts and science. So, an etymological thread is laid from the muses to the modern word “museum”. Museyon is at once an academy of sciences, a dormitory for scientists, a technical center, a school, and the world’s greatest library, which contained up to half a million scrolls. A passionate scribe and a vain man, King Ptolemy II suffered because the library did not have some unique manuscripts of Greek playwrights. He sent an embassy to Athens so that the Athenians would borrow the scrolls for a while to copy. Arrogant Athens demanded a fabulous deposit - 15 talents, almost half a ton of silver. Ptolemy accepted the challenge. The silver was delivered to Athens, and the agreement had to be reluctantly fulfilled. But Ptolemy did not forgive such distrust of his bibliophilic inclinations and his word of honor. He left the deposit to the Athenians and the manuscripts to himself. But that's not the point...
The harbor of Alexandria, perhaps the busiest and busiest in the whole world, was uncomfortable. The port in this harbor was founded by Alexander the Great during his visit to Egypt in 332 BC. e. The city flourished due to maritime trade. But by the 12th century AD. e. Alexandria Bay became so filled with silt that ships could no longer use it. From then on, the period of decline of Alexandria began, about which very little is known today...
Present-day Alexandria has more than 2 million inhabitants; it stretches for 25 kilometers along a sand spit that once cut the sea bay, forming a large salt lake. But modern Alexandria has completely different outlines. In the north-west, where there is now an elongated peninsula with a densely populated Arab quarter and the magnificent Abu al-Abbas Mosque, in ancient times there was a sea, or rather, two sea piers - the Grand Pier and the Pier of Happy Return. From the sea side they were covered by the rocky island of Pharos, which served as a natural pier.
History of the building
The Nile carries a lot of silt; very skillful pilots were required in the shallow water among the rocks and shoals. To ensure the safety of navigation, it was decided to build a lighthouse on the island of Pharos, on the approach to Alexandria. In 285 BC, the island was connected to the mainland by a dam, and the architect Sostratus of Knidos began work. Construction took only five years: Alexandria was an advanced technical center and the richest city of the then world, the builders had a huge fleet, quarries and the achievements of Museyon academicians at their disposal.
This structure, just like the pyramids, arose from the sweat and labor of slaves, and during construction the whips of the overseers also whistled. But it had two fundamental differences: firstly, the lighthouse on the island of Foros brought “public benefit”, and secondly, at the time when this last miracle of the ancient world was created, technology had reached considerable heights. The Archimedes screw and pulley, lifting devices, and various construction tools were already known. The main building materials for the lighthouse were limestone, marble, and granite. The construction was led by the famous Greek architect Sostratus of Knidos. At the end of the work, he carved the inscription on the stone of the structure: “Son of Dexiphanes Sostratus - to the guardian gods, for the benefit of those who swim.” Sostratus covered this inscription with cement and on top indicated the name of Ptolemy Soter, who was ruling at that time. Sostratus did not hope to live until the time when the plaster crumbled, and it was not in his interests to find out the ruler’s reaction to this act. After all, having done this, he risked violating the decrees of the Ptolemies. However, soon the cement crumbled, and everyone saw the first inscription. Possidip, a contemporary of Sostratus, sang it in verses that survived the lighthouse until
carried the name of its creator to us.
And this name was widely known in the ancient world. Modern scientists have established that there were several structures similar to the “hanging gardens” of Babylon, and one of them was the “hanging promenade” on the island of Knidos. Its architect and engineer was Sostratus. He is credited with another grandiose construction: during the battles for Memphis, he allegedly diverted the waters of the Nile to capture the city.
Description of the lighthouse
The lighthouse turned out to be in the form of a three-story tower 120 meters high (the first and most dangerous “rival” of the Egyptian pyramids). At its base it was a square with a side of thirty meters, the first sixty-meter floor of the tower was made of stone slabs and supported a forty-meter octagonal tower, lined with white marble. On the third floor, in a round tower surrounded by columns, a huge fire was always burning, reflected by a complex system of mirrors. Firewood for the fire was delivered up a spiral staircase, so flat and wide that carts drawn by donkeys could drive along it to a hundred-meter height. The tower contained many ingenious technical devices: weather vanes, astronomical instruments, clocks. However, it is impossible to perceive this description, conveyed to us by one of the ancient inhabitants of Alexandria, as the only true one: each of those whose descriptions have reached us still tried to somehow embellish what they saw, since the Alexandria Lighthouse was truly a grandiose structure for the world of that time.
Among other descriptions we find the following: “The Faros lighthouse consisted of three marble towers standing on a base of massive stone blocks. The first tower was rectangular and contained rooms in which workers and soldiers lived. Above this tower was a smaller, octagonal tower with a spiral ramp leading to the upper tower." The common features of these two descriptions are visible. As a result, today the following description can be accepted as the most accurate and truthful.
The lighthouse had a height of 180 meters from base to top. This calculation was made based on the testimony of the historian Josephus. According to other descriptions, its height was only 120 meters. Ibn al-Sayha (11th century) gives the figure 130-140 meters. According to modern experts, from a purely practical point of view, such a height was unnecessary, even if we take into account that ancient lighthouses should have been higher due to the weakness of their fire. The greatest European lighthouse at the mouth of the Garonne near Bordeaux has a height of 59 meters above sea level. It was built by the Romans, taking the lighthouse on the island of Foros as a model. It remained in its original form until the 16th century, then it was rebuilt. The lighthouse on Cape Hatteras is 58 meters high, the lighthouse on the coral reefs off Florida is 48 meters high. None of the modern lighthouses reaches the height of Alexandria.
The Ptolemies built this fantastic skyscraper on a rock not only for practical purposes. First of all, the lighthouse was a symbol of the power of their empire, a symbol of wealth and greatness, like a light in the darkness. This structure had a base in the shape of a square with sides of 180-190 meters (other sources give other figures). On this foundation stood a palace with four towers at the corners. From its center rose a massive quadrangular tower 70-80 meters high, which gradually narrowed, ending in battlements. On this tower stood another, narrower, but also quite high, which ended in a stone platform. On this site there were columns in a circle supporting a cone-shaped tower, which was crowned by an 8-meter-high statue of the patron of the seas, Poseidon. According to some reports, at the top of the tower there was a statue of Zeus the Savior, and not his brother Poseidon.
At the top of the third tower, a fire was lit in a voluminous bronze bowl, the reflection of which, using a complex system of mirrors, was visible 100 miles away. A shaft ran through the entire lighthouse, around which a ramp and stairs rose. Carts drawn by donkeys drove along a wide and sloping ramp to the top of the lighthouse. Fuel for the lighthouse was delivered through the mine.
The tall lighthouse also served as an observation post. A complex system of reflectors was also used to view the sea, making it possible to detect enemy ships long before they appeared off the coast.
Death of the lighthouse
The inscription of Sostratus was seen by Roman travelers. At that time the lighthouse was still functioning. With the fall of the Roman Empire, it stopped shining, the upper tower, dilapidated over the centuries, collapsed, but the walls of the lower floor still stood for a long time.
The Alexandria lighthouse stood for 1,500 years, helping the Mediterranean “cybernetos” (as the ancient Greeks called helmsmen) navigate. The lighthouse suffered from earthquakes and weathering of the stone, but during the times of the emperors Claudius and Nero it was restored. Its fire was extinguished forever during an earthquake in the 4th century. During Arab rule in the mid-7th century, it served only as a daylight. During the time of the first Mamluk sultans (mid-13th century), the mainland moved so close to the island that the piers were covered with sand and it was no longer needed as a daylight lighthouse. At the very beginning of the 14th century, it was dismantled into stones, and a medieval Turkish fortress was erected on the ruins of the lighthouse. The bronze plates that served as mirrors were probably melted down into coins. This fortress was subsequently rebuilt more than once and still stands on the site of the world's first lighthouse.
