El Mahalla El Kubra

El Mahalla El Kubra

El Mahalla El Kubra – commonly shortened to El Maḥalla – is the largest city of the Gharbia Governorate and in the Nile Delta, with a population of 535,278 as of 2012. It is a large industrial and agricultural city in Egypt, located in the middle of the Nile Delta on the western bank of the Damietta Branch tributary. The city is known for its textile industry and hosts the Misr Spinning and Weaving Company, which employs around 27,000 people.

Location of El Mahalla El Kubra

Al-Maḥallah al-Kubrā, also spelt Mahalla el-Kubra, is a city in the central Nile River delta of Lower Egypt, Al-Gharbiyah muhafazah (governorate). It lies just west of the Damietta Branch of the Nile.

Etymology

El Mahalla El Kubra consists of two words: El-Mahalla in Arabic means “district” or “encampment”, and El Kubra means “great”. Hence the title collectively suggests “The Great Encampment”. It’s a rough translation of a Coptic Egyptian name ϯϣⲁⲓⲣⲓ “cohabitation” or “residence”. Still, the second part of it – “El Kubra” may come from the Hellenistic name of the same settlement – “Theodosiou Nixis” (Coptic: ⲑⲉⲟⲇⲱⲥⲓⲟⲩ ⲛⲓⲝⲓⲥ, where ⲛⲓⲝⲓⲥ is most likely a Greek transcription of Coptic ⲛⲓϣϯ – “great”).

History

Roman Egypt

El Mahalla El Kubra was known as “Theodosiou” (Coptic: ⲑⲉⲟⲇⲱⲥⲓⲟⲩ) or “Theodosiou Nixis” (Coptic: ⲑⲉⲟⲇⲱⲥⲓⲟⲩ ⲛⲓⲝⲓⲥ, where ⲛⲓⲝⲓⲥ is most likely a Greek transcription of Coptic ⲛⲓϣϯ – “great”) (which might refer to Hibiscus cannabinus) in Ptolemaic and Roman Egypt, meanwhile it was known as “ϯϣⲁⲓⲣⲓ” in Coptic records.

Mamluk Egypt & Egypt Eyalet

El Mahalla El Kubra was designated as the capital of Gharbia Governorate in 1320 by Ibn Qalawun before it was relocated to Tanta in 1836.

2006–11 protests

Over 15,000 protesters clashed with police in El-Mahalla in 2006 following the publication of a cartoon mocking Islam in Denmark.

Later in 2006, textile workers protested market reforms, demanding better living conditions.

Beginning in April 2008, the city held mass demonstrations protesting the election results of President Hosni Mubarak, claiming election fraud and demanding better wages. Security forces were ordered to crack down on the dissidents, and in May, they killed two or three in the city and injured dozens. According to The Washington Post, some Egyptians viewed images of protesters in Mahalla overturning billboards of Mubarak as a turning point in Egyptian politics. The Observer has written that protests in El-Mahalla from 2006 to 2011 spearheaded more considerable political changes throughout Egypt. A Facebook group established by 28-year-old engineer Ahmad Maher to support striking textile workers in El-Mahalla gained 70,000 followers and helped organize support for the strikers nationally.

In 2011, protests in Mahalla contributed to the collapse of the Mubarak dictatorship.

2012 protests and declaration of autonomy

On 15 July 2012, 25,000 workers from El Mahalla El Kubra’s Misr Spinning and Weaving Company went on strike, demanding increased profit sharing, better retirement benefits and a management replacement. The Misr workers were joined by workers from seven other textile factories in the region, and strikes also broke out among doctors and health workers, university workers, and ceramics workers in other parts of Egypt.

Clashes between protesters supporting or opposing the Muslim Brotherhood on 28 November left over 100 people injured. On 7 December, the city declared itself autonomous from Egypt, as workers and students, declaring themselves independent from the “Muslim Brotherhood State”, cut rail lines and blocked entrances to the city. Protesters stormed the city council and announced their intentions to replace it with a revolutionary council.

Buildings and structures

El Mahalla El Kubra contains Misr Spinning and Weaving Company, the largest cotton manufacturing company in Egypt, and this company makes the clock of Big Ben.

Economy

El Mahalla El Kubra is home to the largest public sector Egyptian textile company, the Misr Spinning and Weaving Company, employing over 27,000 workers.

Sport

The city has two football teams: Ghazl Al-Mehalla and Baladeyet Al-Mahalla.

Notable people

  • Ahmed Elmohamady, Egyptian Footballer and Current Captain
  • Mahmoud Mokhtar, a legendary Egyptian sculptor
  • Cyril of Alexandria, Patriarch of Alexandria from 412 to 444
  • Salah Zulfikar, a legendary actor
  • Shawky Gharib, former footballer and coach
  • Mohamed Elneny, footballer
  • Reham Abdel Ghafour, actress