The modern district of Abbassia is named after
Abbas Helmy Pasha and was built upon an older
Coptic village called
p-Sovt em-p-Hoi ( "the wall of the moat") and later
Shats ( "the moat"), which is a calque on the latter Arabic
al-Khandaq ( "the moat"). In 1865 an
observatory, principally for meteorological work, was founded at Abbassia, by the Khedive
Isma'il Pasha and maintained continuously there for nearly forty years. The building lay on the boundary between the cultivated
Nile Delta and the desert, but then with urban encroachment, it was decided in 1904 to move the meteorological work to
Helwan. The observatory at Abbassia was an empty monument until 1952. Abbassia and the nearby region saw heavy rainfall during a period of time
geological researchers call the
Pluvial Abbassia. During this period, red, green and purple rocks or
gravel became distributed all along the valley and Delta regions of the Nile. Gravel beds were formed, including a famous gravel bed at Abbassia. Photographed and described in 1926 by
Paul Bovier-Lapierre, these gravel beds were as thick as 33 feet (10 metres/meters) in some areas. In the
Second World War, during which Egypt was the scene of heavy fighting, the
United Kingdom located its
Royal Armoured Corps School in Abbassia. In September 1941, an
Italian Air Force plane bombed a
British Army depot in Abbassia.
The Cathedral of Saint Mark in Abbassia was the site of the 2012 funeral for
Coptic Pope Shenouda III of Alexandria, attracting more than two million mourners from around the world. A queue of over one kilometer in length formed to view the body of the pope, and as people pushed to get close, three people were crushed to death, and 137 were injured. During the continued 2012 protests of the
Egyptian Revolution of 2011, Abbassia was the scene of confrontations between protesters and armed gangs. On December 11, 2016
a chapel next to the Saint Mark's Coptic Orthodox Cathedral was the site of
a suicide bombing against Egypt's Coptic community. Of the 25 Copts who died in the explosion, most were women and children. The army was deployed to the site, and Egypt began three days of mourning. ==See also==