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The Great Pharos Lighthouse
In the fall of 1994 a team of archaeological
scuba divers entered the waters off of Alexandria, Egypt. Working
beneath the surface they searched the bottom of the sea for
artifacts. Large underwater blocks of stone were marked with
floating masts so that an Electronic Distance Measurement station on
shore could obtain their exact positions. Global positioning
satellites were used to further fix the locations. The information was then fed into computers to
create a detailed database of the sea floor. Ironically, these
scientists were using some of the most high-tech devices available
at the end of the 20th century to try and discover the ruins of one
of the most advanced technological achievements of the 3rd century,
B.C.: The Pharos.
It was the great lighthouse of
Alexandria, one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World.
The story of the Pharos starts with the
founding of the city of Alexandria by the Macedonian conqueror
Alexander the Great in 332 B.C.. Alexander started at least
17 cities named Alexandria at different locations in his vast
domain. Most of them disappeared, but Alexandria in Egypt thrived
for centuries and continues even today.
Alexander the Great choose the location
of his new city carefully. Instead of building it on the Nile delta,
he selected a site some twenty miles to the west, so that the silt
and mud carried by the river would not block the city harbour. South
of the city was the marshy Lake Mareotis. After a canal was
constructed between the lake and the Nile, the city had two
harbours: one for Nile River traffic, and the other for
Mediterranean Sea trade. Both harbours would remain deep and
clear
Alexander died soon after in 323 B.C. and
the city was completed by Ptolemy Soter the new ruler of
Egypt. Under Ptolemy the city became rich and prosperous.
However, it needed both a symbol and a mechanism to guide the many
trade ships into the busy harbour. Ptolemy authorized the
building of the Pharos in 290 B.C., and when it was completed
some twenty years later, it was the first lighthouse in the world
and the tallest building in existence, with the exception of the
Great Pyramid.
The
lighthouse's designer was Sostrates of Knidos. Proud of his
work, Sostrates, desired to have his name carved into the
foundation. Ptolemy II, the son who ruled Egypt after his
father, refused this request wanting his own name to be the only one
on the building. A clever man, Sostrates had the
inscription:
SOSTRATES SON OF DEXIPHANES OF KNIDOS ON BEHALF
OF ALL MARINERS TO THE SAVIOR GODS
chiselled
into the foundation, then covered it with plaster. Into the plaster
was chiselled Ptolemy's name. As the years went by the
plaster aged and chipped away revealing Sostrates'
declaration. The lighthouse was built on the island of Pharos
and soon the building itself acquired the name. The connection of
the name with the function became so strong that the word
"Pharos" became the root of the word "lighthouse" in the
French, Italian, Spanish and Romanian languages.
The
lighthouse was apparently a tourist attraction. Food was sold to
visitors at the observation platform at the top of the first level.
A smaller balcony provided a view from the top of the eight-sided
tower for those that wanted to make the additional climb. The view
from there must have been impressive as it was probably 300 feet
above the sea.
There were few places in the ancient world where
a person could ascend a man-made tower to get such a perspective.
How then did the world's first lighthouse wind up on the floor of
the Mediterranean Sea? Most accounts indicate that it, like many
other ancient buildings, was the victim of earthquakes. It stood for
1,500 years but was damaged by tremors in 365 and 1303 A.D. Reports
indicate the final collapse came in 1326.
Did the
divers actually find the remains of Pharos in the bottom of
the harbour? Some of the larger blocks of stone found certainly seem
to have come from a large building. Statues were located that may
have stood at the base of the Pharos. Interestingly enough,
much of the material found seems to be from earlier eras than the
lighthouse. Scientists speculate that they may have been recycled in
the construction of the Pharos from even older buildings.
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