The
Egyptian Arabic dialect spoken by Mansoura's population is a northern Egyptian Arabic dialect, with noticeable influences from the city's surrounding rural villages, each of which has contributed to the city's population over the years. There are some similarities to
Alexandrian
Egyptian Arabic in some aspects of pronunciation. Mansoura National Museum used to be Dar Ibn Lockman, the house where
Louis IX was imprisoned in 1250 during the
Seventh Crusade. Displayed in the museum are the suits of mail and swords of the crusaders, as well as a collection of maps. Huge paintings depict the Battle of Mansoura. The Mansoura branch of the National Library was inaugurated in 2008 as the Mansoura Misr Library. Mansoura is famous for its architectural style, especially the Shinnawi Palace (after Mohamed Bek El-Shinnawi, a member of the
Wafd Party). It was built by an
Italian architect in 1928. The mosque of El-Saleh Ayoub El-Kebir is one of the most important in Mansoura. It was built by a loyal servant of the Sultan and is located in Al-Sagha Street that separates "Old Mansoura" from the modern city. Like
Cairo,
Alexandria and
Port Said, Mansoura was home to a flourishing
Greek community until the
Nasser era, when many were
forced to leave. Many of the older and best established shops and businesses around the city still bear their original
Greek names. Mansoura also had a small Italian population living in the city too. The first Old English school in the city was established on the site of the old
Greek school in the Toriel area, one of the traditionally relatively affluent residential districts of the city. ==Infrastructure==