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Site of Faiyum Oasis (directly southwest of Cairo, listed as Al-Fayyum) on a map of Egypt
Mac os mojave
map sheet showing Faiyum Oasis

The Faiyum Oasis (Arabic: واحة الفيومWaḥet El Fayyum) is a depression or basin in the desert immediately to the west of the Nile south of Cairo in Egypt. The extent of the basin area is estimated at between 1,270 km2 (490 mi2) and 1700 km2 (656 mi2). The basin floor comprises fields watered by a channel of the Nile, the Bahr Yussef, as it drains into a desert hollowto the west of the Nile Valley. The Bahr Yussef veers west through a narrow neck of land north of Ihnasya, between the archaeological sites of El Lahun and Gurob near Hawara; it then branches out, providing rich agricultural land in the Faiyum basin, draining into the large saltwater Lake Moeris (Birket Qarun).[1] The lake was freshwater in prehistory but is today a saltwater lake.[1] It is a source for tilapia and other fish for the local area.

Differing from typical oases, whose fertility depends on water obtained from springs, the cultivated land in the Faiyum is formed of Nile mud brought down by the Bahr Yussef, 24 km (15 miles) in length.[2] Between the beginning of Bahr Yussef at El Lahun to its end at the city of Faiyum, several canals branch off to irrigate the Faiyum Governorate. The drainage water flows into Lake Moeris.

History[edit]

Survey of the Moeris Basin from the late 19th century

When the Mediterranean Sea was a hot dry hollow near the end of the Messinian Salinity Crisis in the late Miocene, Faiyum was a dry hollow, and the Nile flowed past it at the bottom of a canyon (which was 8,000 feet (2,400 m) deep or more where Cairo is today).[3][4] After the Mediterranean reflooded at the end of the Miocene, the Nile canyon became an arm of the sea reaching inland further than Aswan. Over geological time that sea arm gradually filled with silt and became the Nile valley.[citation needed]

Eventually the Nile valley bed silted up high enough to let the Nile periodically overflow into the Faiyum Hollow and make a lake in it. The lake is first recorded from about 3000 BC, around the time of Menes (Narmer). However, for the most part it would only be filled with high flood waters. The lake was bordered by neolithic settlements, and the town of Crocodilopolis grew up on the south where the higher ground created a ridge.[citation needed]

In 2300 BC, the waterway from the Nile to the natural lake was widened and deepened to make a canal which is now known as the Bahr Yussef. https://downeup331.weebly.com/ubereats-mac-os.html. This canal fed into the lake. This was meant to serve three purposes: control the flooding of the Nile, regulate the water level of the Nile during dry seasons, and serve the surrounding area with irrigation. There is evidence of ancient Egyptianpharaohs of the twelfth dynasty using the natural lake of Faiyum as a reservoir to store surpluses of water for use during the dry periods. The immense waterworks undertaken by the ancient Egyptianpharaohs of the twelfth dynasty to transform the lake into a huge water reservoir gave the impression that the lake itself was an artificial excavation, as reported by classic geographers and travellers.[5] The lake was eventually abandoned due to the nearest branch of the Nile dwindling in size from 230 BC.

A scenic view of Faiyum Oasis in 2008

Faiyum was known to the ancient Egyptians as the twenty-first nome of Upper Egypt, Atef-Pehu ('Northern Sycamore'). In ancient Egyptian times, its capital was Sh-d-y-t (usually written 'Shedyt'),[6] called by the Greeks Crocodilopolis, and refounded by Ptolemy II as Arsinoe.[citation needed]

This region has the earliest evidence for farming in Egypt, and was a center of royal pyramid and tomb-building in the Twelfth dynasty of the Middle Kingdom, and again during the rule of the Ptolemaic dynasty. Faiyum became one of the breadbaskets of the Roman world.

For the first three centuries AD, the people of Faiyum and elsewhere in Roman Egypt not only embalmed their dead but also placed a portrait of the deceased over the face of the mummy wrappings, shroud or case. The Egyptians continued their practice of burying their dead, despite the Roman preference for cremation. Preserved by the dry desert environment, these Faiyum portraits make up the richest body of portraiture to have survived from antiquity. They provide us with a window into a remarkable society of peoples of mixed origins—Egyptians, Greeks, Romans, Syrians, Libyans and others—that flourished 2,000 years ago in Faiyum. The Faiyum portraits were painted on wood in a pigmented wax technique called encaustic.[7]

In the late 1st millennium AD, the arable area shrank, and settlements around the edge of the basin were abandoned. These sites include some of the best-preserved from the late Roman Empire, notably Karanis, and from the Byzantine and early Arab Periods, though recent redevelopment has greatly reduced the archaeological features.

