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Benghazi
Libya's second
largest city is an important commercial and
administrative centre and serves as Eastern
Libya's main port.
It supports some
small industry, mostly food processing and
packaging. The modern city has little visual
charm, as most of its older monuments have been
destroyed, some during World War II and many
others in the course of contemporary
development.
A 1992 estimate
records the population of Benghazi as about
500,000.
The old town
contains many small shops selling a wide variety
of goods. The old market, or funduq,
sells fresh vegetables and local produce and has
all the flavour and atmosphere typical of any
market in the Middle East.
There are some
Roman remains still to be found in the seafront
area, but these are of limited interest.
History of Benghazi
Benghazi was
probably founded in about 515BC by Greeks who
had travelled from Cyrene and settled here on
the coastal plain. Although information is
unclear as to specific dates, we do know that
the early settlement was known as Euesperides,
and its situation was considerably further
inland than modern Benghazi.
By 249BC the old
harbour had silted up and a new site needed to
be found for the town, closer to the sea. It was
renamed Berenice after the Cyrenaican wife of
Egypt's Ptolemy III, and subsequently became
part of the Roman Empire.
The Arab invasion
of AD643 showed no interest in the town of
Berenice and little is known of it until the
15th century, when it once more began to be used
as a trading post by travelling merchants. Ibn
Ghazi (Ben Ghazi), a holy man who lived there
during the latter part of the 16th century, gave
his name to the town in 1579.
By the 17th
century, the invading Turks had established
themselves in Ibn Ghazi, where they built a
fort, and used the town as a centre for
tax-collecting. This made it an extremely
unpopular place for merchants and travellers,
and trade declined rapidly. The town fell into
obscurity for many years and prosperity was not
regained until the second Ottoman occupation,
which began in 1839.
A naval siege,
carried out by the Italians in 1911, resulted in
Benghazi's surrender and Italian dominance of
the city. It became an Italian stronghold and
high walls were built encircling its central
area. During the next 20 years, the Italians
struggled for control of the surrounding areas,
and began to rebuild the city in 1931.
Benghazi was the
scene of heavy bombing raids during the Second
World War and changed hands five times during
this period. It was liberated by General
Montgomery in 1942, but was so badly damaged
that little of the city remained standing.
Rebuilding began
slowly after Libyan independence, but was
hampered by lack of government funds. With the
discovery of oil in the area around Sirt in
1959, however, the city once again grew in
importance and prosperity. As oil revenues
increased, the city's development continued
throughout the sixties and seventies, and its
harbour was rebuilt in the early 1980s, to
enable it to handle larger cargo vessels. New
roads were also built at around this time
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