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The fortress itself was built by Saladin
rather as a place of residence than of defence.
Though elevated on a spur of Mount Mukattam,
it is commanded by higher positions behind;
and while in the days before cannon was
invented it was doubtless a very strong
position, its uselessness as a place of
defence against modern attacks was
demonstrated in 1805, when Mohammad 'Aly, by
means of a battery on a higher position,
expelled the Turkish governor, Khurshîd, from
the Citadel. The fortress was constructed of
massive stones brought from the third and
smaller pyramids of Gîzeh . . . .All Cairene
building subsists on the principle of robbery.
The Ptolemies stole the pillars of the
Pharaohs; the Arabs used the materials of the
Greeks and Romans; the Turks steal from most
of their predecessors with their usual
indiscriminating brigandage. The Citadel is an
extraordinary medley of all styles and
periods. Hieroglyphic blocks jostle Turkish
lath-and-plaster; the eagle of Saladin looks
down upon the flimsy ornaments of Isma'il.
(Source:
Picturesque Palestine, vol. 4, p.
156-158.) |