Jean-Léon Gérôme, View of Medinet El-Fayoum, c. 1868-1870
Fayum mac os download

'Colonial-type' village names (villages named after towns elsewhere in Egypt and places outside Egypt) show that much land was brought into cultivation in the Faiyum in the Greek and Roman periods.[8]

According to the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, in 1910 over 1,000 km2 (400 mile2) of the Faiyum Oasis was cultivated, the chief crops being cereals and cotton. The completion of the Aswan Low Dam ensured a fuller supply of water, which enabled 20,000 acres (80 km2) of land, previously unirrigated and untaxed, to be brought under cultivation in the three years 1903-1905. Three crops were obtained in twenty months. The province was noted for its figs and grapes of exceptional quality. Olives were also cultivated. Rose trees were very numerous, and most of the attar of roses of Egypt was manufactured in the province. Faiyum also possessed an excellent breed of sheep.[2]

Fayum Mac Os X

Archaeology[edit]

There are, especially in the neighborhood of the lake, many ruins of ancient villages and cities. Mounds north of the city of Faiyum mark the site of Crocodilopolis/Arsinoe. There are extensive archaeological remains across the region which extend from the prehistoric period through to modern times, e.g. the Monastery of the Archangel Gabriel at Naqlun.

The cult of Sobek[edit]

In antiquity, the Fajyum was a center of the cult of the crocodile god Sobek. In many settlements, temples were dedicated to local manifestations of the god and associated divinities.[9] The priests of Sobek were key players in the social and economic life, for example by organizing religious festivals or by purchasing goods from local producers. Even in Roman times, priests of these temples therefore enjoyed various privileges. The development of temples dedicated to the Sobek cult can be studied particularly well in Bakchias, Narmouthis, Soknopaiou Nesos, Tebtunis, and Theadelphia, since many written sources (papyri, ostraka, inscriptions) on the daily life of the priests are available from these places.[10]

Egyptian temples have been operating at the edges of the Fayyum at least up until the early third century, in some cases still in the fourth century. The institutionalized Sobek cults thus existed alongside early Christian communities, which settled in the region from the third century onwards and built their first churches in the Fayyum settlements by the fourth century.[11]

Birket Qarun lake[edit]

Birket Qarun (Arabic for Lake of Qarun), is located in the Faiyum Oasis and has an abundant population of fish, notably bulti, of which considerable quantities are sent to Cairo.[2] In ancient times this lake was much larger, and the ancient Greeks and Romans called it Lake Moeris.

Cities and towns[edit]

The largest city is Faiyum, which is also the capital of the Faiyum Governorate. Other towns include Sinnuris and Tamiya to the north of Faiyum, and Sanhur and Ibsheway on the road to the lake.

See also[edit]

  • Phiomia (an extinct relative of the elephant, named after Faiyum)
  • The Alchemist (novel), in which it is a primary setting

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ ab'Lake Moeris'. www.brown.edu. Retrieved 2018-08-14.
  2. ^ abc One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). 'Fayum'. Encyclopædia Britannica. 10 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 219.
  3. ^Warren, John (2006). Evaporites: Sediments, Resources and Hydrocarbons. Berlin: Springer. p. 352. ISBN3-540-26011-0.
  4. ^El Mahmoudi, A.; Gabr, A. (2008). 'Geophysical surveys to investigate the relation between the Quaternary Nile channels and the Messinian Nile canyon at East Nile Delta, Egypt'. Arabian Journal of Geosciences. 2 (1): 53–67. doi:10.1007/s12517-008-0018-9. ISSN1866-7511. S2CID128432827.
  5. ^Catholic Encyclopedia: Egypt
  6. ^Hieroglyphic writing did not have vowels, so spellings vary as to use of vowels for names in Egyptian culture. Hieroglyphic pronunciation was indicated by determinatives which showed what sort of meaning the word had.
  7. ^'History of Encaustic Art'. Archived from the original on 2012-12-23.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
  8. ^For late-period Ancient Egyptian names of the Faiyum oasis and places within it, see http://fayum.arts.kuleuven.be/general/name.htmlArchived 2007-08-15 at archive.today
  9. ^Kockelmann, Holger (2017). Der Herr der Seen, Sümpfe und Flußläufe. Untersuchungen zum Gott Sobek und den ägyptischen Krokodilgötter-Kulten von den Anfängen bis zur Römerzeit. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz. pp. 19–63, 375–421. ISBN978-3-447-10810-2.
  10. ^Sippel, Benjamin (2020). Gottesdiener und Kamelzüchter: Das Alltags- und Sozialleben der Sobek-Priester im kaiserzeitlichen Fayum. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz. ISBN978-3-447-11485-1.
  11. ^Choat, Malcolm (2012). Riggs, Christina (ed.). Christianity. The Oxford Handbook of Roman Egypt. Oxford, New York: Oxford Univ. Press. pp. 474–489. ISBN978-0-19-957145-1.

