Giza (Arabic, الجيزة,
transliterated al-ǧīzah; pronounced in the Egyptian Arabic dialect of Cairo
al-Gīza; also sometimes rendered in English as Gizeh,
Ghizeh, or Geezeh) is a town in Egypt on the left bank of the Nile river, across from the old city of Cairo, and now part of the greater
Cairo metropolis. It is the capital of Al Jizah governorate, and is located in the northeast of this governorate, near its
border.
Giza is most famous as the location of some of the most impressive ancient monuments in the world, a complex of ancient Egyptian royal mortuary and sacred structures, including the Great
Sphinx, the Great
Pyramid of Giza—the only survivor of the Seven Wonders of the World of antiquity—and a number of other large pyramids and temples.
The most active phase of construction here was in the 25th century
BC. These monuments are located some eight kilometers inland into the desert from the old town of Giza on the Nile.
The ancient remains of Giza have attracted visitors and tourists since classical antiquity, when these Old Kingdom
monuments were already over 2,000 years old.
While, due largely to nineteenth-century images, the pyramids of Giza
are generally thought of by foreigners as lying in a remote, desert location, they are located in what is now part of the Cairo
metropolitan area [1] (http://www.delange.org/Giza_Pyramids_Sphinx/GC.jpg). Consequently, urban development reaches
right up to the perimeter of the antiquities site, to the extent that in the 1990s a
Pizza Hut restaurant opened across the street [2] (http://www.theagitator.com/archives/60-16-andec-01.jpg).
External link
|