The Nile as lifeline: from 6000 BC
From about 6000 BC various communities of hunter-gatherers make the Nile
the centre of their territory, around which they roam. But the drying of the
Sahara increasingly confines them to the river area. The unusual habit of this
great river - flooding every year and depositing a layer of rich moist soil on
the surrounding region - is ideally suited to the development of settled
agriculture. The river takes upon itself two otherwise laborious tasks,
irrigation and the enriching of the soil.
By about 3100 BC these communities have become sufficiently prosperous and
stable to be united in a single political entity - the first Egyptian dynasty.
The first dynasty: from c.3100 BC
The unifying of Upper and Lower Egypt into a single kingdom is the event
pointed to by the ancient Egyptians themselves as the beginning of their
civilization.
Lower Egypt is roughly the broad delta of the river, where it separates into
many branches before flowing into the Mediterranean. Upper Egypt is the long
main channel of the river itself, possibly as far upstream as boats can reach -
to the first waterfall or cataract, at Aswan.
Egyptian tradition credits the uniting of Upper and Lower Egypt to a king called
Menes. But that is merely a word meaning 'founder'. It is possible that the real
historical figure is a ruler by the name of Narmer, who features in warlike mood
on an early slate plaque.
Whatever the name, the first historical dynasty is brought into being by the
king or pharaoh who in about 3100 BC establishes control over the whole
navigable length of the Nile. His is the first of thirty Egyptian dynasties,
spanning nearly three millennia - an example of social continuity rivalled in
human history only by China.
In the early centuries, and again in the closing stages of ancient Egypt, the
capital is at Memphis, near modern-day Cairo. But at the peak of Egyptian power,
during the period from about 2000 to 1200 BC, the city of Thebes - several
hundred kilometres up the Nile - is a place of greater importance.
The pyramids remain today to show the early greatness of Memphis, in the period
known as the Old Kingdom. Similarly the temples of Karnak and Luxor are witness
to the extravagant wealth of Thebes during the eras described as the Middle
Kingdom and the New Empire.
The Old Kingdom: c.2580-c.2130 BC
The period known as the Old Kingdom runs from the 4th to the 6th of
Manetho's dynasties and begins several centuries after the unification of Egypt.
During the intervening period little is known of the pharaohs except their
names, deriving from stone inscriptions (from as early as the 1st dynasty the
Egyptian civilization enjoys the advantages of writing, soon to be followed by a
sophisticated calendar). Of some pharaohs even the names are missing.
The change to more solid evidence comes in the time of Zoser, the greatest
pharaoh of the 3rd dynasty (the Old Kingdom is sometimes taken as beginning with
his reign, before the 4th dynasty). A new stability is reflected in the
splendour of Zoser's monument - Egypt's first stone pyramid, built at Saqqara in
about 2620 BC.
Zoser's funerary example is taken to even more elaborate lengths at Giza by his
successors a century later, in the 4th dynasty (c.2575-c.2465 BC).
The three great pyramids at Giza are built between about 2550 and 2470 BC for
Khufu, his son Khafre (probably also responsible for the sphinx) and his
grandson Menkure. This is also the period when the Egyptian practice of
mummification begins, aiming to preserve the body for life in the next world.
The earliest known example of any part of a mummified body is the internal
organs of Khufu's mother, Hetepheres. Her body itself is lost, but her innards
survive within the canopic jars which play an essential part in the ritual of
mummification.
Some details are known of Egypt's first great period from evidence other than
monuments. Records survive of events during six years of the reign of Khufu's
father, Sneferu. They include several elements characteristic of Egypt's
imperial development.
There is a raid far south into Nubia, with the capture of numerous slaves and
cattle. Forty ships ships arrive from Lebanon with the cargoes of cedar required
for Egyptian building projects. Mining operations are undertaken in the Sinai
region, already long known for its valuable copper deposits.
The pharaohs of the 5th and 6th dynasties continue to rule from Memphis and
their lives are known in increasing detail from inscriptions. One example is an
enthusiastic letter of thanks sent by the last king of the 6th dynasty, Pepi II,
to a governor of Aswan who has brought him a Pygmy dancer from Nubia. The
governor, Harkhuf, is so proud of the document that he has its text engraved on
the facade of his tomb.
But the pharaohs of the 6th dynasty have lost the vigour of their predecessors.
Their rule is followed by a century of anarchy, covering the 7th to 10th
dynasties and known as the First Intermediate Period (c.2130-c.2000 BC).
The Middle Kingdom: c.2000-c.1630 BC
When stability returns, it is under the rule of a family deriving their
power from middle Egypt. Mentuhotep II (also known by his throne name,
Nebhepetre) wins control of the whole country in about 2000 BC. His base is
Thebes, which now begins its central role in the story of ancient Egypt - though
relatively little survives of Mentuhotep's own monuments in the region.
The Middle Kingdom, spanning the 11th and 12th dynasties, is notable for the
first serious effort to colonize Nubia. This region now becomes of great
importance to Egypt's trade in luxuries. Nubia's mines are the chief source of
Egyptian gold. Rare commodities such as ivory and ebony, the skins of leopards
and the plumes of ostriches, now travel down the upper Nile to be traded for
Egyptian goods.
The market place is at the second cataract (today submerged under Lake Nasser).
Here the Nubians exchange their commodities - and their slaves, always an
important element in the trade of this region - for the manufactured goods and
the weapons of the more developed economy.
The Middle Kingdom lasts for four centuries before giving way to another era
defined only as falling between kingdoms - the Second Intermediate Period. It is
far less chaotic than the previous intermediate period, but is almost equally
vague. The reason is that very little is known of the foreigners, called by
Manetho the Hyksos, who establish themselves with a capital city somewhere in
the delta.
The Hyksos derive from Asia, probably from Palestine or Phoenicia, and they
worship a Syrian god. But they adapt fully to Egyptian ways, identifying their
god as Seth and ruling as pharaohs (the 15th and 16th of Manetho's dynasties).
The Hyksos are in Egypt for almost a century (c.1630-c.1540 BC). For much of
this time they control the whole country (their monuments are found as far south
as Nubia). But eventually a powerful family in Thebes (the 17th dynasty) grows
strong enough to drive the intruders north. One of its members, Ahmose,
completes the task of expelling them from Egypt - and is accorded by Manetho the
honour of heading the most glorious dynasty of all, the 18th, at the start of
the New Kingdom.
The
New Kingdom: c.1540-c.1080 BC
The New Kingdom, also sometimes known as the New Empire, lasts half a
millennium and provides the bulk of the art, artefacts and architecture (apart
from the pyramids) for which ancient Egypt is famous. Pharaohs of the New
Kingdom create at Thebes the great temples of Karnak and Luxor and are buried,
on the other side of the Nile, in the Valley of the Tombs of the Kings.
