ποΈ Coptos-Berenike
Roman port and trade hub on the Red Sea coast of Egypt
π Fast Facts
- Location: Red Sea coast, Upper Egypt, approximately 40 km south of Hurghada
- Period: Founded as Ptolemaic settlement; major expansion under Roman rule (1stβ3rd centuries CE)
- Primary function: International trade port connecting Mediterranean, Indian Ocean, and Nile Valley routes
- UNESCO status: Not inscribed; archaeological remains largely underwater or eroded
Coptos-Berenike (also transliterated Koptos-Berenike) was a critical port settlement on Egypt's Red Sea littoral, serving as a nexus for Mediterranean and Indian Ocean trade during the Ptolemaic and Roman periods. The site comprises two overlapping settlements: the inland Coptos, an older Pharaonic city connected to the Nile, and the coastal Berenike, established as a purpose-built harbor under Ptolemy II Philadelphus (r. 285β246 BCE) and substantially developed during the Roman Imperial ...