In the 1960s, while exploring coastal waters, an unknown Italian diver, descending to a shallow depth near the Sultan's fortress, found two marble columns. During further work, a statue of the goddess Isis of Pharos, which once stood in a nearby temple, was raised from the bottom. In 1980, a group of archaeologists discovered the remains of the Faros lighthouse on the seabed. At the same time, at a depth of 8 meters, the ruins of the palace of the legendary Queen Cleopatra were discovered...
(autotranslated, could have mistakes)
one of the 7 wonders of the world, was built in the 3rd century BC. e. in the Egyptian city of Alexandria, so that ships could safely pass the reefs on the way to the Alexandria Bay. At night they were helped in this by the reflection of flames, and during the day by a column of smoke. It was the world's first lighthouse and stood for almost a thousand years, but in 796 AD. e. was severely damaged by the earthquake. Subsequently, the Arabs who came to Egypt tried to restore it, and by the 14th century. the height of the lighthouse was about 30 m. At the end of the 15th century. Sultan Qait Bey erected a fortress on the site of the lighthouse, which still stands today.
Year started: approximately 283 BC.
Coordinates:
31°12′51″ n. w. 29°53′06″
Buy at OZON.ru - DVD | Discovery: Seven Wonders of the World. Alexandria Lighthouse. Mausoleum in Halicarnassus | The Seven Wonders Of The World | PAL | DVD: 164
- Model (photo and video)
- Alexandria (Faros) lighthouse, see in the program “I want to believe
- About the lighthouse in the Ukrainian program
During the time of the first Ptolemies, a lighthouse was built on the island of Pharos. According to ancient and medieval authors, it was taller than the tallest pyramid. But at the time Strabo visited it, the lighthouse was no longer very different from other structures. It was half destroyed. Its highest part had collapsed, and its remains lay near the tower, which had been covered with a temporary wooden roof, "and lived in it several watchmen."
The construction of lighthouses began in ancient times and was connected, first of all, with the development of navigation. At first these were just fires located on high banks. Then there are artificial structures. The Alexandria Lighthouse was built in 283 BC. e., the construction of this gigantic, for those times, structure lasted only 5 years. But before we begin to describe this wonder of the world, we should learn a little about the geography and history of the area where it was built.
Alexandria
Alexandria, founded in 332 BC, is located in the Nile Delta, on the site of the Egyptian town of Rakotis. It was one of the first cities of the Hellenistic era, built according to a single plan. In Alexandria there was a sarcophagus of Alexander the Great, there was also a museum - the abode of muses, a center of arts and science. So, an etymological thread is laid from the muses to the modern word “museum”. Museyon is at once an academy of sciences, a dormitory for scientists, a technical center, a school, and the world’s greatest library, which contained up to half a million scrolls. A passionate scribe and a vain man, King Ptolemy II suffered because the library did not have some unique manuscripts of Greek playwrights. He sent an embassy to Athens so that the Athenians would borrow the scrolls for a while to copy. Arrogant Athens demanded a fabulous deposit - 15 talents, almost half a ton of silver. Ptolemy accepted the challenge. The silver was delivered to Athens, and the agreement had to be reluctantly fulfilled. But Ptolemy did not forgive such distrust of his bibliophilic inclinations and his word of honor. He left the deposit to the Athenians and the manuscripts to himself. But that's not the point...
The harbor of Alexandria, perhaps the busiest and busiest in the whole world, was uncomfortable. The port in this harbor was founded by Alexander the Great during his visit to Egypt in 332 BC. e. The city flourished due to maritime trade. But by the 12th century AD. e. Alexandria Bay became so filled with silt that ships could no longer use it. From then on, the period of decline of Alexandria began, about which very little is known today...
Present-day Alexandria has more than 2 million inhabitants; it stretches for 25 kilometers along a sand spit that once cut the sea bay, forming a large salt lake. But modern Alexandria has completely different outlines. In the north-west, where there is now an elongated peninsula with a densely populated Arab quarter and the magnificent Abu al-Abbas Mosque, in ancient times there was a sea, or rather, two sea piers - the Grand Pier and the Pier of Happy Return. From the sea side they were covered by the rocky island of Pharos, which served as a natural pier.
History of the building
The Nile carries a lot of silt; very skillful pilots were required in the shallow water among the rocks and shoals. To ensure the safety of navigation, it was decided to build a lighthouse on the island of Pharos, on the approach to Alexandria. In 285 BC, the island was connected to the mainland by a dam, and the architect Sostratus of Knidos began work. Construction took only five years: Alexandria was an advanced technical center and the richest city of the then world, the builders had a huge fleet, quarries and the achievements of Museyon academicians at their disposal.
This structure, just like the pyramids, arose from the sweat and labor of slaves, and during construction the whips of the overseers also whistled. But it had two fundamental differences: firstly, the lighthouse on the island of Foros brought “public benefit”, and secondly, at the time when this last miracle of the ancient world was created, technology had reached considerable heights. The Archimedes screw and pulley, lifting devices, and various construction tools were already known. The main building materials for the lighthouse were limestone, marble, and granite. The construction was led by the famous Greek architect Sostratus of Knidos. At the end of the work, he carved the inscription on the stone of the structure: “Son of Dexiphanes Sostratus - to the guardian gods, for the benefit of those who swim.” Sostratus covered this inscription with cement and on top indicated the name of Ptolemy Soter, who was ruling at that time. Sostratus did not hope to live until the time when the plaster crumbled, and it was not in his interests to find out the ruler’s reaction to this act. After all, having done this, he risked violating the decrees of the Ptolemies. However, soon the cement crumbled, and everyone saw the first inscription. Possidip, a contemporary of Sostratus, sang it in verses that survived the lighthouse until
carried the name of its creator to us.
And this name was widely known in the ancient world. Modern scientists have established that there were several structures similar to the “hanging gardens” of Babylon, and one of them was the “hanging promenade” on the island of Knidos. Its architect and engineer was Sostratus. He is credited with another grandiose construction: during the battles for Memphis, he allegedly diverted the waters of the Nile to capture the city.
Description of the lighthouse
The lighthouse turned out to be in the form of a three-story tower 120 meters high (the first and most dangerous “rival” of the Egyptian pyramids). At its base it was a square with a side of thirty meters, the first sixty-meter floor of the tower was made of stone slabs and supported a forty-meter octagonal tower, lined with white marble. On the third floor, in a round tower surrounded by columns, a huge fire was always burning, reflected by a complex system of mirrors. Firewood for the fire was delivered up a spiral staircase, so flat and wide that carts drawn by donkeys could drive along it to a hundred-meter height. The tower contained many ingenious technical devices: weather vanes, astronomical instruments, clocks. However, it is impossible to perceive this description, conveyed to us by one of the ancient inhabitants of Alexandria, as the only true one: each of those whose descriptions have reached us still tried to somehow embellish what they saw, since the Alexandria Lighthouse was truly a grandiose structure for the world of that time.
Among other descriptions we find the following: “The Faros lighthouse consisted of three marble towers standing on a base of massive stone blocks. The first tower was rectangular and contained rooms in which workers and soldiers lived. Above this tower was a smaller, octagonal tower with a spiral ramp leading to the upper tower." The common features of these two descriptions are visible. As a result, today the following description can be accepted as the most accurate and truthful.