The kingdom spans three dynasties but it is the first two, the 18th and 19th,
which provide its greatest glories in temples of Amen-Re (though there is an
interim period in the 18th dynasty, under Akhenaten, when this time-honoured god
of the pharaohs is forcefully rejected).
Descendants of Thutmose: c.1525-c.1379 BC
The first powerful ruler of the New Kingdom is Thutmose I. Son of the
pharaoh by a concubine, he secures the succession by marrying his fully royal
half-sister. Succeeding to the throne in about 1525 BC, Thutmose vigorously
extends Egypt's empire. He conquers south into Nubia as far as the fourth
cataract of the Nile. In the north he reaches Syria and the Euphrates.
Marriage to a half-sister is common practice in Egypt's dynasties, and it occurs
again (and for the same purpose) among Thutmose's childen. His heir, also
Thutmose, is the son of a lesser wife. So he is married to his royal half-sister
Hatshepsut, a daughter of the queen.
Thutmose II succeeds his father some time around 1500 BC but dies a few years
later. His heir, Thutmose III, son of a concubine, is an infant when he
inherits. Hatshepsut takes power - first as regent for her stepson but then,
perhaps in about 1490, as pharaoh in her own right.
Hatshepsut is a rare exception in ruling a native Egyptian dynasty as pharaoh.
She appears on her monuments in male attire (even wearing the false beard which
is a special attribute of the pharaoh) and she rules as forcefully as any man,
though she devotes herself to the arts of peace rather than war. Trade and
architecture are her main concerns.
Hatshepsut sends a famous trading mission to Punt (an area probably on the Red
Sea coast of modern Somalia), which results in a new supply of gold, ebony and
myrrh. She continues her father's building programme at Karnak. And her name
lives today in the great funerary temple which she builds on the other side of
the river in commemoration of herself and her father.
Hatshepsut dies in about 1470 and is succeeded by her stepson Thutmose III (the
rightful heir to the throne which she has usurped). He inherits at a time when
the vassal states in Palestine and Syria, subdued by Thutmose I, are reasserting
their independence. It is a challenge which Thutmose III proves well suited to
meet.
In the first of many campaigns to the north (in about 1469) Thutmose wins a
spectacular victory near Megiddo, the details of which he records in an
inscription in the temple at Karnak. He soon recovers control over all the
regions conquered by his grandfather, but he adopts a more statesmanlike
attitude to empire than his predecessor.
Young princes from the conquered territories are brought back to Thebes to be
educated in the Egyptian way of life. Thus indoctrinated, and with personal
contacts at the centre of power, they return home to rule their vassal states in
a frame of mind more inclined to cooperation than rebellion. Thutmose sets an
early pattern for a wise imperial policy.
Like his predecessors, Thutmose III is a passionate builder, adding greatly to
the splendours of Karnak. His great grandson Amenhotep III continues the
tradition, diverting attention to the southern part of Thebes, at Luxor, where
he begins the great temple to Amen-Re.
During a century and a half Thutmose I and his descendants have done great
honour to this traditional god of the pharaohs, the blend of Amen (the local god
of Thebes) and the earlier sun god Re. But the status of the Theban god is
violently challenged during the reign of Amenhotep IV, son of Amenhotep III, who
succeeds his father in about 1353 BC.
The challenge from Aten: c.1353-c.1336 BC
For one brief period Amen is shifted from his central position in the
Egyptian pantheon. Soon after Amenhotep IV comes to the throne, in about 1353
BC, he changes his name from Amenhotep ('Amen is satisfied') to Akhenaten
('beneficial to Aten'), signifying that the new state deity is to be Aten, the
disk of the sun. Six years later Akhenaten moves the court from Thebes to an
entirely new capital city, some 300 miles down the Nile at a site now known as
Tell el Amarna. A great temple to Aten is its central feature.
At the same time Akhenaten attempts to have the name of Amen erased from all
inscriptions. Aten is to be the only god.
The insistence that there is no other god but Aten represents a first step
towards monotheism, and for this reason much attention has been paid to
Akhenaten by western historians. In the Egyptian perspective he seems less
significant. Within a few years of his death, in about 1336 BC, the old religion
is restored, the court moves back to Thebes, and Tell el Amarna is destroyed.
Again the change is symbolized in a change of name. Akhenaten is succeeded by
two boys, each married to one of his daughters to give them legitimacy. The
second of the two is called Tutankhaten. In the resurgence of the cult of Amen,
the new pharaoh's name is changed to Tutankhamen.
Tutankhamen, famous in modern times for the remarkable contents of his tomb,
inherits the throne in about 1333 BC at the age of nine and lives only another
nine years. He would not feature largely in history on his own account.
With no heir to the throne on Tutankhamen's death, his elderly vizier (a man by
the name of Ay, whose wife was nurse to Queen Nefertiti) becomes pharaoh. But Ay
dies within four years, again without an heir. This time the throne is taken by
a more forceful character - Horemheb, commander of the army. He rules for a
quarter of a century, energetically removing all traces of the heretical Aten.
Then, having no heir, he bequeaths the throne to Ramses - his vizier and army
commander, and now founder of the 19th dynasty
Pharaohs called Ramses: 13th-11th century BC
Ramses is the name most commonly associated in the west with the pharaohs
- partly because Ramses II commissions one of the best known images of pharaonic
power (the colossal seated statues of himself at Abu Simbel), but also because
in the declining years of the indigenous Egyptian dynasties eight rulers in
succession are given this name.
The first Ramses lives only two years, to 1290 BC, after being given the throne
as an elderly general. He is followed by his son Seti, already a seasoned
campaigner when he mounts the throne. Seti does much to stabilize the empire
during an eleven-year rule, overseeing the restoration of the defaced
inscriptions to Amen. But the high point of the new dynasty comes in the long
reign of Seti's son, Ramses II.
Ramses inherits the throne young (though he already has experience of war,
through accompanying his father on campaigns) and he rules for the huge span of
sixty-six years (1279-1213 BC). His reign is marked by a peaceful resolution of
Egypt's struggle against the Hittites in Syria, and by major building projects.
Ramses completes the great hall of columns at Karnak, planned by his grandfather
and started by his father. And he creates spectacular monuments at a new site,
Abu Simbel. In addition to the great temple for which Abu Simbel is famous,
there is a smaller one dedicated to Ramses' wife, Nefertari. Colossal statues of
the royal couple accompanied by their children decorate the facade of this
family shrine.
