Bab Zuweila is one of the three remaining gates of Old Cairo. This gate
was built in 1092 when Badr Al-Jamali, the Fatimid vizier, built a second
larger wall around Cairo, as it was increasing in size, and Bab Zuweila was the
southern gate of this wall. The gate has a square shape, with a height, width
and depth of 25 m and its entrance has an arched wall above it. On the right
and left sides of the gate, there are two circular towers. When Sultan
Al-Muayyad built his mosque in 1415, he chose those two towers to build the
mosque’s minarets on top of them. The minarets offer a beautiful view of Cairo
from the top.
Bab Zuweila’s popularity doesn’t come from its shape or height; it
comes from the interesting incidents that happened on these gates. Perhaps the
most famous incident is when Qutuz, the Sultan of Egypt, cut the heads of the
Mongol messengers of Hulagu and hanged their heads on Bab Zuweila. The messengers
were delivering a threatening message from the Mongols to Egypt and at that
time the world believed that the Mongols were invincible, so Qutuz killed the
messengers to prove that the Mongols were humans and to make his troops believe
that they can defeat the Mongols. And indeed Egypt was the first country in
history to repel a Mongolian invasion. Another famous incident that took place
at Bab Zuweila was the killing of the Last Mamluk Sultan of Egypt, Tuman bay
II, by the Ottomans, which ended the Mamluk era of Egypt and signalled the
beginning of the Ottoman era.