The lighthouse had a height of 180 meters from base to top. This calculation was made based on the testimony of the historian Josephus. According to other descriptions, its height was only 120 meters. Ibn al-Sayha (11th century) gives the figure 130-140 meters. According to modern experts, from a purely practical point of view, such a height was unnecessary, even if we take into account that ancient lighthouses should have been higher due to the weakness of their fire. The greatest European lighthouse at the mouth of the Garonne near Bordeaux has a height of 59 meters above sea level. It was built by the Romans, taking the lighthouse on the island of Foros as a model. It remained in its original form until the 16th century, then it was rebuilt. The lighthouse on Cape Hatteras is 58 meters high, the lighthouse on the coral reefs off Florida is 48 meters high. None of the modern lighthouses reaches the height of Alexandria.
The Ptolemies built this fantastic skyscraper on a rock not only for practical purposes. First of all, the lighthouse was a symbol of the power of their empire, a symbol of wealth and greatness, like a light in the darkness. This structure had a base in the shape of a square with sides of 180-190 meters (other sources give other figures). On this foundation stood a palace with four towers at the corners. From its center rose a massive quadrangular tower 70-80 meters high, which gradually narrowed, ending in battlements. On this tower stood another, narrower, but also quite high, which ended in a stone platform. On this site there were columns in a circle supporting a cone-shaped tower, which was crowned by an 8-meter-high statue of the patron of the seas, Poseidon. According to some reports, at the top of the tower there was a statue of Zeus the Savior, and not his brother Poseidon.
At the top of the third tower, a fire was lit in a voluminous bronze bowl, the reflection of which, using a complex system of mirrors, was visible 100 miles away. A shaft ran through the entire lighthouse, around which a ramp and stairs rose. Carts drawn by donkeys drove along a wide and sloping ramp to the top of the lighthouse. Fuel for the lighthouse was delivered through the mine.
The tall lighthouse also served as an observation post. A complex system of reflectors was also used to view the sea, making it possible to detect enemy ships long before they appeared off the coast.
Death of the lighthouse
The inscription of Sostratus was seen by Roman travelers. At that time the lighthouse was still functioning. With the fall of the Roman Empire, it stopped shining, the upper tower, dilapidated over the centuries, collapsed, but the walls of the lower floor still stood for a long time.
The Alexandria lighthouse stood for 1,500 years, helping the Mediterranean “cybernetos” (as the ancient Greeks called helmsmen) navigate. The lighthouse suffered from earthquakes and weathering of the stone, but during the times of the emperors Claudius and Nero it was restored. Its fire was extinguished forever during an earthquake in the 4th century. During Arab rule in the mid-7th century, it served only as a daylight. During the time of the first Mamluk sultans (mid-13th century), the mainland moved so close to the island that the piers were covered with sand and it was no longer needed as a daylight lighthouse. At the very beginning of the 14th century, it was dismantled into stones, and a medieval Turkish fortress was erected on the ruins of the lighthouse. The bronze plates that served as mirrors were probably melted down into coins. This fortress was subsequently rebuilt more than once and still stands on the site of the world's first lighthouse.
In the 1960s, while exploring coastal waters, an unknown Italian diver, descending to a shallow depth near the Sultan's fortress, found two marble columns. During further work, a statue of the goddess Isis of Pharos, which once stood in a nearby temple, was raised from the bottom. In 1980, a group of archaeologists discovered the remains of the Faros lighthouse on the seabed. At the same time, at a depth of 8 meters, the ruins of the palace of the legendary Queen Cleopatra were discovered...
(autotranslated, could have mistakes)
one of the 7 wonders of the world, was built in the 3rd century BC. e. in the Egyptian city of Alexandria, so that ships could safely pass the reefs on the way to the Alexandria Bay. At night they were helped in this by the reflection of flames, and during the day by a column of smoke. It was the world's first lighthouse and stood for almost a thousand years, but in 796 AD. e. was severely damaged by the earthquake. Subsequently, the Arabs who came to Egypt tried to restore it, and by the 14th century. the height of the lighthouse was about 30 m. At the end of the 15th century. Sultan Qait Bey erected a fortress on the site of the lighthouse, which still stands today.
Year started: approximately 283 BC.
Coordinates:
31°12′51″ n. w. 29°53′06″
Buy at OZON.ru - DVD | Discovery: Seven Wonders of the World. Alexandria Lighthouse. Mausoleum in Halicarnassus | The Seven Wonders Of The World | PAL | DVD: 164
- Model (photo and video)
- Alexandria (Faros) lighthouse, see in the program “I want to believe
- About the lighthouse in the Ukrainian program
During the time of the first Ptolemies, a lighthouse was built on the island of Pharos. According to ancient and medieval authors, it was taller than the tallest pyramid. But at the time Strabo visited it, the lighthouse was no longer very different from other structures. It was half destroyed. Its highest part had collapsed, and its remains lay near the tower, which had been covered with a temporary wooden roof, "and lived in it several watchmen."
The construction of lighthouses began in ancient times and was connected, first of all, with the development of navigation. At first these were just fires located on high banks. Then there are artificial structures. The Alexandria Lighthouse was built in 283 BC. e., the construction of this gigantic, for those times, structure lasted only 5 years. But before we begin to describe this wonder of the world, we should learn a little about the geography and history of the area where it was built.
Alexandria
Alexandria, founded in 332 BC, is located in the Nile Delta, on the site of the Egyptian town of Rakotis. It was one of the first cities of the Hellenistic era, built according to a single plan. In Alexandria there was a sarcophagus of Alexander the Great, there was also a museum - the abode of muses, a center of arts and science. So, an etymological thread is laid from the muses to the modern word “museum”. Museyon is at once an academy of sciences, a dormitory for scientists, a technical center, a school, and the world’s greatest library, which contained up to half a million scrolls. A passionate scribe and a vain man, King Ptolemy II suffered because the library did not have some unique manuscripts of Greek playwrights. He sent an embassy to Athens so that the Athenians would borrow the scrolls for a while to copy. Arrogant Athens demanded a fabulous deposit - 15 talents, almost half a ton of silver. Ptolemy accepted the challenge. The silver was delivered to Athens, and the agreement had to be reluctantly fulfilled. But Ptolemy did not forgive such distrust of his bibliophilic inclinations and his word of honor. He left the deposit to the Athenians and the manuscripts to himself. But that's not the point...
The harbor of Alexandria, perhaps the busiest and busiest in the whole world, was uncomfortable. The port in this harbor was founded by Alexander the Great during his visit to Egypt in 332 BC. e. The city flourished due to maritime trade. But by the 12th century AD. e. Alexandria Bay became so filled with silt that ships could no longer use it. From then on, the period of decline of Alexandria began, about which very little is known today...
Present-day Alexandria has more than 2 million inhabitants; it stretches for 25 kilometers along a sand spit that once cut the sea bay, forming a large salt lake. But modern Alexandria has completely different outlines. In the north-west, where there is now an elongated peninsula with a densely populated Arab quarter and the magnificent Abu al-Abbas Mosque, in ancient times there was a sea, or rather, two sea piers - the Grand Pier and the Pier of Happy Return. From the sea side they were covered by the rocky island of Pharos, which served as a natural pier.
History of the building
The Nile carries a lot of silt; very skillful pilots were required in the shallow water among the rocks and shoals. To ensure the safety of navigation, it was decided to build a lighthouse on the island of Pharos, on the approach to Alexandria. In 285 BC, the island was connected to the mainland by a dam, and the architect Sostratus of Knidos began work. Construction took only five years: Alexandria was an advanced technical center and the richest city of the then world, the builders had a huge fleet, quarries and the achievements of Museyon academicians at their disposal.
