E g y p t
in this part of the site you will know more about Egypt as a country
The Country & People of Egypt
Egypt, Arab. Misr, officially Arab Republic of Egypt, republic (1995 est. pop. 62,360,000), 386,659 sq mi (1,001,449 sq km), NE Africa, bordered by the Mediterranean Sea (N), Israel and the Red Sea (E), Sudan (S), and Libya (W); the Sinai peninsula, the only part of Egypt located in Asia, is separated from the rest of the country by the Suez Canal. Major cities include Cairo (the capital) and Alexandria. The principal physiographic feature is the Nile R., which flows the length of the country from south to north and separates the Libyan (Western) and Arabian (Eastern) deserts that comprise 90% of the land area. Bordering the Nile between Aswan and Cairo are narrow strips of cultivated land, home of the vast majority of Egypt's inhabitants. Although the country's industrial base increased considerably in the 20th cent., the economy has been severely strained by Egypt's limited farmland and its large and rapidly growing population. Agriculture, which employs about 40% of its population, depends on the Nile for its fertility. Completion of the Aswan High Dam in 1970 greatly increased arable land, which still constitutes less than 5% of Egypt's total land area. Cotton is the leading cash crop. Major manufactures include refined oil, chemicals, textiles, and processed foods. The Suez Canal and tourism are sources of foreign exchange. Egypt's inhabitants are mainly a complex racial mixture, descended from the ancient Egyptians, Berbers, sub-Saharan Africans, Arabs, Greeks, and Turks. The majority is Sunni Muslims, but there is a substantial minority of Coptic Christians. Arabic is the official language.
Ancient Egypt
Egyptian civilization, one of the world's oldest, developed in the valley of the
Nile over 5,000 years ago. The rival kingdoms of Upper and Lower Egypt were
united as a centralized state 3200 BC; by a king named Menes, who established
his capital at Memphis. A high culture developed early, and the use of writing
was introduced. During the Old Kingdom (3110–2258 BC;) Egyptian culture and
commerce flourished, and the great pyramids were built. Its fall introduced a
period of anarchy, which ended 2000 BC; with the establishment of the Middle
Kingdom, with its capital at Thebes. Civilization again flourished until in 1786
BC; weak rulers allowed the country to pass under the rule of foreign nomads,
known as the Hyksos. The Hyksos were expelled 1570 BC; and the New Kingdom was
established. During the XVIII dynasty (1570–1342 BC;) ancient Egyptian
civilization reached its zenith; a vast empire was established and Thebes and
Memphis became the political, commercial, and cultural centers of the world.
After the XX dynasty (1200–1085 BC;) Egypt came increasingly under foreign
domination, with periods of rule by Libya, Sudan, Assyria, Nubia, and Persia.
Following a brief reestablishment of native power in 405 BC;, Egypt fell without
a struggle to Alexander the Great in 332 BC; After Alexander's death (323 BC;)
Egypt was inherited by his general, Ptolemy, who founded the dynasty of
Ptolemies and under whom the new city of Alexandria became the intellectual and
religious center of the Hellenistic world. The Ptolemies maintained a formidable
empire for more than two centuries until, weakened by internal dynastic
disputes, Egypt fell to Rome in 30 BC; Christianity was readily accepted in
Egypt, which became part of the Byzantine Empire about AD; 395. With the Arab
conquest (639–42) Egypt became an integral part of the Muslim world.
Modern Egypt
After 500 years as part of the caliphate, Egypt was seized by the Mamluks in
1250 and the Ottoman Turks in 1517. The first close contact with the West
occurred in 1798, when French forces under Napoleon occupied the country; they
were expelled in 1801 by combined Ottoman and British troops. In 1805 Muhammad
Ali, a common soldier, was appointed pasha of Egypt; under his rule the
foundations of the modern state of Egypt were established. The construction of
the Suez Canal (1859–69) put Egypt deeply into debt, and, although nominally
still part of the Ottoman Empire, the country was forced to appoint a
French-British commission to manage its financial affairs. The British
consolidated their control between 1883 and 1907, and during World War I, when
Turkey joined the Central Powers, Great Britain declared Egypt a British
protectorate, which effectively persisted for some years after independence in
1923.
Independent Egypt
Egypt bitterly opposed the UN partition of Palestine in 1948 and played an
important role in the Arab-Israeli Wars that followed. In 1952 the Egyptian army
deposed King Farouk in a coup; a republic was established in 1953, and Col.
Gamal Abdel Nasser became president (1954). For a brief period Egypt and Syria
merged (1958) in the United Arab Republic, then were joined by Yemen in the
United Arab States; the union was dissolved in 1961. Inaugurating a program of
economic and social reform, modernization of the army, and construction of the
Aswan High Dam, Nasser, with the aid of the USSR, strove to make Egypt the
undisputed leader of the Arab world. His rallying cry was denunciation of
Israel; in 1967 Egypt lost much territory in the Six-Day War, which also
shattered its economy and armed forces. Nasser died in 1970 and was succeeded by
Anwar al-Sadat, who regained some of Egypt's lost territory in the Yom Kippur
War (1973) and reversed a 20-year trend by ending Soviet influence and seeking
closer ties with the West. In 1977 Sadat angered his Arab allies by traveling to
Jerusalem as a conciliatory gesture to Israel; the two nations signed a peace
treaty in 1979. In 1981 Sadat was assassinated by Muslim fundamentalists, and
Hosni Mubarak, who pledged to continue Sadat's policies, became president. The
Israeli withdrawal from the Sinai and its return to Egypt, which began in 1979,
was completed in 1982. Egypt provided troops for the U.S.-led coalition in the
Persian Gulf War (1991). In the late 1980s and the 1990s Muslim fundamentalists
increasingly opposed the government, and some 1,200 people were killed by
militants between 1992 and 1997. Mubarak was elected to a fourth six-year term
in 1999.
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