References[edit]

Coordinates: 29°27′13″N30°34′51″E / 29.45361°N 30.58083°E

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Faiyum_Oasis&oldid=1010031798'
Index>Unix > fasm on MacOS X [Snow Leopard / Lion]
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Author
Thread
zab

Joined: 28 May 2012
Posts: 6
zab
Hi guys,
I hope that this thread is still alive!
Following 'Shirk' excellent advices and tips, I successfully built FASM 1.70.02 on my OSX machines (32-bits and 64-bits).
I want to share the binary with everyone interested on programming with FASM under OSX (see USAGE file).
QUESTION for 'Tomasz Grysztar': 'Shrink' provided a patch (fasm-fix-out-of-memory-lion.diff.txt) which allow to compile FASM on OSX. Any chance to get it commited to FASM source code?
Thanks
Zab

Description:FASM (v1.70.02) and OBJCONV (v2.14) binaries.
Allow you compile 32-bits and 64-bits FASM programs on OSX.

Download
Filename:fasm-osx.zip
Filesize:258.3 KB
Downloaded:846 Time(s)

29 May 2012, 21:20
STLVNUB

Joined: 08 Aug 2008
Posts: 13
STLVNUB
30 May 2012, 04:31
Shirk

Joined: 12 Sep 2011
Posts: 10
Shirk
Uh, this got sticky - nice
Apparently I'm back to my pet os project, back to fasm and we still need the patched version. (checked no path in 1.70.3 or 1.71 previews).
Not sure if Tomasz reads this forum / has interest in the patch but big thanks to zab for providing the binaries!
Maybe someone could mail him?
24 Sep 2012, 17:03
Tomasz Grysztar

Joined: 16 Jun 2003
Posts: 7873
Location: Kraków, Poland
Tomasz Grysztar
I cannot approve such kind of fix. If that one relocation is processed incorrectly then the other relocations also cannot be trusted and it is inherently unsafe to try fixing it this way. One should rather search for the real source of the problem, that is the underlying bug related to relocations - and report it.
24 Sep 2012, 17:21
Shirk

Joined: 12 Sep 2011
Posts: 10
Shirk
Hi Tomasz,
please don't get me wrong - my post was in no way meant to insult anyone.
It was just written in a challenging tone to lure an answer out of you.
I agree that the real fix would be to determine why this one relocation is messed up. If you ask me - it's a flaw in objconv. I looked through most of the code by now and everything else seems fine. (could be related to different reloc handling in mach-o).
But to be honest - osx or mach-o is nowhere near your target / planned features list and I neither have the time nor the fasm-guts to dig through the whole code to add a mach-o backend. So it looks like mac users are still dependent on this (possibly flawed, however working-fine-so-far) patched binary.
I'm fine with that and most of us can resort back to a VM if hard comes to hard.
so keep the thread sticky and most of us should be happy
Cheers,
Shirk
P.S. - my vote for a fasm mach-o backend
25 Sep 2012, 05:52

Mac Os Download

STLVNUB

Joined: 08 Aug 2008
Posts: 13
STLVNUB
15 Dec 2012, 20:25
STLVNUB

Joined: 08 Aug 2008
Posts: 13
STLVNUB
Weird, can compile and run fasm.asm with fasm, but try to compile for efi and back to 'out of memory'
15 Dec 2012, 20:55
STLVNUB

Joined: 08 Aug 2008
Posts: 13
STLVNUB
ok changed buffer rb 1000h in fasm.asm to buffer rb 4000h
Now compiles efi
15 Dec 2012, 21:45
STLVNUB

Joined: 08 Aug 2008
Posts: 13
STLVNUB
Just compiled fasm.efi and works
I should note that fast.asm for efi already had buffer set to 4000h
so that appears to be the 'out of memory' bug
15 Dec 2012, 22:12
STLVNUB

Joined: 08 Aug 2008
Posts: 13
STLVNUB
OS X appears to need more buffer space as 1000h leads to 'Out Of Memory' errors and also leads to some examples that have buffer set to 1000h, getting errors too.
Is there a reason why OS X needs bigger buffer space??
Of course, it won't work otherwise.
So set the buffer to 4000h and you can do wonders.
16 Dec 2012, 06:21
STLVNUB

Joined: 08 Aug 2008
Posts: 13
STLVNUB
tools/libc/listing.asm is one example that now works.
As well as compiling fasm and fasm.efi from newest sources.
All this on Mountain Lion.
Anybody interested???