This structure, just like the pyramids, arose from the sweat and labor of slaves, and during construction the whips of the overseers also whistled. But it had two fundamental differences: firstly, the lighthouse on the island of Foros brought “public benefit”, and secondly, at the time when this last miracle of the ancient world was created, technology had reached considerable heights. The Archimedes screw and pulley, lifting devices, and various construction tools were already known. The main building materials for the lighthouse were limestone, marble, and granite. The construction was led by the famous Greek architect Sostratus of Knidos. At the end of the work, he carved the inscription on the stone of the structure: “Son of Dexiphanes Sostratus - to the guardian gods, for the benefit of those who swim.” Sostratus covered this inscription with cement and on top indicated the name of Ptolemy Soter, who was ruling at that time. Sostratus did not hope to live until the time when the plaster crumbled, and it was not in his interests to find out the ruler’s reaction to this act. After all, having done this, he risked violating the decrees of the Ptolemies. However, soon the cement crumbled, and everyone saw the first inscription. Possidip, a contemporary of Sostratus, sang it in verses that survived the lighthouse until
carried the name of its creator to us.
And this name was widely known in the ancient world. Modern scientists have established that there were several structures similar to the “hanging gardens” of Babylon, and one of them was the “hanging promenade” on the island of Knidos. Its architect and engineer was Sostratus. He is credited with another grandiose construction: during the battles for Memphis, he allegedly diverted the waters of the Nile to capture the city.
Description of the lighthouse
The lighthouse turned out to be in the form of a three-story tower 120 meters high (the first and most dangerous “rival” of the Egyptian pyramids). At its base it was a square with a side of thirty meters, the first sixty-meter floor of the tower was made of stone slabs and supported a forty-meter octagonal tower, lined with white marble. On the third floor, in a round tower surrounded by columns, a huge fire was always burning, reflected by a complex system of mirrors. Firewood for the fire was delivered up a spiral staircase, so flat and wide that carts drawn by donkeys could drive along it to a hundred-meter height. The tower contained many ingenious technical devices: weather vanes, astronomical instruments, clocks. However, it is impossible to perceive this description, conveyed to us by one of the ancient inhabitants of Alexandria, as the only true one: each of those whose descriptions have reached us still tried to somehow embellish what they saw, since the Alexandria Lighthouse was truly a grandiose structure for the world of that time.
Among other descriptions we find the following: “The Faros lighthouse consisted of three marble towers standing on a base of massive stone blocks. The first tower was rectangular and contained rooms in which workers and soldiers lived. Above this tower was a smaller, octagonal tower with a spiral ramp leading to the upper tower." The common features of these two descriptions are visible. As a result, today the following description can be accepted as the most accurate and truthful.
The lighthouse had a height of 180 meters from base to top. This calculation was made based on the testimony of the historian Josephus. According to other descriptions, its height was only 120 meters. Ibn al-Sayha (11th century) gives the figure 130-140 meters. According to modern experts, from a purely practical point of view, such a height was unnecessary, even if we take into account that ancient lighthouses should have been higher due to the weakness of their fire. The greatest European lighthouse at the mouth of the Garonne near Bordeaux has a height of 59 meters above sea level. It was built by the Romans, taking the lighthouse on the island of Foros as a model. It remained in its original form until the 16th century, then it was rebuilt. The lighthouse on Cape Hatteras is 58 meters high, the lighthouse on the coral reefs off Florida is 48 meters high. None of the modern lighthouses reaches the height of Alexandria.
The Ptolemies built this fantastic skyscraper on a rock not only for practical purposes. First of all, the lighthouse was a symbol of the power of their empire, a symbol of wealth and greatness, like a light in the darkness. This structure had a base in the shape of a square with sides of 180-190 meters (other sources give other figures). On this foundation stood a palace with four towers at the corners. From its center rose a massive quadrangular tower 70-80 meters high, which gradually narrowed, ending in battlements. On this tower stood another, narrower, but also quite high, which ended in a stone platform. On this site there were columns in a circle supporting a cone-shaped tower, which was crowned by an 8-meter-high statue of the patron of the seas, Poseidon. According to some reports, at the top of the tower there was a statue of Zeus the Savior, and not his brother Poseidon.
At the top of the third tower, a fire was lit in a voluminous bronze bowl, the reflection of which, using a complex system of mirrors, was visible 100 miles away. A shaft ran through the entire lighthouse, around which a ramp and stairs rose. Carts drawn by donkeys drove along a wide and sloping ramp to the top of the lighthouse. Fuel for the lighthouse was delivered through the mine.
The tall lighthouse also served as an observation post. A complex system of reflectors was also used to view the sea, making it possible to detect enemy ships long before they appeared off the coast.
Death of the lighthouse
The inscription of Sostratus was seen by Roman travelers. At that time the lighthouse was still functioning. With the fall of the Roman Empire, it stopped shining, the upper tower, dilapidated over the centuries, collapsed, but the walls of the lower floor still stood for a long time.
The Alexandria lighthouse stood for 1,500 years, helping the Mediterranean “cybernetos” (as the ancient Greeks called helmsmen) navigate. The lighthouse suffered from earthquakes and weathering of the stone, but during the times of the emperors Claudius and Nero it was restored. Its fire was extinguished forever during an earthquake in the 4th century. During Arab rule in the mid-7th century, it served only as a daylight. During the time of the first Mamluk sultans (mid-13th century), the mainland moved so close to the island that the piers were covered with sand and it was no longer needed as a daylight lighthouse. At the very beginning of the 14th century, it was dismantled into stones, and a medieval Turkish fortress was erected on the ruins of the lighthouse. The bronze plates that served as mirrors were probably melted down into coins. This fortress was subsequently rebuilt more than once and still stands on the site of the world's first lighthouse.
In the 1960s, while exploring coastal waters, an unknown Italian diver, descending to a shallow depth near the Sultan's fortress, found two marble columns. During further work, a statue of the goddess Isis of Pharos, which once stood in a nearby temple, was raised from the bottom. In 1980, a group of archaeologists discovered the remains of the Faros lighthouse on the seabed. At the same time, at a depth of 8 meters, the ruins of the palace of the legendary Queen Cleopatra were discovered...
одно из 7 чудес света, был построен в III веке до н. э.в египетском городе Александрия, чтобы корабли могли благополучно миновать рифы на пути в александрийскую бухту. Ночью им помогало в этом отражение языков пламени, а днём — столб дыма. Это был первый в мире маяк, и простоял он почти тысячу лет, но в 796 г. н. э. был сильно поврежден землетрясением. Впоследствии пришедшие в Египет арабы пытались восстановить его, и к XIV в. высота маяка составляла около 30 м. В конце XV в. султан Кайт-бей воздвиг на месте маяка крепость, которая стоит и сейчас.
Год начала работы: примерно 283 г. до н.э.
Координаты:
31°12′51″ с. ш. 29°53′06″
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Купить в OZON.ru - DVD | Discovery: Семь чудес света. Александрийский маяк. Мавзолей в Галикарнасе | The Seven Wonders Of The World | PAL | DVD: 164 |
- Модель (фото и видео)
- Модель Александрийского (Фаросского) маяка
- Александрийский (Фаросский) маяк см. в передаче "Хочу верить!
- О маяке в украинской передаче
Во времена первых Птоломеев и был построен на острове Фарос маяк. По свидетельству древних и средневековых авторов, он был выше самой высокой пирамиды. Но в то время, когда его посетил Страбон, маяк уже не очень отличался от других сооружений. Он был наполовину разрушен. Его самая высокая часть рухнула, и ее обломки лежали около башни, которую покрыли временной деревянной крышей, «и жило в ней несколько сторожей».
Строительство маяков началось в глубокой древности и связано это было, в первую очередь, с развитием мореплавания. Сначала это были просто костры, расположенные на высоких берегах. Потом уже искусственные сооружения. Александрийский светящийся маяк был сооружен в 283 году до н. э., строительство этого гигантского, для тех времен, сооружения длилось всего 5 лет. Но прежде чем приступить к описанию этого чуда света, следует немножко узнать о географии и истории местности, где оно было возведено.
