Description: Print title: Sefi Canal at Fidemin-el-Fayum Print Specifics: Type of print: Wood Engraving - Original antique print Year of printing: not indicated in the print - actual 1892 Publisher: D. Appleton & Co., New York. Condition: 1 (1. Excellent - 2. Very good - 3. Good - 4. Fair). Light age toning of paper. Dimensions: 7 x 10.5 inches (17,5 x 26 cm), including blank margins (borders) around the image. Paper weight: 3 (1. Thick - 2. Heavier - 3. Medium heavy - 4. Slightly heavier - 5. Thin) Reverse side: Blank Notes: 1. Green color 'border' around the print in the photo is a contrasting background on which the print was photographed. 2. The print detail is sharper than the photo of the print. Original Narrative: The sefi, that is, " summer " canals, all of recent origin, are excavated below the mean low-water level from 26 to 30 feet below the surface, so that they are reached by the stream even at the very height of the dry season. In Upper Egypt they are disposed parallel with the river and at a very slight incline, so as to bring them at once to the level of the lands to be irrigated. But in Lower Egypt, from which the system of irrigating basins has entirely disappeared, the sefi canals remain everywhere at a lower level than the fields, to which the water must be raised by means of steam-engines, sakiehs, or shadufs. One of these sefi canals is the famous Mahmudieh channel, which derives its water from the Nile in order to irrigate the tracts skirting the desert as far as the city of Alexandria, and which serves at the same time as a great navigable highway. But having become partly choked by the mud, it is no longer deep enough to admit a regular current, hence has to be partly filled by means of steam-engines established at Atfeh, on the Bosetta branch of the Nile. The Damietta branch also feeds numerous summer canals, thanks to its relatively high elevation above the plains of the delta. The sefi system was first introduced under Mohammed Ali, when the cultivation ofJumel cotton was begun. By this method are still almost exclusively raised the larger and more important crops, such as sesame, sugar, and cotton, which are thus watered for three months continuously before the period of the ordinary inundation. So it happens that the small holdings have no share in the benefits reserved for the large estates irrigated during the period of low water. The high State functionaries and rich money-lenders alone derive any advantage from growing these larger industrial crops. Yet they are not the only contributors to the maintenance of the works, the cost of which is enormous, owing to the mud constantly accumulating in the ditches and gradually filling them up in many places. A single year would suffice to convert a sefi canal into a simple nili channel but for the numerous gangs of fellahin employed for weeks and months together on the work of excavation. The sefi canals taken collectively represent a quantity of deposits about half as much again as that of the Suez Canal, and every year the amount of mud and earth required to be again displaced to keep open the dykes is not less than one-third of the original deposits. Martin2001 Satisfaction Guaranteed Policy! Any print purchased from me may be returned for any (or no) reason for a full refund including all postage. Internet seller since 1998. Five-star service.
Price: 15 USD
Location: Manassas, Virginia
End Time: 2024-08-10T19:30:34.000Z
Shipping Cost: 4.45 USD
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Item Specifics
Restocking Fee: No
Return shipping will be paid by: Seller
All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within: 30 Days
Refund will be given as: Money Back
Print Type: Wood engraving
Dimensions: 7 x 10.5" (17,5 x 26 cm)
Style: Realism
Listed By: Martin2001
Features: Not-framed
Subject: Africa
Original/Licensed Reprint: Original
Print Surface: Paper
Type: Print