In Egyptian tradition Ramses II comes to be considered the ideal pharaoh. This
is due to many factors - the length of his reign, the size of his harem and
family (at least 100 children), the prosperity and calm of Egypt at the time,
and a flair for publicity revealed in the vast number of monuments and
inscriptions commemorating his achievements (an inconclusive battle against the
Hittites at Kadesh, where the pharaoh himself played a central and courageous
part on the battlefield, is invariably described as a great victory).
As a result of Ramses' resounding fame, members of the subsequent 20th dynasty
all take his name - in an unbroken line from Ramses III to Ramses XI.
These later Ramses, ruling from 1187 to c.1075 BC, are not in fact descended
from the great man. Their ancestor, Setnakht, is a commoner who seizes the
throne in 1190 after a period of chaos. Setnakht's son, Ramses III, restores a
degree of order, but the situation soon deteriorates again.
The problem facing him is gradual loss of control in the three regions into
which Egypt has expanded from the narrow valley of the upper Nile - north into
Palestine and Syria, west into Libya, south into Nubia. From the north the
threat now comes not from the Hittites, with whom a lasting peace was
established by Ramses II, but from a group to whom the Hittites themselves fall
prey - the mysterious Sea Peoples.
The Sea People most directly threatening Egypt are described in the documents as
the Peleset. Pressing south from the coast of Palestine, they are eventually
held in this region by Ramses III. They are almost certainly the same people as
the Philistines.
Meanwhile loss of control in Libya and Nubia means a great reduction in the
revenue of the empire. Amid mounting anarchy, the pillaging of tombs for their
immense treasures becomes common practice. When Ramses XI dies, in about 1075
BC, the governor of the northern town of Tanis sets up an independent kingdom in
the Nile delta. His act brings to an end the 20th dynasty and the New Kingdom.
Libyans and others: 11th-8th century BC
The 21st dynasty, based in Tanis, never controls the whole of Egypt.
Thebes, under the influence of powerful high priests, remains for the most part
friendly but independent.
The Theban priests are more resentful of the next dynasty (the 22nd, beginning
in about 950 BC). This is a dynasty of Libyans, military men who for a while win
control of all Egypt through their garrisons. Their manners and beliefs are
fully Egyptian, for they and their ancestors have served in Egyptian armies
(they probably descend from Libyan captives brought into Egypt by Ramses III).
The Libyans prove unable to hold Egypt together. Local commanders become
increasingly independent. At one time there are as many as six proclaiming
themselves kings of their regions, while in about 800 BC a separate dynasty (the
23rd) is proclaimed in Thebes. In the 8th century yet another (the 24th) is
established in the Nile delta.
During this chaos there is only one calm region within the old Egyptian empire.
Cush, in the far south, has recently gone its own way, operating as a stable and
independent kingdom in a traditional Egyptian style. By the mid-8th century the
Cushite king is Kashta. He directs his attention to the rich but now chaotic
land further down the Nile.
The Cushite Dynasty: from c.730 BC
The first incursion of the kings of Cush into Egypt occurs in about 750
BC, when Kashta conquers upper Egypt (the region north of the first cataract and
Abu Simbel). But it is his son Piye, also known as Piankhi, who from about 730
BC captures cities the entire length of the Nile as far north as Memphis and
receives the submission of the local rulers of the delta region.
After this achievement Piye retires to his capital at Napata, where be builds a
great temple to Amen-Re. But it is impossible to remain in control of Egypt from
as far south as Napata. The final establishment of the Cushite or 25th dynasty
is therefore the work of Piye's brother, Shabaka, who succeeds him in about 719
BC.
Shabaka renews the campaign to the north, defeating Bochoris (a descendant of
the previous Egyptian dynasty, whom Shabaka is said to have burnt alive) and
installing himself securely in Thebes and Memphis.
Here he and and his descendants might well have ruled peacefully for some time,
since they are widely welcomed for their pious safeguarding of the cult of
Amen-Re. But it is their misfortune to coincide with the greatest external
threat yet to confront the Nile civilization. The new power in the middle east
is the formidable state of Assyria, now brutally subduing the many small states
and cities of Palestine and Phoenicia.
From about 705 BC, when Assyria has a new king (Sennacherib), there is a
widespread rebellion in the middle east against Assyrian rule. In support of the
rebels the pharaoh (now Shabaka's nephew Shebitku) marches north from Memphis
with an Egyptian army. He is heavily defeated. Egypt becomes the next Assyrian
target.
In 663 the Assyrian king (Esarhaddon, son of Sennacherib) captures Memphis,
seizes the royal treasure and harem and claims the title 'king of Egypt'. When
the Assyrian army withdraws, leaving Egypt under the control of vassal rulers,
the Cushites briefly recover Memphis. But another Assyrian expedition, in 663,
settles the issue. This time Thebes is reached and plundered.
Assyrians, Persians and a Greek: 663-332 BC
From the 7th century BC the middle east is controlled by a succession of
powerful empires - Assyrian, Babylonian, Persian, Greek and Roman. Each, with
the exception of Babylon, conquers Egypt. The long centuries of powerful native
dynasties are now conclusively over.
The first intruders, the Assyrians, rule with a relatively light hand this large
region which seems too distant to govern more directly. They entrust the
administration to vassal princes. One of these establishes the 26th dynasty,
controlling the entire country and becoming effectively independent of Assyria.
During this period Egypt undergoes something of a revival (it is now that the
remarkable voyage round Africa is achieved).
Egypt during this dynasty is only on the periphery of the dramatic events
beginning in the middle east at the end of the 7th century - the destruction by
the Babylonians of the Assyrian capital Nineveh (in 612 BC) and of Jerusalem (in
586), followed by the capture of Babylon by an army of the Persian emperor Cyrus
(in 539).
After the fall of Nineveh the Egyptians attempt to stake a claim to the Assyrian
empire as far as the Euphrates, a region which for so many centuries has been
linked to Egypt. In 612 BC they confront a Babylonian army at Carchemish. The
Egyptians are soundly defeated, but the Babylonians do not press their advantage
to the point of invading Egypt itself.
A century later the rising power of Persia proves harder to keep at bay. This
time the defeat of an Egyptian army is very much nearer home, at Pelusium in the
Sinai peninsula in 525 BC. It is followed by the capture of Memphis (by now once
again the main city of Egypt).
Egypt becomes a province of the new empire under the control of a Persian
governor (or satrap). The Persian emperors take their imperial responsibilities
seriously. Darius I, for example, commissions the codification of existing
Egyptian laws. And under his orders, starting in about 515 BC, a canal is
constructed between the Nile and the Red Sea.
