Agouza (Arabic: العجوزة, romanized: al-ʿajuza) is one of nine municipal districts that form Giza city,[1] which is part of the Greater Cairo metropolis, on the western bank of the river Nile. It is situated between 6th October Bridge and 15 May Bridge and south of Imbaba. Most of it is colloquially known as Mohandessin, a 1950s planned community originally called Madinat al-Awqaf, sub-divided in to a number of profession-based housing cooperatives, one of which was for engineers (mohandissin).
The Egyptian National Circus and the adjoining Balloon Theater are on the Agouza Corniche. The British Council main centre in Egypt is also on the Corniche.
History
editAgouza used to be a mostly royal and state-owned agricultural estate held under waqf (endowment) until the early 20th Century with villages, such as Mit Okba, and 'izbas (hamlets) such as al-Hutiyya.[2] From the 1930s the Ministry of Awqaf piloted plans to turn the estates into a new suburban district of Cairo as Dokki to its south flourished. In 1948, its chief architect Mahmoud Riad set out the final plan of Madinat al-Awqaf, with plots being advertised for sale that year.[3]
Much of this development along with smaller developments to its south made up the Wasat (middle) district in the city of Giza,[4] before being divided in 1997 into the districts of Agouza (most of which is Madinat al-Awqaf/Mohandessin) and Dokki, (the other half of Madinat al-Aqaf plus other developments) with most of Agouza known colloqially as Mohandeseen, even though it is a smaller non-administrative shiakha (census block) within it (see Demographics below).
Origin of the name[citation needed]
editThere are two contesting stories explaining the origin of Agouza's name.
The first is that in the 1940s and 1950s, an old woman (agouza in Arabic) sat alongside the Corniche and sold coffee to cars passing by. When people wanted to meet up, they would say "I'm at the agouza," and the name just stuck. The story is unverified however.
The second, perhaps more likely story, is that the name refers to Nazly Hanem, the wife of Sherif Pacha who was Prime Minister at the time of Mohamed Ali in the 1800s. At the age of 80 she decided to build a mosque to fulfill her husband's wish after his death. Given her old age people referred to the mosque as Al Agouza which later became the name of the whole district.
Nawal Street
editAfter Abdel Rahim Sabri Pasha's daughter Nawal died at the age of 6, he named his palace (now the Military Nasr Academy) after her, which led to its street being named Nawal Street.[citation needed]
Demographics and sub-districts
editThe district of Agouza had a population of 278,479 in 2017, 143,681 male and 134,798 female.[5] It is made of six shiakhas:
Shiakha | Code 2017 Census | Total Population | Male | Female |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ḥûtiyya, al- | 210201 | 15,585 | 7939 | 7646 |
`Ajûza, al- (Agouza) | 210202 | 12,473 | 6514 | 5959 |
Mît `Uqba (Mit Okba) | 210203 | 68,393 | 34,590 | 33,803 |
A`lâm, al- (Madînat al-Awqâf) | 210204 | 18,286 | 9314 | 8972 |
Muhandisîn, al- (Jazîrat Mît `Uqba) | 210205 | 21,141 | 10,966 | 10,175 |
Arḍ al-Liwâ' | 210206 | 142,601 | 74,358 | 68,243 |
Notable places
editHospitals
edit- Al-Agouza Hospital[6]
Libraries
edit- 6 October Public Library
References
edit- ^ "الصفحة الرئيسية - الأحياء". www.giza.gov.eg. Retrieved 8 January 2023.
- ^ "Mīt 'Uqba - Tadamun". Retrieved 8 January 2023.
- ^ Keller, Thomas; Polach, Tomas (2010). "Mohandessin". ETH Basel. Retrieved 8 January 2023.
- ^ "الصفحة الرئيسية حى الدقى". www.giza.gov.eg. Retrieved 11 January 2023.
- ^ a b "2017 Census for Population". cedejcapmas.org. 2017. Retrieved 8 January 2023.
- ^ Weeks, R. (1977). "Study for El Agouza Hospital, Cairo". World Hospitals. 13 (4): 222–223. PMID 10305879.