موضوع عن القاهرة بالانجليزي
القاهرة بالانجليزى
معلومات عن مدينة القاهرة مع الصور
paragraph about cairo
مصر القاهرة بنات
cairo city
مساحة القاهرة الكبرى بالكيلومتر
القاهرة نقاط الاهتمام
لماذا سميت القاهرة بهذا الاسم
القاهرة بالانجليزي
كيف تكتب القاهرة بالانجليزي
معنى كلمة cairo بالعربي
معنى cairo
ترجمة كلمة cairo
مصر بالانجليزى
كيف تكتب كلمة مصر بالانجليزية
موضوع عن القاهرة بالانجليزي
اصل كلمة كايرو
عاصمة مصر بالانجليزي
Cairo, the metropolis of an Arab country
Located on the banks of the Nile, just
before the river delta, Cairo is the capital of Egypt. With sixteen million
inhabitants, it is also the first agglomeration of the African continent and
the Arab world.
How is it organized? How is it
characteristic of the metropolises of poor countries?
I. The explosion of cities
• More than half of people in poor
countries live in the countryside. Yet cities are experiencing unparalleled
growth. Recent (it started in the fifties), it is also extremely strong. Driven
by poverty or natural calamities (drought, floods), the farmers leave their
village in the hope of living better in the city. This massive rural exodus is
accompanied by significant natural growth (due to a high birth rate): cities are
growing in a disproportionate way.
• Cairo's population grew from 3.3
million in 1960 to 6.9 million in 1970, then to 16.2 million today (11th in the
world). It is still experiencing natural growth a little under 2% and thus has
an additional 300,000 inhabitants each year. How can a city, let alone a city
in a poor country, still accommodate nearly a thousand more people every day?
How to house these new inhabitants and give them work?
II. An overpopulated capital
1. A crowded center
• The old center east of the Nile has
very high population densities, up to more than 3,000 inhabitants per hectare.
Few remains of the medieval city deeply transformed by the urban explosion. The
winding streets welcome the shopping activities, in the shops and on the
sidewalks: these are the souks.
• A modern business district builds its
office towers near the Nile. Nearby, the old center was deserted by the
well-to-do people (who mainly settled in Heliopolis): the new, poorer
inhabitants are huddling together, occupying all available spaces. The terraces
of the buildings gradually become real dwellings. The roofs are occupied by
families, sometimes even by small farms (pigeons, hens or sheep) or garbage.
One or two floors are thus added to buildings, often very old, which are not
always strong enough to support such installations: some collapse under this
weight.
2. Expansion costs
• The city has expanded to include
surrounding villages. It occupies the valley of the Nile in all its width and
has gained the desert plateaus, in the east and in the west. The great pyramids
of Cheops, Khephren and Mykerinos that dominate the Giza plateau to the west
are now part of the suburbs of the city: residential buildings, not the desert,
now surround these pyramids.
• At the gates of Cairo, there are
cemeteries dating from the Middle Ages. In the eighties, they were colonized by
poor families. They used the empty spaces between the tombs to build first
small shelters and then real houses. The city authorities have established
water points and power lines: these cemeteries have become slums. Nearly one
million people live in the City of the Dead.
III. Serious development problems
• The central districts are poorly served
by public transport, despite the introduction of a metro whose first line connects
since 1987 the industrial zone to the south to the northern neighborhoods. The
center is congested by gigantic traffic jams and suffers from significant
pollution (which adds to the sand dust raised by the wind).
The city now encroaches on the valuable
agricultural lands of the Nile Valley. Each year, thousands of hectares of
cultivated land disappear. To curb this disordered growth, the government has
built new cities in the desert to welcome newcomers. The massive rural exodus
fueled by overcrowded campaigns is the main cause of Cairo's explosive growth.
Its inhabitants often have to settle for shanty towns and small trades.
Population and aspects of the city
The agglomeration of Cairo has nearly 18
million inhabitants. The inhabitants are called Cairotes. They represent more
than a quarter of the Egyptian population.
In the second half of the twentieth
century the city expanded considerably, the population was quadrupled. The
extension has been at the expense of the good agricultural lands of the Delta
and the Nile Valley. To master urban expansion, new cities were created in the
desert surroundings of the city; they are occupied by the middle classes and
the well-to-do social classes of Cairo society.
Cairo is the economic, political and
cultural center of Egypt.
Near the Nile is clustered the
modern-looking business district. Large towers are home to hotels, Egyptian
government central offices, bank offices and foreign companies.
The historic center of the city is at the
foot of the hills on the right bank of the Nile. It is dominated by the
citadel. The ocher color of these districts contrasts with the color of the
districts of the modern city. Residential buildings are elevated by often
illegal constructions on the roof terraces of buildings. It is mostly inhabited
by a poor population.
The city develops by welcoming the
Egyptians driven from the countryside by the rural exodus. For them, the
capital is hoping to find work (almost half of the jobs in the Egyptian private
sector are concentrated there). Space being reduced, makeshift constructions
were built even in the cemeteries (like that of the City of the Dead). Slums
whose occupants live in deplorable hygienic conditions are extremely extensive,
particularly in the eastern part of the city.
The urban concentration creates important
problems in the car traffic but also pollution.
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