But direct control from the distant capital of another empire is a new and
unwelcome experience in Egypt. During the 5th and 4th centuries there are
frequent uprisings (usually with the help of the Greeks, implacable opponents of
Persia). Sometimes these result in periods of virtual independence. But in 343
BC a new Persian invasion brings Egypt back under tight control.
The date is significant. Just nine years later, in 332 BC, a young Greek prince
arrives at the head of a victorious army. He is Alexander the Great.
Understandably, in the circumstances, he is welcomed as a liberator.
Alexander spends the winter in Egypt. His actions there are the first indication
of how he will set about keeping control of distant conquests, places with their
own cultural traditions. One method is to establish outposts of Greek culture.
In Egypt he founds the greatest of the cities known by his name - Alexandria.
Another method, equally important, is to present himself in the guise of a local
ruler. To this end he carries out a sacrifice to Apis, a sacred bull at Memphis,
where the priests crown him pharaoh. And he makes a long pilgrimage to a famous
oracle of the sun god Amon, or Amen-Re, at Siwa. The priest duly recognizes
Alexander as the son of the god.
The Greeks in Egypt: 332-30 BC
Alexander the Great arrives in Egypt at an early stage of his great
journey of conquest. He clears out the Persian administration before moving
against Persia herself.
After Alexander's death, in 323, his empire is divided among his generals. Egypt
falls to Ptolemy, whose descendants will give Egypt her final dynasty - a
glittering one, albeit largely Greek in flavour. Its capital is the city
established by the conqueror himself, Alexandria.
Ptolemy adds legitimacy to his rule in Egypt by acquiring Alexander's body. He
intercepts the embalmed corpse on its way to burial, brings it to Egypt and
places it in a golden coffin in Alexandria.
It will remain one of the famous sights of the town for many years, until
probably destroyed in riots in the 3rd century AD.
The Ptolemaic inheritance: 285 BC
The central struggle of Ptolemy's reign is to establish firm and broad
boundaries to his kingdom. This involves him in almost continuous warfare
against other leading members of Alexander's circle. At times he holds Cyprus
and even parts of mainland Greece. When the dust of conflict has settled, he is
firmly in control of Egypt and has strong claims (disuputed by the Seleucid
dynasty) to Palestine.
He calls himself king of Egypt from 306 BC. By the time he abdicates in 285, in
favour of one of his sons, the Ptolemaic dynasty is secure.
Ptolemy and his descendants show respect to Egypt's most cherished traditions -
those of religion - and turn them to their own advantage. By favouring the
priests, protecting the temple revenues and adopting the customs of the
pharaohs, they acquire for themselves the same divine status as their Egyptian
predecessors.
Inevitably, in the long run, there is local hostility to foreign rulers. But in
the end this proves irrelevant. Egypt, an extraordinarily rich corner of the
Mediterranean, falls prey to an irrestible new imperial power - that of Rome.
Nobody could claim that dynastic Egypt fizzles out. It flares to a romantic end,
while the last ruler in the line of the Ptolemies flirts with two
representatives of the most efficient and expansionist empire of the ancient
world.
Cleopatra is twenty when she first meets Julius Caesar, in 48 BC. She is
twenty-seven when she first meets Mark Antony, in 41 BC. She is thirty-eight
when she applies the asp to her breast in 30 BC, a year after the battle of
Actium. With her defeat, the Roman empire achieves a new completeness -
encompassing the entire Mediterranean. And Egypt will remain under Roman control
for the next six centuries.
Roman Egypt: 1st century BC - 4th century AD
The wealth of Egypt makes it the most important of Rome's overseas
provinces. The Nile valley produces rich harvests of grain, much of which is
shipped to Italy. The craftsmen of this ancient civilization, skilled in such
difficult techniques as the manufacture of glass, produce luxury items much in
demand in the capital. And the population, settled and relatively prosperous, is
an easy target for a Roman poll tax.
A Roman prefect governs the province, with three legions to preserve internal
order and guard the frontiers - which geography makes easier to protect than in
most provinces of the empire.
Unlike the Ptolemies, the Roman imperial administrators have little influence on
Egyptian life. The culture of the cities remains Greek. Alexandria, in
particular, continues to be a centre of Greek science and enquiry.
Alexandria also plays an important role in the early history of Christianity.
The deserts of Egypt are the home of the first Christian monks. And from the
Christian community of Egypt there emerges a distinctive group which still
survives today - the Coptic church.
Christian Egypt: 4th - 7th century AD
Although the sophisticated inhabitants of Egypt are now Greek in their
culture, the majority of the people are indigenous Egyptians, speaking a version
of the ancient Egyptian language. They are referred to by the Greeks as
aigyptioi (Egyptians). From this Greek word (via an Arabic abbreviation, qubt)
comes the name Copt - most often used of Coptic Christians.
The Christians of Egypt are often free-thinking on doctrinal matters (above all
in the case of Arius). After the Council of Chalcedon, in 451, the Copts differ
from the Greeks on a doctrinal point about the nature of Christ. The Copts are
accused of believing that he has a single divine identity, even when on earth
(the 'monophysite' heresy).
By the time of the Arab conquest of Egypt, in 642, the majority of Egyptian
Christians are Copts. It is they who become the Christian church in Egypt,
surviving on sufferance within a mainly Muslim community. Coptic (the last link
with ancient Egyptian) gradually dies out as a spoken language, though in the
service books of Coptic churches today the liturgy is still printed in parallel
columns of Coptic and Arabic.
Over the centuries a close link develops between two ancient and neighbouring
Christian communities, isolated within the territories of Islam - the Coptic
church of Egypt and the Orthodox church of Ethiopia.
The Arab conquests: 7th century AD
One of the most dramatic and sudden movements of any people in history is
the expansion, by conquest, of the Arabs in the 7th century (only the example of
the Mongols in the 13th century can match it). The desert tribesmen of Arabia
form the bulk of the Muslim armies. Their natural ferocity and love of warfare,
together with the sense of moral rectitude provided by their new religion, form
an irresistible combination.
When Muhammad dies in 632, the western half of Arabia is Muslim. Two years later
the entire peninsula has been brought to the faith, and Muslim armies have moved
up into the desert between Syria and Mesopotamia.
Muslim North Africa: from AD 642
The Arab conquest of Egypt and North Africa begins with the arrival of an
army in AD 640 in front of the Byzantine fortified town of Babylon (in the area
which is now Old Cairo). The Arabs capture it after a siege and establish their
own garrison town just to the east, calling it Al Fustat.
The army then moves on to Alexandria, but here the defences are sufficient to
keep them at bay for fourteen months. At the end of that time a surprising
treaty is signed. The Greeks of Alexandria agree to leave peacefully; the Arabs
give them a year in which to do so. In the autumn of 642, the handover duly
occurs. One of the richest of Byzantine provinces has been lost to the Arabs
without a fight.
