Until recently Marsa Alam was a sleepy fishing village, but the barren hinterland has a surprisingly interesting history. There is plenty of evidence in the rock inscriptions and paintings that Stone Age man made in the surrounding mountains many thousands of years ago. The smooth rock was perfect for such work. This prehistoric art includes depictions of hunting scenes showing numerous animals including giraffes, ostriches and hunting dogs.

Wadi Hammamat and the Silk Road to Asia:

Graffiti from a later period can also be found in the towering smooth walls of Wadi Hammamat (Valley of Baths) which is closer to El Quseir, but still a not too distant excursion from Marsa Alam. These include graffiti dating from Pharaonic times, including drawings of reed boats which have been dated to 4000 BC. Evidence suggests that the valley was the major trading route between ancient Thebes (Luxor) and the Red Sea and that crucially it provided a trading link via El Quseir, the Red Sea and the Silk Road between Thebes and Asia.  Historians believe that ancient Egypt's trade routes extended not just to Arabia, but as far as the Han Dynasty of China.

Biblical text also suggests that the Jews may have used the valley on their exodus from Egypt although there's no other evidence to support this.   However, we do know that the Romans later constructed watch towers and wells at regular intervals along the route.


 

-          Marsa Alam’s  ancient gold and emerald mines:

There was another equally important reason why the Marsa Alam area was vital to the economy of ancient Egypt. The surrounding coastal area was rich in deposits of copper, lead, gold, emeralds and semi-precious stones. It is thought to have contained the first emerald mines anywhere in the world and was the sole source of emeralds for the Roman Empire.

You can still visit what are popularly known as
Cleopatra's Mines in the Wadi El Gamal National Park south of Marsa Alam.   Most historians think these mines were already in use during the Ptolemaic period, some even arguing that the history of the mines may go back as far as the second millemium BC. While there's no hard evidence linking Queen Cleopatra to the mines, there is every reason to believe they may have been in operation in her time.  Cleopatra adored jewellery and she loved the green gem stone above all others and once gave an emerald with her portrait engraved on it to at least one favored ambassador.  Additionally, a large rock cut temple at Sikait is typical of the Ptolemaic period and Strabo writes of Egyptians mining emeralds only a few years after her death. 

However the only datable artifact to be found in these mining villages is a Roman coin from the reign of Emperor Nero in the first century AD. By this time there were at least nine mining villages across an area of seventy square kilometers with the biggest two at Nugrus and Sikait.   The Romans called the area Smaragdus Mons or the Emerald Mountains. It was almost certainly the only emerald mining area in the Roman Empire and the mines remained in use until the fourteenth century but declined thereafter with the importation of emeralds from India. 

The mountainous Red Sea coastline was also an important source of granite for the Empire, and slaves were used to hack the stone out of the mountains. Even the Roman guards considered such locations as a punishment posting. It is thought that it was during the reign of Ptolemy II (281-246BC) that the first road was built linking Marsa Alam on the Red Sea with Edfu. This route ran through what is now the “Wadi el Gemal” (Valley of the Camels) national park. The main purpose of the road was to take emeralds and other precious stones and metals from the mines near the Red Sea to the Nile for onward shipment.

Historians estimate that the Egyptian Eastern Desert produced some thirty types of stone, gem stone and metal and that prior to 1000BC more than seventy gold mines contributed to a significant part of ancient Egypt's legendary wealth. Some of the gold mines continued to operate under the British administration during the early twentieth century before eventually closing down due to the high cost of extraction. However recently they were reopened by foreign investors using the latest mining technology. These mines together with some marble and granite quarries provide employment for some of the population, although others are now being drawn in to the tourist trade.


- The Ottomans, Britain, and France fight for El Qusseir:

In 1571 the Ottoman Sultan Selim I constructed a formidable fort on high ground overlooking the port of El Quseir to protect both the harbor and the Ottoman Empire's flow of trade up the Red Sea.  Both the fort and the town are a short excursion from hotels in the area.
In 1799 the French army under Napoleon seized the town and fort, widening the ramparts and fortifying them with cannon.  Shortly afterwards these enhanced defences withstood an assault by the British battleships HMS Daedalus and HMS Fox.

In June 1801, however,  the fort was finally abandoned by the French army when  an invasion force of some 6000 British and Indian soldiers under General Baird landed at El Quseir.  This force then crossed the Eastern Desert in a ten day march at the height of summer to capture Qena on the Nile.  A feat which helped to hasten the final surrender of French forces in September.

Today, at the fort's main gate you can buy a ticket for a forty minute tour which includes a look at several small exhibits of the area's history, Bedouin life and traditions.

- Tourism in Marsa Alam:

During the late 1980s and early 1990s, as the coastal resorts of Hurghada and Sharm El Sheikh to the north began to flourish, some began to realize that Marsa Alam, with its virgin beaches and coral reefs, had an enormous tourist potential.


In 2001,  Marsa Alam International Airport was inaugurated and in July 2007 a new $14 million 220 Km road was completed between Edfu and Marsa Alam. Previously tourists had to take a long circuitous route by Safaga and Qena to reach Luxor.