Cairo (Egypt)
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View of Pyramids from the Mena House Hotel |
Few other countries are so dominated by their capital: Cairo is Egypt. For Egyptians to speak of one is to speak of the other. The 'Mother of the World' nurtures1 more than 16 million Egyptians, Arabs, Africans and sundry(各式各样的)international hangers-on in a collision of East and West, old and new, African and Arabic. She's overburdened with one of the world's highest population densities2, which makes for a seething3 (原意为沸腾)mass of people, buildings and cacophonous(发音不和谐的)traffic.
Cairo has been the heart of Egypt for more than 1000 years. Here the medieval world and the contemporary Western world clash in a confusion of mud-brick houses and towering modern office buildings, of flashy cars and donkey-drawn carts(驴车). Cairenes see nothing strange in this. They aren't driven by the Western obsession4 to update and upgrade. The resulting pervasive5 sense of timelessness is one of the city's great charms. At the end of the day, it's a city travelers either loveor hate; few come away indifferent.
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Cairo Tower at Night |
Finding your way about Cairo's vast sprawl6 is not as difficult as it may seem. Midan Tahrir is at the center. Northeast of Tahrir and centered on Sharia Talaat Harb is Downtown, a bustling7 commercial district. The city's main train station at Midan Ramses marks Downtown's northernmost extent. Heading east, Downtown ends at Midan Ataba and the old medieval heart of the city known as Islamic Cairo takes over.
Bordering Downtown to the west is the Nile River, which is obstructed8 (拦截)by two sizeable islands. The more central of these, connected directly to Downtown by three bridges, is Gezira, home to the Cairo Tower and the Opera House complex. The west bank of the Nile is less historical and much more residential9. The primary districts are Mohandiseen, Agouza, Doqqi and Giza, all of which are light on charm and heavy on concrete. Giza covers by far the largest area of the four, stretching some 20km (12.4mi) west on either side of the long, straight road that ends at the foot of the Pyramids.