Ṭanṭā

Egypt
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Ṭanṭā, city and capital of Al-Gharbiyyah muḥāfaẓah (governorate), Lower Egypt, in the Nile River delta. It lies on an irrigation canal almost midway between the Rosetta (west) and Damietta (east) branches of the Nile on the Cairo-Alexandria superhighway. It is also a junction for railways leading to Alexandria and Damietta and serving the flat, alluvial governorate.

A centre of Arab learning and pilgrimage, Ṭanṭā’s most revered possession is the mosque and tomb of Aḥmad al-Badawī, a 13th-century Islamic marabout (holy man) born at Fès (Morocco). Three important annual feasts are celebrated in Ṭanṭā, including the birthday of the marabout, which attracts hundreds of thousands of people from all over Egypt. In addition to the Islamic schools attached to Al-Aḥmadī Mosque, there is the Arabic college of Al-Aḥmadī (renamed Ṭanṭā Institute), one of the oldest in Egypt. It was founded in 1276 and was reorganized in 1769 as an affiliate of Al-Azhar University of Cairo. Ṭanṭā University (founded 1972) offers courses of study in agriculture, commerce, engineering, and other faculties; a branch of the Sadat Academy for Management Sciences (founded 1981) is also located in the city. Ṭanṭā was one of two Coptic bishoprics created in 1895 under the patriarch of Alexandria.

Industries include petroleum refining, cotton ginning, cottonseed oil extracting, wool spinning, flour milling, and the production of tobacco products and pasta (macaroni). The older Suez-Mediterranean oil pipeline runs through the city. Pop. (2006) 422,854.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Noah Tesch.