Shamāl Sīnāʾ

Shamāl Sīnāʾ

formerly  Sīnaʾ ash-Shamālīyah 

      (Arabic: “Northern Sinai”), muḥāfaẓah (governorate), northern part of the Sinai Peninsula, Egypt. The governorate was created out of Sīnāʾ muḥāfaẓah in 1978 after the initial stages of Israel's withdrawal from the peninsula. The town of Al-ʿArīsh is the capital of the muḥāfaẓah.

      The northern half of the Sinai Peninsula is dominated by the broad At-Tīh Plateau, which extends from the governorate's southern boundary downward to the north until it meets the Mediterranean coastal plain. At the northern edge of the muḥāfaẓah, the Mediterranean coastal plain widens out westward toward the Suez Canal, where it gives way to large expanses of sand dunes. Wadi Al-ʿArīsh, a seasonal stream 155 miles (250 km) long, lies in the northeastern section of the governorate and empties into the Mediterranean Sea near Al-ʿArīsh. Along the northern coast lies the large and brackish Bardawīl Lake (266 square miles [690 square km]); this lake is bounded on the north by a long, narrow sandbar pierced by two canals that link the lake with the sea. A large aquifer of groundwater, which is augmented by drainage from winter rainfall, underlies the muḥāfaẓah, and there are numerous wells and springs that tap this source.

      Agriculture has become important on the plain of Al-ʿArīsh and along the coast, and reclamation and irrigation efforts have brought much of the arable land there under cultivation. Crops of barley, fruits, market vegetables, olives, and dates are grown. Another large reclamation effort has been undertaken along the southwestern edge of Bardawīl Lake, where vegetables, fruit trees, and wood trees have been planted.

      The majority of the settled population of the muḥāfaẓah lives in the coastal region. The largest town of the governorate is Al-ʿArīsh (Arīsh, Al-ʿ), which also serves as a port. Other towns are Būr Fuʾād, Al-Qanṭarah (both Suez Canal towns), Rummānah (on the coast road), and Nakhl. The Mediterranean coastal road in the governorate has been the main thoroughfare for military and commercial traffic between Egypt and Palestine since antiquity. Area 10,646 square miles (27,574 square km). Pop. (2006) 339,752.

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Universalium. 2010.

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