Александрия
Александрия, основанная в 332 году до нашей эры, раскинулась в дельте Нила, на месте Египетского городка Ракотиса. Это был один из первых городов эпохи эллинизма, сооружённых по единому плану. В Александрии стоял саркофаг Александра Великого, здесь же находился мусейон - обиталище муз, центр искусств и науки. Так вот и прокладывается этимологическая ниточка от муз к современному слову "музей". Мусейон - сразу и академия наук, и общежитие для учёных, и технический центр, и школа, и величайшая в мире библиотека, в которой было до полумиллиона свитков. Страстный книжник и тщеславный человек, царь Птоломей II страдал оттого, что в библиотеке не было некоторых уникальных рукописей греческих драматургов. Он направил посольство в Афины, чтобы афиняне одолжили свитки на время, скопировать. Спесивые Афины потребовали баснословный залог - 15 талантов, почти полтонны серебра. Птоломей принял вызов. Серебро было доставлено в Афины, и пришлось скрепя сердце выполнять договор. Но Птоломей не простил такого недоверия его библиофильским наклонностям и его честному слову. Он оставил залог афинянам, а рукописи - себе. Но не в этом суть дела...
Гавань Александрии, пожалуй самая деловитая и оживлённая во всём мире, была неудобной. Порт в этой гавани был основан Александром Великим еще во время посещения Египта в 332 году до н. э. Город процветал за счет морской торговли. Но к XII веку н. э. александрийская бухта настолько заполнилась илом, что корабли больше не могли ею пользоваться. С этих пор начинается период упадка Александрии, о котором на сегодняшний день известно крайне мало...
Нынешняя Александрия насчитывает более 2 миллионов жителей, она протянулась на 25 километров по песчаной косе, которая когда-то перерезала морской залив, образуя большое соленое озеро. Но у современной Александрии совсем другие очертания. На северо-западе, где ныне расположен вытянутый полуостров с густо заселенным арабским кварталом и великолепной мечетью Абу-аль-Аббаса, в древние времена было море, точнее, две морские пристани - Большая пристань и Пристань счастливого возвращения. Со стороны моря их прикрывал скалистый остров Фарос, служивший естественным молом.
История сооружения
Нил несёт массу ила, на мелководье среди камней и мелей требовались очень умелые лоцманы. Чтобы обезопасить мореплавание, решено было построить маяк на острове Фарос, на подходе к Александрии. В 285 году до нашей эры остров соединили с материком дамбой, и архитектор Сострат Книдский приступил к работам. Строительство заняло всего пять лет: Александрия была передовым техническим центром и самым богатым города тогдашнего мира, к услугам строителей были громадный флот, каменоломни и достижения мусейонских академиков.
Это сооружение, так же, как пирамиды, возникло из пота и труда рабов, и во времена строительства также свистели бичи надсмотрщиков. Но были у него два принципиальных отличия: во-первых, маяк на острове Форос приносил «общественную пользу», во-вторых, в те времена, когда создавалось это последнее чудо античного мира, техника достигла немалых высот. Уже были известны винт и полиспаст Архимеда, подъемные приспособления, различные строительные инструменты. Основным строительным материалом для маяка были известняк, мрамор, гранит. Строительством руководил известный греческий архитектор Сострат Книдский. По окончанию работы он высек на камне сооружения надпись: «Сын Дексифана Сострат - богам-хранителям, на благо плавающим». Эту надпись Сострат покрыл цементом и сверху обозначил имя Птолемея Сотера, правящего в то время. Сострат не надеялся дожить до того времени, когда осыпется штукатурка, да и не в его интересах было узнать реакцию правителя на этот поступок. Ведь сделав это, он пошёл на рискованное нарушение указов Птоломеев. Однако, вскоре цемент осыпался, и все увидели первую надпись. Поссидип, современник Сострата, воспел его в стихах, которые пережили маяк и донесли до нас имя его создателя.
А имя это было широко известно в античном мире. Современные ученые установили, что сооружений, подобных «висячим садам» Семирамиды, было несколько, и одно из них - «висячая променада» на острове Книд. Архитектором и инженером ее был Сострат. Ему приписывают еще одно грандиозное сооружение: во время боев за Мемфис он якобы отвел воды Нила, чтобы захватить город.
Описание маяка
Маяк получился в виде трёхэтажной башни высотой в 120 метров (первый и самый опасный "соперник" египетским пирамидам). В основании он был квадратом со стороной тридцать метров, первый шестидесятиметровый этаж башни был сложен из каменных плит и поддерживал сорокаметровую восьмигранную башню, облицованную белым мрамором. На третьем этаже, в круглой, обнесённой колоннами башне, вечно горел громадный костёр, отражавшийся сложной системой зеркал. Дрова для костра доставлялись наверх по спиральной лестнице, такой пологой и широкой, что по ней на стометровую высоту въезжали повозки, запряжённые ослами. На башне находилось множество остроумных технических приспособлений: флюгера, астрономические приборы, часы. Впрочем, воспринимать это описание, переданное нам одним из древних жителей Александрии, как единственно верное никак нельзя: каждый из тех, чьи описания дошли до нас, пытался все же как-то приукрасить увиденное, поскольку Александрийский маяк был воистину грандиозным сооружением для тогдашнего мира.
Среди иных описаний встречаем и такое: «Фаросский маяк состоял из трёх мраморных башен, стоявших на основании из массивных каменных блоков. Первая башня была прямоугольной, в ней находились комнаты, в которых жили рабочие и солдаты. Над этой башней располагалась меньшая, восьмиугольная башня со спиральным пандусом, ведущим в верхнюю башню.» Видны общие черты этих двух описаний. В итоге, на сегодняшний день можно принять за наиболее точное и правдивое следующее описание.
Маяк имел от основания до вершины высоту 180 метров. Такой подсчет сделали на основании свидетельств историка Иосифа Флавия. По другим описаниям его высота была всего 120 метров. Ибн аль-Сайха (XI век) называет цифру 130-140 метров. По мнению современных специалистов, чисто с практической точки зрения такая высота была излишней, даже если принимать во внимание, что древние маяки должны быть выше ввиду слабости их огня. Величайший европейский маяк в устье Гаронны у Бордо имеет высоту 59 метров над уровнем моря. Построили его римляне, взяв за образец маяк на острове Форос. В первоначальном виде он сохранился до XVI века, потом его перестроили. Маяк на мысе Гаттерас имеет высоту 58 метров, маяк на коралловых рифах у Флориды - 48 метров. Ни один из современных маяков не достигает высоты Александрийского.
Птолемеи построили этот фантастический небоскреб на скале не только для практических целей. Прежде всего маяк был символом могущества их империи, символом богатства и величия, подобно свету во тьме. Это сооружение имело основание в форме квадрата со сторонами 180-190 метров (другие источники приводят другие цифры). На этом основании стоял дворец с четырьмя башнями по углам. Из его центра поднималась массивная четырехугольная башня высотой 70-80 метров, которая постепенно сужалась, заканчиваясь зубцами. На этой башне стояла еще одна, более узкая, но тоже довольно высокая, которая заканчивалась каменной площадкой. На этой площадке по кругу стояли колонны, поддерживавшие конусообразную башню, которую венчала статуя покровителя морей Посейдона высотой 8 метров. По некоторым сведениям, на вершине башни стояла статуя Зевса-Спасителя, а не его брата Посейдона.
