Cairo Coptic Quarter
Koptisches Kairo – Kirchen aus dem 4.–7. Jahrhundert ohne Unterbrechung in Gebrauch
Warum dieses Ziel wichtig ist
Das Koptische Viertel (Masr al-Qadima) in Kairo, auch bekannt als Alt-Kairo, beherbergt Kirchen aus dem 4. bis 7. Jahrhundert: die hängende Kirche (Al-Muallaqah), die Basilika des Heiligen Sergius (über der überlieferten Rast der Heiligen Familie), die Kirche der Heiligen Barbara und das Koptische Museum.
Das Koptische Christentum, die älteste christliche Kirche Afrikas, führt seine Gründung auf den Evangelisten Markus zurück, der Alexandria im Jahr 42 n. Chr. erreicht haben soll.
Wichtigste Sehenswürdigkeiten
Hanging Church (Al-Muallaqa)
3rd-7th c. Suspended over a Roman bastion of the Fortress of Babylon. Noah's-Ark-shaped wooden roof, 110 icons. Was the Coptic Papal seat 11th-14th c.
Abu Serga (Saints Sergius and Bacchus)
4th/5th c. Crypt where the Holy Family is said to have stayed during the Flight into Egypt.
Coptic Museum
1910. 16,000 artifacts including the Nag Hammadi codices (discovered 1945).
Church of Saint Barbara
5th-century Coptic church preserving the relics of Saint Barbara.
Church of Saint George
Rare round 1909 Greek Orthodox church above an older 10th-century crypt.
Ben Ezra Synagogue
Traditional site where the infant Moses was found in the bulrushes. The Cairo Geniza was discovered here in 1896.
Saint Mark Coptic Orthodox Cathedral, Abbassia
Papal seat, 15 km from Old Cairo. Holds relics of Saint Mark returned from Venice in 1968.
Cave Church of Saint Simon the Tanner (Moqattam)
15,000 seats - largest church in the Middle East. Built into the cliff above the Zabbaleen Christian community.
Beste Reisezeit
Oktober–April (angenehme Temperaturen). Koptisches Weihnachten am 7. Januar feierlich.
Wichtige Feiertage
- 7 January - Coptic Christmas (29 Kiahk on the Coptic calendar)
- 19 January - Coptic Theophany
- Variable - Coptic Easter (one week after Western)
- Saint Mark - 30 April (Catholic) / 8 May (Coptic)
Anreise
Metro Linie 1, Station Mar Girgis, direkt im koptischen Viertel.
Unterkunft
Kairo bietet breites Hotelspektrum. Garden City oder Islamic Cairo für Nähe zu den koptischen Stätten.
Touren und Erlebnisse
Geführte koptische Touren von lokalen Agenturen (Halbtagstouren). Kombination mit Gizeh und ägyptischen Museen für Komplett-Kairo-Besuch.
Practical information
- Hours
- Churches typically 09:00-16:00 (closed during liturgies). Coptic Museum 09:00-17:00. Saint Simon's Mon-Sat 08:00-17:00.
- Fees
- Coptic Museum 200 EGP foreigners. Most churches free. Saint Simon's free.
- Dress code
- Strict modest dress in all churches. Women cover their hair.
- Accessibility
- The Hanging Church is reached by a long flight of steps. Most other sites have step-free entry on the ground floor.
Pilgertipps
💡 Pilgertipps
- The Coptic Quarter (Mar Girgis metro station, line 1) groups four of the principal Coptic sites within a 200-metre walk: the Hanging Church (Al-Muallaqa, the oldest church in Egypt), the Coptic Museum (the world's finest collection of Coptic Christian art), the Church of Saint Sergius (Abu Serga, traditionally built over the Holy Family's resting cave), and the Saint Barbara Church.
- Visit on a Friday morning if possible — the Coptic Sunday is Friday (the principal Coptic liturgical day) and the Hanging Church celebrates the principal Divine Liturgy at 08:00-11:00. Friday evening at the Cave Church of Saint Simon (Mokattam, the world's largest church by capacity, carved into the cliff above the Manshiet Nasser zabbalin district) is the great popular Coptic charismatic-style service.
