Cairo Sights

  1. Church of St Barbara

    St Barbara was beaten to death by her father for trying to convert him to Christianity. Her relics supposedly rest in a small chapel left of the nave.

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  2. Church of St Simeon the Tanner

    The Church of St Simeon the Tanner , on a ridge above 'Garbage City', is just a part of a whole complex carved into the cliffs. It seats 5000 (that the buses carrying worshippers fit through the lanes below is a miracle in itself) and is ringed with biblical scenes carved into the rock. Look over the ridge, and you can see the whole sprawling city; look down, and you see real, live pigs rooting around the zabbaleen backyards, recycling the edible trash.

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  3. Convent of St George

    The Convent of St George is closed to visitors, but you can step down into the main hall and the chapel. Inside the latter is a beautiful wooden door, almost 8m high, behind which a small room is still occasionally used for the chain-wrapping ritual that symbolises the persecution of St George during the Roman occupation. Occasionally, visitors wishing to be blessed are wrapped in chains by the resident nuns, who intone the requisite prayers.

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  4. Greek Orthodox Cemetery

    Beyond the Church of St Barabara an iron gate leads to the large, peaceful (if a bit litter-strewn) Greek Orthodox Cemetery. Women on their own should be careful - we've heard reports of flashers lurking among the gravestones.

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  5. Monastery & Church of St George

    St George (Mar Girgis) is one of the region's most popular Christian saints. A Palestinian conscript in the Roman army, he was executed in AD 303 for resisting Emperor Diocletian's decree forbidding the practice of Christianity. There has been a church dedicated to him in Coptic Cairo since the 10th century; this Greek Orthodox one dates from 1909. The interior has been gutted by fires, but the stained glass windows and blue-green tile ceiling remain bright and colourful.

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  6. Mosque of Amir Qurqumas

    The 1507 Mosque of Amir Qurqumas is beautiful, thanks to restoration work, but not always open.

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  7. Mosque of Gamal ad-Din

    The 1408 Mosque of Gamal ad-Din is a monument that has received the somewhat overzealous restoration attention. It's raised above a row of shops, the rent from which was intended for the mosque's upkeep.

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  8. Omar Makram Mosque

    Omar Makram Mosque is the place where anybody who's anybody has a funeral.

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  9. Shar Hashamaim Synagogue

    Shar Hashamaim Synagogue is one of the few remaining testaments to Cairo's once-thriving Jewish community. Resembling a set from Tomb Raider, its ornate Babylonian exterior was being restored at the time of research; when it's done, the place may once again be open on Saturdays, the Jewish holy day.

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