На верхушке третьей башни в объемистой бронзовой чаше зажигали огонь, отблеск которого при помощи сложной системы зеркал был виден за 100 миль. Через весь маяк проходила шахта, вокруг которой поднимались пандус и лестница. По широкому и отлогому пандосу на вершину маяка въезжали повозки, запряженные ослами. По шахте доставляли горючее для маяка.
Высокий маяк служил и наблюдательным пунктом. Сложная система отражателей использовалась и для обзора морских просторов, позволяя обнаруживать вражеские суда задолго до того, как они появлялись у берега.
Гибель маяка
Надпись Сострата видели римские путешественники. В то время маяк ещё функционировал. С падением Римской империи он перестал светить, обвалилась обветшавшая за столетия верхняя башня, но долго ещё стояли стены нижнего этажа.
Александрийский маяк простоял 1500 лет, помогая ориентироваться средиземноморским «кибернетос» (так называли кормчих древние греки). Маяк страдал от землетрясений и выветривания камня, но во времена императоров Клавдия и Нерона его восстанавливали. Его огонь навсегда погас во время землетрясения в IV веке. Во времена арабского господства в середине VII века он служил лишь дневным маяком. Во времена первых султанов-мамлюков (середина XIII века) материк настолько приблизился к острову, что пристани занесло песком и он уже был не нужен и как дневной маяк. В самом начале XIV века его разобрали на камни, а на развалинах маяка воздвигли средневековую турецкую крепость. Бронзовые пластины, служившие зеркалами, вероятно, переплавили на монеты. Эту крепость впоследствии не раз перестраивали и до сих пор она стоит на месте первого в мире маяка.
В 1960-х годах, во время исследования прибрежных вод, неизвестный итальянский ныряльщик, опустившись на небольшую глубину у крепости султана, нашел две мраморные колонны. При дальнейших работах со дна подняли статую богини Исиды Фаросской, которая некогда стояла в близлежащем храме. В 1980 году группа археологов обнаружила на морском дне остатки Фаросского маяка. Тогда же наглубине 8 метров обнаружили развалины дворца легендарной царицы Клеопатры...
(autotranslated, could have mistakes)
one of the 7 wonders of the world, was built in the 3rd century BC. e. in the Egyptian city of Alexandria, so that ships could safely pass the reefs on the way to the Alexandria Bay. At night they were helped in this by the reflection of flames, and during the day by a column of smoke. It was the world's first lighthouse and stood for almost a thousand years, but in 796 AD. e. was severely damaged by the earthquake. Subsequently, the Arabs who came to Egypt tried to restore it, and by the 14th century. the height of the lighthouse was about 30 m. At the end of the 15th century. Sultan Qait Bey erected a fortress on the site of the lighthouse, which still stands today.
Year started: approximately 283 BC.
Coordinates:
31°12′51″ n. w. 29°53′06″
Buy at OZON.ru - DVD | Discovery: Seven Wonders of the World. Alexandria Lighthouse. Mausoleum in Halicarnassus | The Seven Wonders Of The World | PAL | DVD: 164
- Model (photo and video)
- Alexandria (Faros) lighthouse, see in the program “I want to believe
- About the lighthouse in the Ukrainian program
During the time of the first Ptolemies, a lighthouse was built on the island of Pharos. According to ancient and medieval authors, it was taller than the tallest pyramid. But at the time Strabo visited it, the lighthouse was no longer very different from other structures. It was half destroyed. Its highest part had collapsed, and its remains lay near the tower, which had been covered with a temporary wooden roof, "and lived in it several watchmen."
The construction of lighthouses began in ancient times and was connected, first of all, with the development of navigation. At first these were just fires located on high banks. Then there are artificial structures. The Alexandria Lighthouse was built in 283 BC. e., the construction of this gigantic, for those times, structure lasted only 5 years. But before we begin to describe this wonder of the world, we should learn a little about the geography and history of the area where it was built.
Alexandria
Alexandria, founded in 332 BC, is located in the Nile Delta, on the site of the Egyptian town of Rakotis. It was one of the first cities of the Hellenistic era, built according to a single plan. In Alexandria there was a sarcophagus of Alexander the Great, there was also a museum - the abode of muses, a center of arts and science. So, an etymological thread is laid from the muses to the modern word “museum”. Museyon is at once an academy of sciences, a dormitory for scientists, a technical center, a school, and the world’s greatest library, which contained up to half a million scrolls. A passionate scribe and a vain man, King Ptolemy II suffered because the library did not have some unique manuscripts of Greek playwrights. He sent an embassy to Athens so that the Athenians would borrow the scrolls for a while to copy. Arrogant Athens demanded a fabulous deposit - 15 talents, almost half a ton of silver. Ptolemy accepted the challenge. The silver was delivered to Athens, and the agreement had to be reluctantly fulfilled. But Ptolemy did not forgive such distrust of his bibliophilic inclinations and his word of honor. He left the deposit to the Athenians and the manuscripts to himself. But that's not the point...
The harbor of Alexandria, perhaps the busiest and busiest in the whole world, was uncomfortable. The port in this harbor was founded by Alexander the Great during his visit to Egypt in 332 BC. e. The city flourished due to maritime trade. But by the 12th century AD. e. Alexandria Bay became so filled with silt that ships could no longer use it. From then on, the period of decline of Alexandria began, about which very little is known today...
Present-day Alexandria has more than 2 million inhabitants; it stretches for 25 kilometers along a sand spit that once cut the sea bay, forming a large salt lake. But modern Alexandria has completely different outlines. In the north-west, where there is now an elongated peninsula with a densely populated Arab quarter and the magnificent Abu al-Abbas Mosque, in ancient times there was a sea, or rather, two sea piers - the Grand Pier and the Pier of Happy Return. From the sea side they were covered by the rocky island of Pharos, which served as a natural pier.
History of the building
The Nile carries a lot of silt; very skillful pilots were required in the shallow water among the rocks and shoals. To ensure the safety of navigation, it was decided to build a lighthouse on the island of Pharos, on the approach to Alexandria. In 285 BC, the island was connected to the mainland by a dam, and the architect Sostratus of Knidos began work. Construction took only five years: Alexandria was an advanced technical center and the richest city of the then world, the builders had a huge fleet, quarries and the achievements of Museyon academicians at their disposal.
This structure, just like the pyramids, arose from the sweat and labor of slaves, and during construction the whips of the overseers also whistled. But it had two fundamental differences: firstly, the lighthouse on the island of Foros brought “public benefit”, and secondly, at the time when this last miracle of the ancient world was created, technology had reached considerable heights. The Archimedes screw and pulley, lifting devices, and various construction tools were already known. The main building materials for the lighthouse were limestone, marble, and granite. The construction was led by the famous Greek architect Sostratus of Knidos. At the end of the work, he carved the inscription on the stone of the structure: “Son of Dexiphanes Sostratus - to the guardian gods, for the benefit of those who swim.” Sostratus covered this inscription with cement and on top indicated the name of Ptolemy Soter, who was ruling at that time. Sostratus did not hope to live until the time when the plaster crumbled, and it was not in his interests to find out the ruler’s reaction to this act. After all, having done this, he risked violating the decrees of the Ptolemies. However, soon the cement crumbled, and everyone saw the first inscription. Possidip, a contemporary of Sostratus, sang it in verses that survived the lighthouse until
carried the name of its creator to us.
And this name was widely known in the ancient world. Modern scientists have established that there were several structures similar to the “hanging gardens” of Babylon, and one of them was the “hanging promenade” on the island of Knidos. Its architect and engineer was Sostratus. He is credited with another grandiose construction: during the battles for Memphis, he allegedly diverted the waters of the Nile to capture the city.