An increasingly nominal caliphate: from the 9th c. AD
From the 9th century the rule of the Abbasid caliphs in Baghdad is often,
in many parts of the Muslim world, more nominal than real. In Palestine and
Syria there are uprisings from supporters of the previous Umayyad dynasty, whose
base was Damascus. In the rich province of Egypt, governors are increasingly
unruly (as many as twenty-four are appointed and then dismissed during the
23-year caliphate of Harun al-Rashid).
In the further extremes of the empire independence from the Abbasids is even
more marked. Spain is ruled by Umayyads. North Africa has Berber dynasties from
790. And eastern Persia, by about 870, is in the hands of Persians hostile to
Baghdad.
The weakness of the caliphs tempts them into a measure which makes the problem
worse. They acquire slaves from the nomadic Turks of central Asia and use them
in their armies. The slaves, who become known as Mamelukes (from the Arabic
mamluk, 'owned'), are excellent fighters. They distinguish themselves in the
service of the caliphate and are often given positions of military
responsibility. Well placed to advance their own interests, they frequently take
the opportunity.
One of the first Mamelukes to seize power is Ahmad ibn Tulun. In the early 870s
he takes control of Egypt. By 877 he has conquered the Mediterranean coast
through Palestine and up into Syria.
This half of the Fertile Crescent has been ruled from Egypt at many periods of
history. Separated from Mesopotamia by a broad swathe of desert, it is easier to
control from Cairo than from Baghdad.
Palestine and Syria remain under Egyptian dominance for most of the next two
centuries. The Tulunid dynasty, founded by Ahmad ibn Tulun in the 870s, rules
the region until 905. The Ikhshidids, another Turkish dynasty, control it from
935 to 969, when they in their turn are replaced by the Fatimids - masters of an
even broader swathe of Mediterranean coastline.
The Fatimid dynasty: AD 909-1171
An Ismaili leader, Ubaydulla, conquers in 909 a stretch of north Africa,
displacing the Aghlabids in Kairouan. He founds there a dynasty known as Fatimid
- for he claims to be a caliph in the Shi'a line of descent from Ali and Fatima
his wife, the daughter of Muhammad.
Sixty years later, in 969, a Fatimid army conquers Egypt, which now becomes the
centre of a kingdom stretching the length of the north African coast. A new
capital city is founded, adjoining a Muslim garrison town on the Nile. It is
called Al Kahira ('the victorious'), known in its western form as Cairo. In the
following year, 970, the Fatimids establish in Cairo the university mosque of Al
Azhar which has remained ever since a centre of Islamic learning.
At the height of Fatimid power, in the early 11th century, Cairo is the capital
of an empire which includes Sicily, the western part of the Arabian peninsula
(with the holy places of Mecca and Medina) and the Mediterranean coast up to
Syria.
A century later the authority of the Ismaili caliphs has crumbled. There is
little opposition in 1171 when Saladin, subsequently leader of the Islamic world
against the intruding crusaders, deposes the last of the Fatimid line. And there
is no protest when Saladin has the name of the Abbasid caliph in Baghdad
included in the Friday prayers in Cairo's mosques. After a Shi'a interlude,
Egypt is back in the Sunni fold.
Egypt, Palestine and Syria: AD 1174-1250
Saladin's control of Egypt, Damascus and Aleppo, together with his
campaign of 1187-8 against the Latin kingdom of Jerusalem, brings almost the
entire eastern Mediterranean once again under unified rule. The region will
remain united during the rest of Saladin's Ayubid dynasty (until 1250), then
under the next dynasty in Egypt (that of the Mameluke sultans) and finally under
Ottoman rule from Turkey.
The only exceptions, in the short term, are the few strongholds which the Franks
retain after 1188 - Tyre, Tripoli and a coastal strip up to Antioch. This region
is briefly enlarged by the efforts, in the third crusade, of Richard I in
1191-2, but a more significant change comes with the fall of the Ayubid dynasty
in 1250.
Mamelukes and Mongols: AD 1250-1260
The decade beginning in 1250 provides a succession of dramatic events in
Egypt, Palestine, Syria and Mesopotamia. In 1250 the last sultan of Saladin's
dynasty is murdered in Egypt by the slaves of the palace guard. This enables a
Mameluke general, Aybak, to take power. He rules until 1257, when his wife has
him killed in a palace intrigue. His place is immediately taken by another
Mameluke general, Qutuz.
In the following year, 1258, Baghdad and the caliphate suffer a devastating
blow. Mongols, led by Hulagu, grandson of Genghiz Khan, descend upon the city
and destroy it. The Middle East appears to be open to conquest and destruction.
In 1259 Hulagu and the Mongols take Aleppo and Damascus. The coastal plain and
the route south to Egypt seem open to them. But in 1260 at Ayn Jalut, near
Nazareth, they meet the army of the Mameluke sultan of Egypt. It is led into the
field by Baybars, a Mameluke general.
In one of the decisive battles of history Baybars defeats the Mongols. It is the
first setback suffered by the family of Genghis Khan in their remorseless half
century of expansion. This battle defines for the first time a limit to their
power. It preserves Palestine and Syria for the Mameluke dynasty in Egypt.
Mesopotamia and Persia remain within the Mongol empire.
Baybars and his successors: AD 1260-1517
Baybars is ruthless - in the best Mameluke tradition. Seized as a boy
from the Kipchak Turks, north of the Caspian, he has been brought to Egypt as a
slave. His talents have enabled him to rise to high command in the Mameluke
army. In 1260, the year of his great victory at Ayn Jalut, he defeats and kills
his own Mameluke sultan. He is proclaimed in his place by the army.
During his reign of seventeen years Baybars crushes the Assassins in their last
strongholds in Syria, drives the crusaders from Antioch, and extends the rule of
Egypt across the Red Sea to control the valuable pilgrim cities of Mecca and
Medina.
In exercising this extensive rule, Baybars takes the precaution of pretending
that he does so on behalf of an Abbasid refugee from the ruins of Baghdad - whom
he acclaims as the caliph. His many successors maintain the same fiction. These
Mameluke sultans are not a family line, like a traditional dynasty. They are
warlords from a military oligarchy who fight and scheme against each other to be
acclaimed sultan, somewhat in the manner of the later Roman emperors.
But they manage to keep power in their own joint hands until the rise of a more
organized state sharing their own Turkish origins - the Ottoman empire.
