Suakin

Suakin is a port city in Northern Sudan. Once considered the height of medieval luxury on the Red Sea, the old city built of coral is now in ruins.

Understand

Suakin was likely Ptolemy's Port of Good Hope, Limen Evangelis, which is similarly described as lying on a circular island at the end of a long inlet. Suakin was first mentioned by name in the 10th century by al-Hamdani, who says it was already an ancient town. At that time, Suakin was a small Beja settlement, but it began to expand after the abandonment of the port of Badi to its south. The Beja were originally Christian. Despite the town's formal submission to the Muslim Mamluks in 1317, O. G. S. Crawford believed that the city remained a center of Christianity into the 13th century. Muslim immigrants such as the Banu Kanz gradually transformed this: Ibn Battuta records that in 1332, there was a Muslim "sultan" of Suakin, al-Sharif Zaid ibn-Abi Numayy ibn-'Ajlan, who was the son of a Meccan sharif. Suakin was sieged by the Portuguese in 1513 and captured briefly in 1541.

Ottoman sultan Selim I nominally added the port to the territory of the Ottoman Empire in 1517, though it was only loosely controlled, until the Ottoman province of Habesh was established in 1555 with the residence of its pasha in Suakin. The Ottomans restored the two main mosques โ€“ Shafi'i and Hanafi, strengthened the walls of the fort and built new roads and buildings โ€“ but by the 18th and 19th centuries, the Swiss traveler Johann Ludwig Burckhardt found two-thirds of the homes in ruins and described it as a place of "ill-faith, avarice, drunkenness and debauchery". The Khedive Isma'il of Egypt received Suakin from the Ottomans in 1865 and attempted to revitalize it, building new houses, mills, mosques, hospitals, and a church for immigrant Copts.

The British Army was involved at Suakin in 1883โ€“1885 and Lord Kitchener was there in this period leading the Egyptian Army contingent. Suakin was his headquarters and his force survived a lengthy siege in the city. After the defeat of the Mahdist State, the British preferred to develop the new Port Sudan, rather than engage in the extensive rebuilding and expansion that would have been necessary to make Suakin comparable. By 1922, the last of the British had left.

Since 2000, Sudan's National Corporation for Antiquities and Museums has undertaken research and documented the history of Suakin, and in 2022, the online project Sudan Memory published historical photographs, architectural drawings and a 3D reconstruction of the town on its website. In January 2018, as part of a rapprochement with Sudan, Turkey was granted a 99-year lease over Suakin Island. Turkey plans to restore the ruined Ottoman port city on the island.

Get in

By bus

You can take a public minivan from Port Sudan. The journey takes one hour and costs US$2.

By ferry

There is a ferry from Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, that takes 12-14 hours and departs every two days. Vehicles can be transported.

The Suakin bus station is about a 10-minute walk from Suakin Island.

By plane

The nearest airport is the Port Sudan New International Airport (PZU  IATA).

Get around

Motor rickshaws run from the bus station.

See

On the mainland

  • ๐ŸŒ Taj as-Sirr Mosque (โ€ู…ุณุฌุฏ ุงู„ุณูŠุฏ ุชุงุฌ ุงู„ุณุฑ ุงู„ู…ูŠุฑุบู†ูŠ).
  • ๐ŸŒ City gate (โ€ุจูˆุงุจุฉ ูƒุชุดู†ุฑ, Kitchener Gate).

On the island

  • ๐ŸŒ Suakin Island. The location of the old city, now mostly in ruins. Highlights include Khorshid Effendiโ€™s House, the Hanafi Mosque and the Shafai Mosque. The ticket office is located at the entrance to the island, after the causeway. SDG10 per person, although you may be asked for US$0.50 instead.

Buy

There is a vegetable market near Taj al-Sirr Mosque.

Sleep

Go next

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