Roman Amphitheatre in Alexandria
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| Roman Amphitheatre
in Alexandria |
Over 30 years of excavation in Alexandria, Egypt
have uncovered many Roman remains including this well-preserved
theatre with galleries, sections of mosaic-flooring, and marble
seats for up to 800 spectators.
In Ptolemaic times, this area was the Park of Pan
and a pleasure garden. The theater at one point may had been
roofed over to serve as an Odeon for musical performances.
Inscriptions suggest that it was sometimes also used for wrestling
contests. The theatre stood with thirteen semi-circular tiers
of white marble that was imported from Europe. Its columns
are of green marble imported from Asia Minor, and red granite
imported from Aswan. The wings on either side of the stage
are decorated with geometric mosaic paving. The dusty walls
of the trenches, from digging in the northeast side of the
Odeon, are layered with extraordinary amounts of potsherds.
Going down out of the Kom, you can see the substantial arches
and walls in stone, the brick of the Roman baths, and the
remains of Roman houses.