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Asyut

 
Dictionary: As·yut   (ä-syūt') pronunciation

A city of east-central Egypt on the Nile River. It is an industrial and trade center. Population: 386,000.

 

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Asyut (äsyūt'), city (1986 pop. 272,986), E central Egypt, on the Nile. An industrial and trading center and also the seat of a university, it is famed for pottery, carved bone and wood, leatherwork, and silk shawls. Nearby is the Asyut Barrage, which helps regulate the Nile's flow and impounds water for irrigational use. Asyut was the ancient Greek city of Lycopolis and later a station of the caravan trade. The city has a large Coptic Christian population, although many have left.


Dialing Code: The telephone dialing code for: Asyut, Egypt
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The country code is: 20
The city code is: 88


Wikipedia: Asyut
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Lycopolis and Lykopolis redirect here; for the ancient city bearing those names located in the delta of the Nile, see Lycopolis (Delta).
Asyut
Asyut is located in Egypt
Asyut
Location in Egypt
Coordinates: 27°11′N 31°10′E / 27.183°N 31.167°E / 27.183; 31.167
Country  Egypt
Governorate Asyut Governorate
Time zone EST (UTC+2)
 - Summer (DST) +3 (UTC)

Asyut (Arabic: أسيوط‎), is the capital of the modern Asyut Governorate, Egypt; there is an ancient city nearby. The modern city is located at: 27°11′00″N 31°10′00″E / 27.1833333°N 31.1666667°E / 27.1833333; 31.1666667, while the ancient city is located at: 27°10′00″N 31°08′00″E / 27.1666667°N 31.1333333°E / 27.1666667; 31.1333333.

Contents

Etymology

Asyut
in hieroglyphs
O34
G39
w t
O49

The name of the city is derived from early Egyptian Zawty (Z3JW.TJ) (late Egyptian, Səyáwt) into the Coptic Syowt ⲥⲓⲟⲟⲩⲧ. In Graeco-Roman Egypt, it was called Lycopolis or Lykopolis (Greek: Λυκόπολις, "ἡ Λύκων πόλις"), [1] Lycon, [2] or Lyco [3].

Ancient Asyut

Around 3100 BC ancient Asyut was the capital of the Thirteenth Nome of Upper Egypt (Lycopolites Nome), seated on the western bank of the Nile. The two most prominent gods of pre-Christian Asyut were Anubis and Wepwawet, both funerary deities.

During the First Intermediate Period, the rulers of "Zawty"; Khety I, Itefibi, and Khety II were supporters of the Herakleopolitan kings, of whose domain the Nome formed the southern limits. The conflict between this Nome and the southern Nomes under the rule of the Eleventh dynasty ended with the victory of Thebes and the decline of Asyut's importance.

The shield of a king named Recamai, who reigned in Upper Egypt (probably during the "shepherd dynasty" in the "Lower Country"), has been discovered in Asyut [4]. Lycopolis has no remarkable ruins, but in the excavated chambers of the adjacent rocks are found mummies of wolves, confirming the origin of its name, as well as a tradition preserved by Diodorus Siculus [5], to the effect that an Aethiopian army, invading Egypt, was repelled beyond the city of Elephantine by herds of wolves. Osiris was worshipped under the symbol of a wolf at Lycopolis. He having, according to a myth, come "from the shades" under that form, to aid Isis and Horus in their combat with Typhon [6]. Other Ancient Egyptian monuments discovered in Asyut include; the Asyut necropolis (west of the modern city), tombs which date to dynasties Nine, Ten and Twelve, and Ramessid tombs of Siese and Amenhotep.

In Graeco-Roman times, there was a distinct dialect of Coptic spoken in Asyut, known as "Lycopolitan", after the Greek name for the city. Lesser-used names for this dialect are "Sub-Akhmimic" and "Assiutic".

Modern Asyut

Today, the city of Asyut has almost 400,000 inhabitants.[7] It is the Egyptian city with the highest Coptic Christian concentration. It is also home to the University of Asyut, one of the largest universities in Egypt, Assiut Barrage, and to the Lillian Trasher Orphanage.

The Virgin Mary is reported to have appeared in Asyut on 17 August 2000. This apparition is recognized as official by the Coptic Orthodox Church.[citation needed]

People from Asyut

Twinnings

References

  1. ^ Ptol. iv. 5. § 63; Steph. B. s. v.; Strabo xvii. p. 813)
  2. ^ (Plin. v. 9. s. 11)
  3. ^ (Itin. Anton. p. 157)
  4. ^ (Rosellini, Mon. Civ. i. 81.)
  5. ^ (ii. 88; comp. Aelian. Hist. An. x. 28)
  6. ^ (Champollion, Descript. de l'Egypte, vol. i. p. 276; Jollois, Egypte, vol. ii. ch. 13.)
  7. ^ Egypt [ City Population: Cities, Towns, Countries & Provinces, Statistics & Maps ]
  8. ^ Wikisource-logo.svg "Lycopolis". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. 1913. http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Catholic_Encyclopedia_(1913)/Lycopolis. 

Bibliography

  • Loprieno, Antonio: Ancient Egyptian: A Linguistic Introduction, Oxford U Press 1996. ISBN 0-521-44849-2
  • Baines & Malek Cultural Atlas of Ancient Egypt, 2000. ISBN 0-8160-4036-2
  • Kahl, Jochem: Ancient Asyut: The first Synthesis after Three Hundred Years of Research. The Asyut Project vol. I. Wiesbaden 2008. ISBN 978-3447056663

External links

Coordinates: 27°11′N 31°10′E / 27.183°N 31.167°E / 27.183; 31.167

This article incorporates text from the public-domain Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913.


 
 
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