Last edited by STLVNUB on 17 Dec 2012, 20:07; edited 1 time in total
16 Dec 2012, 06:25

Mac Os Catalina

KevinN

Joined: 09 Oct 2012
Posts: 161
KevinN
Yep, as soon as my monitor works again. And if i can get mountain lion up on a custom
16 Dec 2012, 06:44
KevinN

Joined: 09 Oct 2012
Posts: 161
KevinN
I've got ML running now. it might be interesting to get fasm running
I found a few OSX Nasm examples too. there was a quartz and an OPENGL one. and a boilerplated hello world
http://michaux.ca/articles/assembly-hello-world-for-os-x
http://forum.nasm.us/index.php?topic=1075.0 (OpenGL)
22 Dec 2012, 16:36
KevinN

Joined: 09 Oct 2012
Posts: 161
KevinN
http://osxbook.com/blog/2009/03/15/crafting-a-tiny-mach-o-executable/
https://gist.github.com/1084476
http://www.feiri.de/macho/
http://seriot.ch/hello_macho.php
looks like others have, and continue to play with macho-o. I think the above examples are good for understanding the bare minimum requirements for a macho32 and macho64. I just nasm assembled the second example off git and it works:

251 bytes on ML! hehe small enough to get to know macho bit by bit and byte by byte
im trying to see if i can get some function out of tinycc on osx with objconv [edit: tinycc can be used same way fasm works with objconvert and ld. ld adds a lot of weight, probably a lot unnecessary.]

Last edited by KevinN on 02 Jan 2013, 14:53; edited 6 times in total
01 Jan 2013, 23:55
KevinN

Joined: 09 Oct 2012
Posts: 161
KevinN
here are some gui programs used as tools to examine macho:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/machoview/
http://www.affinic.com/?page_id=109
02 Jan 2013, 00:13
KevinN

Joined: 09 Oct 2012
Posts: 161
KevinN
http://opensource.apple.com/release/developer-tools-45/
the source for cctools including ld, otool, as etc
02 Jan 2013, 07:00
Shirk

Joined: 12 Sep 2011
Posts: 10
Shirk
Nice analysis on mach-o so far -- I had a look into a fasm mach-o backend but tbh. couldn't find my way around mach-o 64.
@STLVNUB - the buffer size problems could be a result of things like the additional alignment requirements and other features like these that Xnu enforces.
19 Aug 2013, 10:01

Fayum Mac Os Catalina

alexfru

Joined: 23 Mar 2014
Posts: 80
alexfru
I'm getting close to declaring official support of Mac OS X in my C compiler and just for the fun of it I made FASM executables out of fasm.o for Linux, Mac OS X and DOS/DPMI.
I used my compiler's C library and two pages of simple asm & C code to translate names (leading underscores are used by default in my compiler), preserve regs (my compiler preserves only the obvious: EBP, ESP) and intercept fopen() (it should really be called with 'rb' and 'wb' and not 'r' and 'w') and gettimeofday() (not implemented in my library, not part of the C standard).
The result seems to be working so far. I compiled a few C apps with my compiler instructed to use FASM in place of NASM.
Btw, the DOS/DPMI version is somewhat 'cleaner' in that it does not try to use unreal mode.
If anyone is interested I could share the code & instructions and the binary(-ies).
16 Oct 2017, 10:22
alexfru

Joined: 23 Mar 2014
Posts: 80
alexfru
So, it looks like my Smaller C compiler is working on Mac OS X 10.6 (Snow Leopard) through Mac OS X 10.12 (Sierra).
Here's how I turn fasm.o into various executables.


Compiling for MacOS:

Compiling for DOS/DPMI:

Compiling for Windows:

My compiler depends on NASM and the above asm code is for NASM, so you should have NASM 2.03 or newer if you want to recompile FASM using Smaller C and the above pieces of code.
Smaller C should work out of the box on Windows and DOS, just include the path to v0100binw or v0100bind in %PATH%.
On Linux and Mac OS X you can simply recompile the compiler, using the usual (you will need NASM already installed):

On Mac you may see an error from readlink, but it should still work.
I'm attaching the binaries.
What else?. Feel free to poke around the compiler's library source for Mac OS X system calls. Ditto for the linker if you want to make 32-bit Mach-O executables by hand. Or you could just use the linker as-is.

Description:Precompiled FASM 1.71.64 for Windows
Download
Filename:fasmw.exe.zip
Filesize:66.51 KB
Downloaded:573 Time(s)

Description:Precompiled FASM 1.71.64 for DOS/DPMI (will need CWSDPMI)
Download
Filename:fasmdp.exe.zip
Filesize:68.29 KB
Downloaded:572 Time(s)

Description:Precompiled FASM 1.71.64 for Mac OS X
Download
Filename:fasmm.zip
Filesize:58.6 KB
Downloaded:564 Time(s)

18 Oct 2017, 03:44

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