Description of the lighthouse
The lighthouse turned out to be in the form of a three-story tower 120 meters high (the first and most dangerous “rival” of the Egyptian pyramids). At its base it was a square with a side of thirty meters, the first sixty-meter floor of the tower was made of stone slabs and supported a forty-meter octagonal tower, lined with white marble. On the third floor, in a round tower surrounded by columns, a huge fire was always burning, reflected by a complex system of mirrors. Firewood for the fire was delivered up a spiral staircase, so flat and wide that carts drawn by donkeys could drive along it to a hundred-meter height. The tower contained many ingenious technical devices: weather vanes, astronomical instruments, clocks. However, it is impossible to perceive this description, conveyed to us by one of the ancient inhabitants of Alexandria, as the only true one: each of those whose descriptions have reached us still tried to somehow embellish what they saw, since the Alexandria Lighthouse was truly a grandiose structure for the world of that time.
Among other descriptions we find the following: “The Faros lighthouse consisted of three marble towers standing on a base of massive stone blocks. The first tower was rectangular and contained rooms in which workers and soldiers lived. Above this tower was a smaller, octagonal tower with a spiral ramp leading to the upper tower." The common features of these two descriptions are visible. As a result, today the following description can be accepted as the most accurate and truthful.
The lighthouse had a height of 180 meters from base to top. This calculation was made based on the testimony of the historian Josephus. According to other descriptions, its height was only 120 meters. Ibn al-Sayha (11th century) gives the figure 130-140 meters. According to modern experts, from a purely practical point of view, such a height was unnecessary, even if we take into account that ancient lighthouses should have been higher due to the weakness of their fire. The greatest European lighthouse at the mouth of the Garonne near Bordeaux has a height of 59 meters above sea level. It was built by the Romans, taking the lighthouse on the island of Foros as a model. It remained in its original form until the 16th century, then it was rebuilt. The lighthouse on Cape Hatteras is 58 meters high, the lighthouse on the coral reefs off Florida is 48 meters high. None of the modern lighthouses reaches the height of Alexandria.
The Ptolemies built this fantastic skyscraper on a rock not only for practical purposes. First of all, the lighthouse was a symbol of the power of their empire, a symbol of wealth and greatness, like a light in the darkness. This structure had a base in the shape of a square with sides of 180-190 meters (other sources give other figures). On this foundation stood a palace with four towers at the corners. From its center rose a massive quadrangular tower 70-80 meters high, which gradually narrowed, ending in battlements. On this tower stood another, narrower, but also quite high, which ended in a stone platform. On this site there were columns in a circle supporting a cone-shaped tower, which was crowned by an 8-meter-high statue of the patron of the seas, Poseidon. According to some reports, at the top of the tower there was a statue of Zeus the Savior, and not his brother Poseidon.
At the top of the third tower, a fire was lit in a voluminous bronze bowl, the reflection of which, using a complex system of mirrors, was visible 100 miles away. A shaft ran through the entire lighthouse, around which a ramp and stairs rose. Carts drawn by donkeys drove along a wide and sloping ramp to the top of the lighthouse. Fuel for the lighthouse was delivered through the mine.
The tall lighthouse also served as an observation post. A complex system of reflectors was also used to view the sea, making it possible to detect enemy ships long before they appeared off the coast.
Death of the lighthouse
The inscription of Sostratus was seen by Roman travelers. At that time the lighthouse was still functioning. With the fall of the Roman Empire, it stopped shining, the upper tower, dilapidated over the centuries, collapsed, but the walls of the lower floor still stood for a long time.
The Alexandria lighthouse stood for 1,500 years, helping the Mediterranean “cybernetos” (as the ancient Greeks called helmsmen) navigate. The lighthouse suffered from earthquakes and weathering of the stone, but during the times of the emperors Claudius and Nero it was restored. Its fire was extinguished forever during an earthquake in the 4th century. During Arab rule in the mid-7th century, it served only as a daylight. During the time of the first Mamluk sultans (mid-13th century), the mainland moved so close to the island that the piers were covered with sand and it was no longer needed as a daylight lighthouse. At the very beginning of the 14th century, it was dismantled into stones, and a medieval Turkish fortress was erected on the ruins of the lighthouse. The bronze plates that served as mirrors were probably melted down into coins. This fortress was subsequently rebuilt more than once and still stands on the site of the world's first lighthouse.
In the 1960s, while exploring coastal waters, an unknown Italian diver, descending to a shallow depth near the Sultan's fortress, found two marble columns. During further work, a statue of the goddess Isis of Pharos, which once stood in a nearby temple, was raised from the bottom. In 1980, a group of archaeologists discovered the remains of the Faros lighthouse on the seabed. At the same time, at a depth of 8 meters, the ruins of the palace of the legendary Queen Cleopatra were discovered...
Heritage identity & evidence
Identity
- LUX ID
LUX-LH-000134- Type
- Lighthouse
- Object kind
- Lighthouse
- Current status
- inactive
Review & coverage
External identifiers
No reviewed external identifiers yet.
Key source-backed claims
- Construction or building date -283 · Александрийский (Фаросский) маяк archive
- English name Lighthouse Alexandria · Александрийский (Фаросский) маяк archive
- Light visibility / range 50 · Александрийский (Фаросский) маяк archive
- Local name Φάρος της Αλεξάνδρειας · Александрийский (Фаросский) маяк archive
Claim evidence
Operational status
Selected value: inactive
Why this value is shown: Current evidence is active; Source: Legacy archive field; Inherited from the archive
Field support: Needs a reviewed field source
Archive value: inactive
Show claim history
- inactive selected why: Current evidence is active; Source: Legacy archive field; Inherited from the archive · Александрийский (Фаросский) маяк Current · archive · Legacy archive field
Technical details
- claim_id
CLAIM-LUX-LH-000134-status-001- review_status
current- confidence
archive- source_type
migration_field- winner_reason
current active claim; source type migration_field; confidence archive
Technical details
- field_id
status- current_claim_id
CLAIM-LUX-LH-000134-status-001- winner_reason
current active claim; source type migration_field; confidence archive- field_support_status
no-trusted-reference- candidate_count
1- distinct_value_count
1- review_guidance
accepted/current claims without valid_to; prefer accepted, then latest valid_from, curated source, confidence, id.
Construction or building date
Phase history: -283
Reviewer action: Treat each active date as a separate lighthouse phase, rebuild, first-light, or current-structure date before promoting phase-specific facts.
Field support: Needs a reviewed field source
Archive value: -283
Show claim history
- -283 · Александрийский (Фаросский) маяк Current · archive · Legacy archive field
Technical details
- claim_id
CLAIM-LUX-LH-000134-construction_date-001- review_status
current- confidence
archive- source_type
migration_field
Technical details
- field_id
construction_date- current_claim_id
CLAIM-LUX-LH-000134-construction_date-001- field_support_status
no-trusted-reference- candidate_count
1- distinct_value_count
1- review_guidance
repeatable lifecycle phase field; display active values as phase history and only flag conflict when review assigns two different values to the same phase.
Tower height
Selected value: 140
Why this value is shown: Current evidence is active; Source: Legacy archive field; Inherited from the archive
Field support: Needs a reviewed field source
Archive value: 140 m
Show claim history
- 140 selected why: Current evidence is active; Source: Legacy archive field; Inherited from the archive · Александрийский (Фаросский) маяк Current · archive · Legacy archive field
Technical details
- claim_id
CLAIM-LUX-LH-000134-tower_height-001- review_status
current- confidence
archive- source_type
migration_field- winner_reason
current active claim; source type migration_field; confidence archive
Technical details
- field_id
tower_height- current_claim_id
CLAIM-LUX-LH-000134-tower_height-001- winner_reason
current active claim; source type migration_field; confidence archive- field_support_status
no-trusted-reference- candidate_count
1- distinct_value_count
1- review_guidance
accepted/current claims without valid_to; prefer accepted, then latest valid_from, curated source, confidence, id.