The Ottomans, cautious about Mameluke military prowess, tackle other
neighbouring powers such as the Persians before approaching Egypt. But in 1517
the Ottoman sultan, Selim I, reaches the Nile delta. He takes Cairo, with some
difficulty, and captures and hangs the last Mameluke sultan.
Mameluke rule, spanning nearly three centuries, has been violent and chaotic but
not uncivilized. Several of Cairo's finest mosques are built by Mameluke
sultans, and for a while these rulers maintain Cairo and Damascus (500 miles
apart) as twin capitals. A pigeon post is maintained between them, and Baybars
prides himself on being able to play polo within the same week in the two
cities.
An Ottoman province: AD 1517-1798
Although Egypt has the status only of an Ottoman province after its
conquest by Selim I in 1517, it remains a region in which the Mamelukes continue
to exercise great power. Indeed the first governor appointed by Selim is a
Mameluke, and others are left in charge of regional districts. During the next
two centuries they become like feudal barons, keeping their own armies (in their
case consisting of slaves) and using them supposedly in the interest of their
lord, the Ottoman sultan.
During the 16th century, with strong sultans in Istanbul, the system works well.
Cairo keeps effective control of the fertile Nile region as far as Aswan, and of
the Red Sea and the pilgrimage places of Arabia.
Under the feebler sultans of the 17th century, lack of firm rule from the centre
allows the Mameluke beys (the term for officials in the Ottoman empire) to
become increasingly unruly. By the 18th century the Ottoman governor in Cairo is
permanently at loggerheads with beys controlling their own regions of the
province.
Into this state of anarchy there arrives, in 1798, a European who specializes in
introducing administrative discipline. He declares that he has come as a friend
of the Ottoman Turks, to recover their province from Mameluke tyranny. He is
Napoleon.
The Ottoman empire and Napoleon: AD 1798-1799
During the 18th century Turkish involvement in European affairs is
limited mainly to the immediate neighbours. There is a succession of wars with
Russia and constant adjustment to the frontier with Austria in the Balkans. But
in 1798 the Ottoman empire finds itself unavoidably caught up in Europe's great
war of the time, when Napoleon decides to invade Egypt as an indirect method of
harming British imperial interests.
The Ottoman governor of Egypt and his unruly Mameluke forces are ill-prepared to
cope with such an invasion, though the condition of Napoleon's army does much to
level the odds - after being shipped from France and marching south through the
desert, from Alexandria to Cairo, in the midsummer heat.
It is a profoundly demoralized invading force which finally confronts the
Mameluke army at Giza on July 21. But the French are arranged by Napoleon on the
open terrain in solid six-deep divisional squares, and their fire-power slices
with devastating effect through the wild charges of the Egyptian cavalry.
Victory in the Battle of the Pyramids delivers Cairo to Napoleon.
While emphasizing his respect for Islam, Napoleon sets about organizing Egypt as
a French territory with himself as its ruler, assisted by a senate of
distinguished Egyptians. All is going according to his plan. His team of
scientists can now begin to look about them (in the following year, 1799, a
French officer finds the Rosetta stone).
But there is already a major snag. Some ten days after Napoleon's victory,
Nelson finally comes across the warships of the French fleet - at anchor in
Aboukir Bay, near the western mouth of the Nile. On August 1, in the Battle of
the Nile, he destroys them as a fighting force (only two French ships of the
line survive).
Napoleon, master of Egypt, is stranded in his new colony. He has no safe way of
conveying his army back to France. Moreover he has provoked a new enemy. Turkey,
of whose empire Egypt is officially a part, declares war on France in September
1798. In February news comes that a Turkish army is preparing to march south
through Syria and Palestine to attack Egypt. Napoleon moves first.
When Napoleon gets back to Cairo in June, after four wasted months in Syria, he
characteristically claims to be returning from a triumph. But he has now lost
interest in this part of the world. He departs to seize his destiny in Paris,
leaving behind a French army which is finally expelled from Egypt in 1801 by a
combined Turkish and British force.
With the end of this three-year period of high foreign drama, Egypt returns to
its traditional ways. The Mameluke beys confidently resume their local
tyrannies. But this time, finally, the sultan and his officials find the resolve
to confront their unruly subordinates.
Massacres and Mamelukes: AD 1802-1811
On three separate occasions there are cold-blooded attempts by the
authorities in Egypt to solve the problem of the Mamelukes. In 1802 a Turkish
admiral is instructed to invite Mameluke leaders to a social gathering at
Aboukir, for them to be assassinated during the entertainment.
In 1805 a newly appointed governor of Egypt contrives a further but still
insufficient massacre. The same governor later completes the task, in 1811, by
inviting some 300 Mameluke beys to an event in the Cairo citadel. It is
surprising that they accept. Once they are inside, the gates are shut and troops
open fire. Only one of the guests survives. Six centuries of Mameluke power in
Egypt come to a sudden end.
Mohammed Ali and Ibrahim Pasha: AD 1805-1840
The governor who asserts his control with such ruthless efficiency is
Mohammed Ali. His long rule changes the course of Egyptian history and
permanently removes a large and prosperous region from Ottoman control.
At first, ably assisted by his eldest son Ibrahim Pasha, Mohammed Ali serves the
sultan well. An expedition by Ibrahim in 1816-18 restores Ottoman authority over
Arabia, where the Wahhabi sect has recently held sway (in 1821 another of
Mohammed Ali's sons subdues the Sudan). In 1824 Ibrahim is sent with a fleet to
Greece, to help the sultan suppress the movement for Greek independence. But a
disagreement between Mohammed Ali and the sultan gives Ibrahim a more subversive
role. In 1832 he marches north from Egypt to invade the Ottoman province of
Syria.
Ibrahim Pasha has a whirlwind series of successes against Ottoman armies during
1832. He captures Acre and wins a battle at Homs during May. By July he is
through the Taurus mountains and in December he wins another victory at Konya.
By the spring of 1833 he appears to be in a position to march on Istanbul. In an
agreement signed at Kutahya in May, the sultan secures the retreat of the
Egyptian army by ceding to Mohammed Ali the hereditary governorships of Adana
(in southeast Anatolia) and Syria.
Ibrahim Pasha becomes governor general of the two provinces. His father now
rules a vast swathe of land from the Sudan to the Euphrates.
In 1839 the Turkish sultan attempts to recover Syria by military means, in what
proves a disastrous failure. Ibrahim Pasha wins another victory at Nizip, this
time so convincingly that the Ottoman fleet changes sides and joins the
Egyptians. At this point the western powers intervene, fearful as ever of the
collapse of the Ottoman empire. At a treaty in London in 1840 it is agreed that
Mohammed Ali will restore Syria and Adana to the sultan. In return he is granted
the hereditary rule of Egypt, though the province remains within the sultan's
empire.
