The
city reached its peak in the 12th century, with a population of approximately
200,000.It was the center of administrative power in Egypt, until it was
ordered burned in 1168 by its own vizier, Shawar, to keep its wealth out of the
hands of the invading Crusaders. The remains of the city were eventually
absorbed by nearby Cairo, which had been built to the north of Fustat in 969
when the Fatimid conquered the region and created a new city as a royal enclosure
for the Caliph. The area then fell into disrepair for hundreds of years and was
used as a garbage dump.
Today,
Fustat is part of Old Cairo, with few buildings remaining from its days as
capital, though there have been many archaeological digs which have taken
advantage of the wealth of buried material in the area.Many ancient items
recovered from the site are on display in Cairo's Museum of Islamic Art.
Fustat
grew into a series of tribal areas, khittas,around the central mosque
and administrative buildings.The majority of the settlers came from Yemen, with
the next largest grouping from western Arabia,along with some Jews and Roman
mercenaries. Arabic was generally the primary spoken dialect in Egypt, and was
the language of written communication, though Coptic was still spoken in Fustat
in the 8th century.
Fustat
was the center of power in Egypt under the Umayyad dynasty, which had started
with the rule of Muawiyah I , and headed the Islamic caliphate from 660 to 750.
However, Egypt itself was considered only a province of larger powers, and was
ruled by governors who were appointed from other Muslim centers such as
Damascus, Medina, and Baghdad. The city was still a major one though, and in
the 9th century, it had a population of approximately120,000.But when General
Gawhar of the Tunisian-based Fatimid’s captured the region, this launched
a new era when Egypt was the center of its own power. Gawhar founded a new city
just north of Fustat on August 8, 969, naming it Al Qahira (Cairo),and
in 971, the Fatimid Caliph al-Mo’ezz al- moved his court from al –Mansuryia
al-Mansuryia in Tunisia to the new city that Gawhar founded. But Cairo
was not intended as a center of government at the time—it stayed primarily as
the royal enclosure for the Caliph and his court and army,while Fustat remained
the capital in terms of economic and administrative power. The city thrived and
grew, and in 987, the geographer Ibn Hawkal wrote that al-Fustat was
approximately one third the size of Baghdad. By 1168, it had a population of
200,000.
Today,
little remains of the grandeur of the old city. The three capitals, Fustat,
Al-Askar and Al-Qatta’I were absorbed into the growing city of Cairo. Some of
the old buildings remain visible in the region known as"Old Cairo",
but much of the rest has fallen into disrepair,overgrown with weeds or used as
garbage dumps.
The
oldest-remaining building from the area is probably the Mosque of Ibn Tulun,
from the 9th century, which was built while the capital was in Al-Qatta'i. The
first mosque ever built in Egypt (and by extension, the first mosque built in
Africa), the Mosque of Amr, is still in use, but has been extensively rebuilt
over the centuries, and nothing remains of the original structure.