- Sawhāj
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▪ Egyptalso spelled Sohāg, or Suhag,town and capital of Sawhāj muḥāfaẓah (governorate) in the Nile River valley of Upper Egypt. The town is located on the Nile's western bank between Asyūṭ and Jirjā, immediately across from Akhmīm on the eastern bank. It has cotton-ginning, textile-weaving, and food-processing factories. Automobile parts are distributed, and it is a centre for vehicle repair. The Sawhāj Institute is an affiliate of Al-Azhar University, Cairo.Sawhāj lies along the Cairo-Aswān railway and the main highway through Upper Egypt. A bridge across the Nile links it to Akhmīm. In recent years the two cities have virtually merged, although they are still separately administered. Pop. (1996) 170,125.▪ governorate, Egyptmuḥāfaẓah (governorate) in Upper Egypt, south of Asyūṭ and north of Qinā governorates. It is a ribbonlike stretch of the fertile Nile River valley about 60 miles (100 km) long. Through it the Nile flows in a roughly 13-mile- (21-km-) wide flat-bottomed valley hemmed in by limestone cliffs rising to nearly 1,000 feet (305 m). Throughout the area the Nile has cut a channel close to the eastern side of the valley; nearly all of the arable land lies west of the river. Sawhāj governorate's habitable area is one of the most densely populated in Egypt.About three-fourths of the employed population are farmers. The principal crops are cotton, millet, wheat, sugarcane, onions, peanuts (groundnuts), and melons. Local provincial industries include silk weaving at Akhmīm. Perennially irrigated land is watered from Al-Sawhājīyah Canal, fed from the Najʿ Ḥammādī barrage to the south. At Mount Al-Ḥarīdī and Al-ʿĪsāwīyah Sharq east of Akhmīm, there are limestone quarries.Two notable sites of antiquity are Abydos, with monuments of Old, Middle, and New Kingdom Egypt; and Bayt Khallāf, near Sawhāj town, the site of a mastaba (mud-brick tomb) probably of King Djoser (3rd dynasty; c. 2650–c. 2575 BC). Nearby is the Coptic White Convent with a late 5th-century basilica church surrounded by a wall of white calcite incorporating many reused pharaonic stones. The Red Convent, also with a basilica church, is located 4 miles (6.5 km) to the northwest. Both of these centres of early and medieval Coptic learning have been restored.Apart from Sawhāj, the capital of the muḥāfaẓah, principal towns are Akhmīm, Jirjā, and Ṭaḥtā. Jirjā has a sugar refinery, which was enlarged in the early 1980s. Area 597 square miles (1,547 square km). Pop. (2006) 3,746,377.
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Universalium. 2010.