3 Best Sights in Cairo, Egypt

Tunis Village

Fodor's choice

This small village overlooking Qarun Lake is often referred to as Eastern Switzerland. Evelyne Porret, a Swiss potter, moved to the village in the 1980s and established a pottery school that is still open today. With it, she transformed the villagers’ lives. The school, along with a country house, formed a compound that became the center of the town. Today, Tunis Village is home to the workshops of some of the country’s best potters, as well as some eco-lodges and contemporary restaurants.

Medinet el-Fayyum

Medinet el-Fayyum, the capital and the largest city of the Fayyum Governorate, was once a place of worship for the crocodile god, Sobek, inspiring the Greeks to name the city Crocodilopolis. Today, it sits 7 meters (22 meters) above sea level, and eight canals provide it with water. Traces of ancient Mamluk and Ottoman architecture can be found in some of its downtown mosques, and the lively city center hosts bazaars and markets weekly. The city's iconic attractions, however, are its four waterwheels. They were first introduced during the Ptolemaic Dynasty (305–30 BC), and you can hear them amid the honking of horns and the rush of traffic. There are waterwheels elsewhere in the Fayyum as well.

Nazla

The precariously perched kilns that dot the ravine at the edge of this village are a spectacular sight to behold. Specialized pots, such as the bukla, a squat vessel with a skewed mouth, are made here, but all are sold at markets in Medinet el-Fayyum.

Recommended Fodor's Video