- The Coptic Museum (small entrance fee, ~120 EGP in 2026 — verify on the spot) is essential — the Nag Hammadi codices (the 4th-century gnostic library), the icon collection, the Coptic textiles. Allow 2-3 hours.
- The Saint Mark Cathedral at Abbassia (the seat of the Coptic Pope, 4 km north of the Coptic Quarter) is open to visitors — the modern (1968) cathedral is the working seat of Pope Tawadros II. Saint Mark's relics are in the crypt.
- Women cover their hair in Coptic churches; men remove hats and wear long trousers. The dress code is enforced firmly — paper scarves are available at the entrance to most churches.
- Cairo traffic is severe — allow 2-3 hours for any cross-city transfer. The Cairo Metro is fast, cheap (5 EGP / ~€0.10) and works in central Cairo; the Mar Girgis station gives direct Coptic Quarter access.
- The Hanging Church's interior is decorated with 110 Coptic icons including 17th-century works. The Coptic Pope's throne (when in Cairo) is at the right of the iconostasis. Photography is permitted without flash.
Wussten Sie schon?
ℹ️ Wussten Sie schon?
- The Coptic Orthodox Church is one of the six Oriental Orthodox churches, founded by Saint Mark the Evangelist in Alexandria around 42-49 AD. The Coptic Pope of Alexandria is one of the four ancient eastern Patriarchs (with Antioch, Jerusalem, Constantinople); the See of Alexandria is the second-ranked Christian See after Rome.
- Coptic Christianity is the oldest Christian community in the Arab world. About 10-15 million Copts live in Egypt today (10-15% of the population) — making it the largest Christian community in the Middle East by absolute numbers.
- The Coptic language is the direct continuation of ancient Egyptian — written in Greek letters plus seven additional characters borrowed from demotic Egyptian. It survived as a spoken language until the 17th century and is still used as the liturgical language of the Coptic Church.
- The Hanging Church gets its name from being built on top of (and 'hanging' from) the Babylon Fortress walls of Roman Cairo — the structure literally suspends over a Roman wall passage. Approximate construction date is 3rd-4th century with major reconstructions in the 7th and 11th centuries.
- The Cave Church of Saint Simon the Tanner on Mokattam Mountain is the largest church in the Middle East by capacity (20,000 seated worshippers, 70,000 standing). It is the home of the Zabbalin community — Cairo's Coptic Christian garbage collectors who have a thriving charismatic liturgical tradition.
Biblical references
- Matthew 2:13-15 — “Arise, take the young child and his mother, and flee into Egypt - the Flight into Egypt.”
- Hosea 11:1 — “Out of Egypt have I called my son - quoted in Matthew 2:15.”
- Isaiah 19:25 — “Blessed be Egypt my people, and Assyria the work of my hands - foundational Coptic self-understanding.”
Empfohlene Lektüre
| Title / Reference | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| The Story of the Copts (Iris Habib El Masri, 2 vols) | The standard English-language history of Coptic Christianity from Saint Mark to the modern day. Written from within the Coptic tradition; comprehensive on theology, liturgy and the monastic tradition. |
| Coptic Christianity in Ottoman Egypt (Febe Armanios) | Academic study of the survival and adaptation of the Coptic community under 400 years of Ottoman rule. Strong on the role of the Hanging Church and the Cairo Patriarchate. |
| The Lives of the Desert Fathers (Translated) | The 4th-5th century tales of the early Egyptian desert monastics — Anthony the Great, Pachomius, Macarius. Read before visiting Wadi El Natrun. |
Nearby destinations to combine
Sinai - Saint Catherine's Monastery
Oldest continuously inhabited Christian monastery (548-565 AD)
Holy Family Route
Vatican-endorsed pilgrimage path of the Flight into Egypt
Teil dieser Routen
- Coptic Egypt — Cairo Coptic Quarter, Holy Family Route and Saint Catherine's Sinai
Frequently asked questions
Names in other languages
| Arabic | Misr / Al-Qahira al-Qadima |
|---|---|
| Greek | Kairo |
| German | Kairo |
| Russian | Kair |
| French | Le Caire |
| Italian | Il Cairo |