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πŸ›οΈ Coptos-Berenike

Archaeology - Ancient Rome Egypt Africa

πŸ›οΈ Coptos-Berenike
Ancient Roman ports and trade settlements on the Red Sea coast


πŸ• 2 min read Β· Updated 15 Mar 2026 at 15:57
πŸ“Œ Fast Facts
  • Two linked Roman settlements in Upper Egypt's Eastern Desert
  • Coptos: inland Nile port; Berenike: coastal Red Sea harbor
  • Period of prominence: 1st–6th centuries CE
  • Connected by a desert trade route spanning approximately 260 kilometers

Coptos and Berenike functioned as the primary Roman gateways for trade between the Mediterranean and the Indian Ocean. Coptos, located on the Nile near modern Qift, served as the collection and dispatch point for goods destined for the Red Sea. Berenike, situated on the Egyptian coast south of the modern city of Hurghada, operated as the main harbor where ships departed for Arabia, East Africa, and India. Together they formed an integrated economic network central to Roman commerce ...

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