With this concession the separate history of modern Egypt begins. And the sultan
in Istanbul is free to turn his attention to the perennial problems on his
western flank, in the Balkans.
Egypt modernized: AD 1805-1848
The long reign of Mohammed Ali brings transformation to Egypt. He reforms
the structure of the army and establishes a navy, for which he needs a
deep-water harbour. The only candidate is Alexandria, which now recovers an
international existence after its many centuries of somnolence. The ancient city
becomes once again the first port of call for any visitor to Egypt. Trade
develops, prosperity returns.
By 1820 more than thirty foreign enterprises are based in the city. In the same
year the Mahmudiya canal is opened, linking Alexandria with the Nile.
By means of this canal goods from the coast can easily reach Cairo, and from
Cairo it is not too long a haul to carry them overland to the Red Sea at Suez.
In the late 1830s the British East India Company begins a regular steamship
service between Suez and Bombay. Egypt becomes established as Europe's most
direct link with the east.
The increase in trade and prosperity is accompanied by administrative
improvements in the Egyptian government. Until now the language of government
has been exclusively that of the ruling minority, Turkish. From 1828 Mohammed
Ali publishes a bilingual official gazette, printed in Turkish and Arabic (a
government printing press is in itself an innovation during his reign).
There is one area in which Mohammed Ali fails to recognize Egypt's best
interests. In 1833 a group of French engineers put before him a proposal for a
canal joining the Mediterranean to the Red Sea at Suez. Mohammed Ali is not
interested, though the idea later greatly attracts his son Said.
Mohammed Ali's immediate successor in 1848 is a grandson, Abbas I, who is
murdered in 1854 and is succeeded by Said. Murder is nothing new among Egyptian
rulers. What is new, as a result of the stability introduced by Mohammed Ali, is
that a single family retains the throne. It is occupied by Mohammed Ali's
descendants until the abdication of Farouk in 1952.
The Suez Canal: AD 1859-1869
A glance at the map suggests the possibility of a canal linking the
Mediterranean and the Red Sea. On the direct route south to Suez half the work
is already done by nature, in the form of Lake Timsah and the two Bitter Lakes.
With the increasing importance of India to the European powers in the late 18th
century (as the main scene of rivalry between France and Britain) there is a
strong military and economic motive to undertake the great task. During the
French occupation of Egypt in 1798, Napoleon himself spends several days
surveying the region with a party of officers and scientists.
During the early part of the 19th century several plans for a canal are drawn up
without success. The breakthrough comes with the accession to the Egyptian
throne of Said in 1854. He is a friend of a French diplomat, Ferdinand de
Lesseps, who has long had the ambition of achieving a Suez canal. By November
1854 Lesseps has been granted a concession to undertake the project. Eighteen
months later he is ready to float the Suez Canal Company.
Half the money is subscribed in France, where Napoleon III has been very
supportive of the scheme. None comes from Britain. Indeed the British government
does all it can to prevent a development which looks alarmingly like providing
the French with a back door to India.
Said Pasha himself rescues the scheme by subscribing 60 million francs. On 25
April 1859 Lesseps swings the first pickaxe at the northern end of the route,
the site of a new harbour to be named Port Said. He is the first in a labour
force soon numbering tens of thousands, who between them excavate over the next
ten years 97 million cubic yards (more than two cubic miles) of earth and rock.
For the opening ceremony, in November 1869, thousands of distinguished guests
assemble from all over Europe and the Middle East. The procession of ships
through the canal is led by the French imperial yacht with the empress Eugénie
on board. The journey time to and from India is slashed. East and west are
linked as never before.
Expansion and bankruptcy: AD 1863-1879
It is a myth that Verdi's Aida is commissioned for the opening of the Suez canal
in 1869 but misses its deadline (not being produced until 1871 in Cairo). It is
commissioned for the new Cairo opera house, which has opened in 1869 with a
production of Rigoletto.
This profusion of Italian opera vividly suggests the speed with which Egypt is
being Europeanized. Ismail, who succeeds his uncle Said on the throne in 1863,
has been educated in France. He now begins to employ, with carefree enthusiasm,
a stream of European and American experts to provide his country with western
weapons, buildings, railways and amenities (such as piped water and gas) in
addition to opera.
This level of expenditure, combined with mismanagement of government finances,
leads by the mid-1870s to bankruptcy. Government revenue is not even sufficient
to pay the interest on foreign loans. In 1875 Ismail tries to stave off disaster
by selling his shares in the Suez canal to the British government (from having
no part in the scheme, Britain becomes at a stroke the largest shareholder).
Even this proves insufficient. From 1876 Egyptian finances are placed under
joint French and British control. When Ismail subsequently refuses to cooperate,
in 1879, the two nations appeal to the sultan in Istanbul. Using the authority
as sovereign which still remains to him, he dismisses Ismail - replacing him as
khedive with his son, Mohammed Tewfik.
Pan-Islam and nationalism: AD 1872-1882
During the 1870s there are two strands of resistance to the existing state of
affairs in Egypt. One is the impulse of nationalism which has swept through
Europe during the 19th century. The other, first surfacing at this period and of
great significance again in the late 20th century, is the pan-Islamic movement -
based on the premise that Muslim states must reject the corrupting influence of
the Christian west and rediscover the strength and purity of early Islam.
The natural head of any such Islamic movement is the caliph, a role seen since
the 16th century as being held by the Ottoman sultan in Istanbul. Abdul-Hamid
II, sultan from 1876, actively encourages pan-Islamic sentiments.
The intellectual leader of the movement at this time is Jamal al-Din, an Afghan
philosopher who moves to Cairo in 1871. He builds up a large following through
lectures in which he urges resistance to western influence, if necessary by the
use of assassination.
After Egyptian finances are placed under foreign control in 1876, with the
resulting influx of European administrators, these threats become more serious.
An alarmed Egyptian government expels Jamal al-Din in 1879, sending him into
exile in India. But in this same year a different threat, more nationalist in
kind, becomes evident.
A secret society has recently been formed by Arab officers within the Egyptian
army, with the intention of removing their Turkish-speaking superiors who occupy
all the senior ranks. They organize a mutiny in 1879. In the short term it
achieves nothing. But one of the society's members, Arabi Pasha, continues to
rise in the army and acquires increasing popularity as the champion of Egyptian
nationalism.
By 1882 there is enough support for a nationalist ministry to be forced on the
khedive. A new chamber of deputies is put in place, with Arabic now the official
language of government. Arabi Pasha is minister of war.
These developments greatly alarm the western powers, particularly since the
Egyptian government is proving incapable of suppressing the Mahdist movement in
the Sudan, which also aims at removing all foreign control.
