The Pharos of Alexandria, built by Sostratus …
Years: 280BCE - 280BCE
The Pharos of Alexandria, built by Sostratus of Cnidus, perhaps for Ptolemy I Soter, is finished during the reign of Soter's son Ptolemy II of Egypt in about 280 BCE.
The lighthouse, which stands on the island of Pharos in the harbor of the new city, is said to have been more than three hundred and fifty feet (one hundred and ten meters) high; the only taller man-made structures at this time would be the ancient pyramids of Giza.
Its base proclaims that the architect dedicated it to the "savior gods" on behalf of navigators.
One of the Seven Wonders of the World and the most famous lighthouse in antiquity, the four hundred foot-high (one hundred and twenty-two meters) tiered stone tower shields constant fires of resinous wood or oil, reflected by metal mirrors, thus rendering them visible for possibly thirty miles (about fifty kilometers).
A technological triumph, it is to remain the archetype of all lighthouses since.
