
Cairo Citadel
'The
Saladin Citadel of Cairo' () is one of the most popular
tourist attractions of
Cairo.
It is sometimes referred to as ''Mohamed Ali Citadel'' (), because it contains the
mosque of
Mohamed Ali (or ''Muhammad Ali''), which was built almost 7 centuries later.
The
Mosque of Muhammad 'Ali Pasha was built between
1828 and
1848, perched on the summit of the
citadel.
[1]
The
Ottoman mosque was built in memory of Tusun Pasha, Muhammad `Ali's oldest son, who died in
1816.
The location, part of the
Mokattam hill near the center of Cairo, was once famous for its fresh breeze and grand views of the city, and was fortified by Saladin between
1176 and
1183 AD, to protect it from the
Crusaders. The citadel stopped being the seat of government when
Egypt's ruler,
Khedive Ismail, moved to his newly built
Abdin Palace in the Ismailiya neighborhood in the
1860s.
The citadel also contains Al-Gawhara palace, the National Military Museum and the Police Museum.

Cairo Citadel at night
Notes
1.
"The Mosque of Muhammad Ali" (history), webpage:
AN-mosque.
External links
★
Cairo Citadel (Arabic)
★
Cairo Citadel