A General History And Collection Of Voyages And Travels - Volume 6 - By Robert Kerr













































































































 -  We got close up to Suez about three
o'clock in the afternoon, where we saw many troops of horse in - Page 546
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We Got Close Up To Suez About Three O'clock In The Afternoon, Where We Saw Many Troops Of Horse In The Field, And Two Great Bands Of Foot-Soldiers In The Town, Who Made Many Shots At Us From A Blockhouse.

The Turkish navy at this place consisted of forty-one large gallies, and nine great ships.

Having completed the examination, and returned to our fleet, we all went to the point of land to the west of the bay, and came to anchor near the shore in five fathoms water, in an excellent harbour, the bottom a fine soft sand.

It is certain that in ancient times Suez was called the City of Heroes, for it differs in nothing as to latitude situation and bearings from what is said in Ptolomy, Table III. of Africa. More especially as Suez is seated on the uttermost coast of the nook or bay where the sea of Mecca ends, on which the City of Heroes was situated, as Strabo writes in his XVII book thus: "The city of Heroes, or of Cleopatra, by some called Arsinoe, is in the uttermost bounds of the Sinus Arabicus, which is towards Egypt.". Pliny, in the VI. book of his Natural History, seems to call the port of Suez Danao, on account of the trench or canal opened between the Nile and the Red Sea. The latitude of Suez is 29 deg. 45' N. being the nearest town and port of the Red Sea to the great city of Cairo, called anciently Babylon of Egypt. From Suez to the Levant Sea or Mediterranean, at that mouth of one of the seven branches of the Nile which is called Pelusium, is about 40 leagues by land, which space is called the isthmus, or narrow neck of land between the two seas.

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