Light visibility / range
Selected value: 50
Why this value is shown: Current evidence is active; Source: Legacy archive field; Inherited from the archive
Field support: Needs a reviewed field source
Archive value: 50 miles
Show claim history
- 50 selected why: Current evidence is active; Source: Legacy archive field; Inherited from the archive · Александрийский (Фаросский) маяк Current · archive · Legacy archive field
Technical details
- claim_id
CLAIM-LUX-LH-000134-light_visibility-001- review_status
current- confidence
archive- source_type
migration_field- winner_reason
current active claim; source type migration_field; confidence archive
Technical details
- field_id
light_visibility- current_claim_id
CLAIM-LUX-LH-000134-light_visibility-001- winner_reason
current active claim; source type migration_field; confidence archive- field_support_status
no-trusted-reference- candidate_count
1- distinct_value_count
1- review_guidance
accepted/current claims without valid_to; prefer accepted, then latest valid_from, curated source, confidence, id.
English name
Selected value: Lighthouse Alexandria
Why this value is shown: Current evidence is active; Source: Legacy archive field; Inherited from the archive
Field support: Needs a reviewed field source
Show claim history
- Lighthouse Alexandria selected why: Current evidence is active; Source: Legacy archive field; Inherited from the archive · Александрийский (Фаросский) маяк Current · archive · Legacy archive field
Technical details
- claim_id
CLAIM-LUX-LH-000134-english_name-001- review_status
current- confidence
archive- source_type
migration_field- winner_reason
current active claim; source type migration_field; confidence archive
Technical details
- field_id
english_name- current_claim_id
CLAIM-LUX-LH-000134-english_name-001- winner_reason
current active claim; source type migration_field; confidence archive- field_support_status
no-trusted-reference- candidate_count
1- distinct_value_count
1- review_guidance
accepted/current claims without valid_to; prefer accepted, then latest valid_from, curated source, confidence, id.
Key sources
2 active / 2 total in-archive source links. Full sources and reference search leads below
External Identity Graph
- LUX Light ArchiveLUX-LH-000134 Canonical LUX ID
Local identity anchor for the record and related claims.
- Wikidata
- WikipediaSearch / review Search lead
review lead · Useful for public descriptions and cross-checking, but text must be rewritten or quoted sparingly.
- ARLHSSearch / review Review source
review lead · Search the World List of Lights and add a verified ARLHS ID when found.
- OpenStreetMapSearch / review Search lead
review lead · Resolve to a stable node, way, or relation URL before acceptance.
- Source URLs2 active / 2 total in-record source links Record source URLs
record provenance · Record-level source URLs are listed in the source provenance section.
- Lighthouse DirectorySearch / review Review source
review lead · Use the regional directory page as a trusted catalogue lead; add the exact URL after review.
Evidence graph
Derived view of how sources, facts, identifiers, lifecycle events, and relationships support this record.
Sources
Facts
- Construction or building date construction_date · -283
- English name english_name · Lighthouse Alexandria
- Light visibility / range light_visibility · 50
- Operational status status · inactive
- Tower height tower_height · 140
Identifiers
- Search / review object
- Search / review object
- Search / review object
- Search / review object
- Search / review object
Lifecycle
- No lifecycle evidence nodes yet.
View by year
Reconstructed state
No reviewed year-by-year state profile yet.
State profile JSON will appear here after review.
History and connections
Lifecycle summary
Current status: inactive
Lifecycle events
- BuiltInherited from legacy archive
Construction date recorded.
1 source · medium confidence
Construction phases
Repeated construction dates are treated as lighthouse phases or rebuilds, not one current-date conflict.
- -283 · Александрийский (Фаросский) маяк · Phase claim
Source narrative context: Year started: approximately 283 BC.
Evidence and data
Detailed timeline, graph, map history, and JSON exports for review and research.
Coverage: no-accepted-coordinates
Open timeline JSON · Open graph JSON · Open map history JSON · Open state profile JSON
Lighthouse history (1 events)
- Construction date recordedrecord-derived
Record history (2 changes)
- Archive record createdarchive-metadata
- Archive record updatedarchive-metadata
Connection graph (1 objects)
Geo timeline (0 places)
No accepted coordinate point yet. The text geography remains listed as context.
- Geography contextЕгипет · text-only
Related nodes
- Александрийский (Фаросский) маяк. Галерея documents · galery
- Модель Александрийского (Фаросского) маяка documents · galery
Referenced by
- РАДИО МОСКВЫ ВСЕ СВОИ ЭФИР 17 МАРТА 2016 mentions · lighthouse_names
Rights & Attribution
Content License
Original editorial content on this page: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International. See Rights & Reuse.
Media Rights
No published media with documented rights on this record.
Attribution
"Lighthouse Alexandria" · LUX-LH-000134 · © LUX143 · Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International · https://light.lux143.org/lighthouses/LUX-LH-000134/
Citation
LUX Light Archive, Lighthouse record: "Lighthouse Alexandria", LUX-LH-000134, https://light.lux143.org/lighthouses/LUX-LH-000134/, accessed 2026-07-03, archive v0.24.42.
Legacy archive provenance
This object now uses its LUX identity as the public record. The original Drupal node is preserved as migration provenance and a compatibility route.
- Canonical LUX ID
- LUX-LH-000134
- Legacy node
- node:626
- Legacy URL
- /node/626/
- Drupal source type
- lighthouse
- Source system
- drupal_migration
- Source path
- /node/626
Trusted References
Known external identifiers and review leads for Wikipedia, Wikidata, map, registry, and catalogue coverage. Search leads are not accepted evidence until reviewed. Field-level evidence is implied only when evidence scope or supported fields are explicit.
| Source | Status | Evidence scope | Reference | Review note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wikidata | search-candidate | Search / review | Resolve to a verified QID before treating as evidence. | |
| Wikipedia | search-candidate | Search / review | Useful for public descriptions and cross-checking, but text must be rewritten or quoted sparingly. | |
| OpenStreetMap | search-candidate | Search / review | Resolve to a stable node, way, or relation URL before acceptance. | |
| ARLHS | review-source | Search / review | Search the World List of Lights and add a verified ARLHS ID when found. | |
| Lighthouse Directory | review-source | Search / review | Use the regional directory page as a trusted catalogue lead; add the exact URL after review. |
Record identifiers
- Node
- 626
- Source type
- lighthouse
- Review class
- Lighthouse
- Wikidata class
- Q39715
- Created
- 30/05/2011 08:25:30 UTC
- Changed
- 24/02/2012 14:50:45 UTC
- Source path
- /node/626
All technical fields
- Status
- inactive Legacy archive claim · Александрийский (Фаросский) маяк
- Construction date
- -283 Multiple lighthouse phases Александрийский (Фаросский) маяк archive
- Tower height
- 140 Legacy archive claim · Александрийский (Фаросский) маяк
- Focal height
- Not recorded
- Light height
- Not recorded
- Light characteristic
- Not recorded
- Light number
- Not recorded
- Operation
- Not recorded
- Visibility
- 50 Legacy archive claim · Александрийский (Фаросский) маяк Last known light information Last known light information. The record is marked inactive, so this value needs date/status review before it is read as a current operating signal.
- Legacy light IDs
- Not recorded
- Call sign
- Not recorded
- Lens / optics
- Not curated
- Latitude
- Not recorded
- Longitude
- Not recorded
Empty lighthouse fields are shown so review gaps are visible. Lens and optics are curated as heritage assets when evidence exists.