In May 1882 British and French fleets are sent as a precautionary measure to
Alexandria. Their presence inflames an already tense situation. Riots in
Alexandria in June result in the deaths of many of the European residents. The
British fail to persuade the French to join them in an invasion of Egypt to
restore order, so a British army undertakes the task alone.
An Egyptian army under Arabi Pasha confronts the British at Tel-el-Kebir on
September 13 and is defeated. Two days later the British enter Cairo. Arabi
Pasha is tried for sedition and is exiled to Sri Lanka.
Egypt is now an occupied country, though in terms of international law it
remains a strange hybrid. The British, settling down to the business of
administering the realm, are doing so ostensibly on behalf of the Egyptian
khedive who himself is technically subject to a distant sovereign, the sultan in
Istanbul. It is a more complex version of the fiction by which the British rule
their empire in India.
British occupation: AD 1882-1914
The dominant figure during the years of the British occupation of Egypt is
Evelyn Baring, a member of a long-established British family of bankers. He
first serves in Egypt from 1877 to 1880 as the British member of the commission
responsible for coping with the Egyptian debt. After the defeat of Arabi Pasha
in 1882, Baring returns as consul general - in effect in charge of the British
administration.
Over the next quarter-century Baring (or Lord Cromer, as he is from 1892) places
the Egyptian finances on a sound footing and oversees all internal affairs -
including the withdrawal from Sudan after Gordon's death in 1885 and the return
under Kitchener in 1898.
Cromer's authoritarian attitudes and his tendency to work only with Egypt's
traditional ruling class (he learns Turkish but not Arabic) put him at odds with
the continuing demands of the Egyptian nationalists. By 1907 the British
government, in an attempt to liberalize the administration, replaces him with an
Arabic-speaking consul general, Eldon Gorst.
But it is events on a wider stage than local nationalism which bring about the
next change in Egypt's political status. The khedive's sovereign, the Ottoman
sultan, is from November 1914 at war with Britain. In December Britain declares
that 'the suzerainty of Turkey is terminated', and that Egypt is now to be 'a
British protectorate'.
Eight years to independence: AD 1914-1922
At the moment when Britain makes Egypt a protectorate, the khedive (now Abbas
II) is away in Constantinople. Being closely linked to the Turkish enemy, he is
replaced on the throne by his uncle, Husayn Kamil. Three years later Husayn dies
and is succeeded by a younger brother, Fuad.
Egypt is not directly involved in World War I but the defeat of the Axis powers,
including Turkey, leads to immediate hopes of independence - particularly after
France and Britain declare their commitment in November 1918 to the
self-determination of the various peoples liberated from the Ottoman empire.
On 13 November 1918, within two days of the signing of the armistice, a
political party is formed in Cairo by Saad Zaghlul. It is named Wafd, short for
Al-Wafd al-Misri and meaning the Egyptian Delegation. The name reveals the
immediate purpose - to send to the coming peace conference delegates who will
voice the demand of the Egyptian people for independence.
This is more than has been envisaged by Britain, which ensures that there is no
Egyptian presence at the talks. When the leaders of Wafd react angrily in Cairo,
martial law is introduced. Zaghlul and several colleagues are arrested in March
1919 and are deported to Malta. The result is uproar in Egypt, with
demonstrations against foreigners in general and the British in particular.
During the next three years the situation remains tense, while it becomes
increasingly evident that the nationalist policies of Wafd are shared by a large
majority in Egypt. In 1922 Britain proposes immediate independence, with various
strings attached. British troops are to remain in Egypt to protect imperial
interests (meaning in particular the Suez canal). And the Sudan is left out of
any settlement.
Fuad, the sultan, accepts these terms. In March 1922 he becomes Fuad I, king of
an independent Egypt. He already has an heir to his throne, the two-year-old
prince Farouk.
Throne and Wafd: AD 1922-1939
A constitution providing for parliamentary government is introduced in 1923.
Elections in the following year sweep Wafd into power with Zaghlul as prime
minister. One of the party's main principles, the demand for the merging of
Egypt and the Sudan, guarantees friction with the British government. And its
commitment to constitutional government puts it at loggerheads with the king.
Whatever the details of his new constitution, Fuad instinctively inclines to
more absolute royal powers.
The issue of the Sudan comes to a head in 1924, when riots and violence by
Sudanese nationalists prompt the British government to use force majeure in a
unilateral solution. Egyptian forces are evicted from the Sudan.
A compromise on the Sudan is not found until 1936. During the intervening twelve
years the struggle between Wafd and the king continues. Zaghlul dies in 1927 but
he is followed at the head of the party by an almost equally forceful leader,
Mustafa al-Nahas Pasha.
The conflict between the king and Nahas Pasha (who is determined to curb the
royal powers) lasts until the death of Fuad in 1936. It includes one lengthy
period (1928-34) when Fuad tears up the constitution of 1923 and rules by
decree. Relations are hardly any easier after the young prince Farouk succeeds
to the throne.
Early in the new reign Nahas Pasha leads a delegation to London and signs an
Anglo-Egyptian treaty which goes some way to easing the tensions between the two
countries - at any rate on the topic of the British troops stationed in Egypt
and much resented by Wafd.
It is agreed that the number of these troops will be steadily scaled down while
Egypt strengthens its own defensive forces, and that they will eventually be
limited to the region of the Suez canal. Nothing is settled on the long-term
future of the Sudan, but the treaty at least enables Egypt to resume its shared
responsibilities after a gap of twelve years.
Wars and revolution: AD 1939-1952
In the run-up to World War II the Italian aggression on either side of
Egypt and the Sudan, in Libya and Ethiopia, gives a new sense of unity to
British and Egyptian interests. Egypt remains neutral throughout the war, but
the British forces - previously so unwelcome - now have the important task of
driving back the Italians from both borders.
This responsibility becomes very much greater from 1941, when Rommel and his
Afrika Corps join the Italians in a determined drive east towards Egypt. By June
1942 they are within forty miles of Alexandria and seem likely to reach Cairo
and the Suez canal, until they are at last held at El Alamein.
When the field of combat moves north out of Africa in 1943, Egyptian attention
begins to focus more locally on Arab affairs. Arab hackles are raised by the
summary treatment dealt out to Lebanese nationalists by the French in 1943,
while Zionist demands on Palestine are also seen as cause for alarm.
One result is the conference of Arab nations held in Cairo in March 1945. Under
the presidency of Nahas Pasha, this results in the formation of the Arab League.
Three years later the League has a full-scale war on its hands, as its members
attempt to nip the state of Israel in the bud in the Arab-Israeli war of 1948.
These postwar years are also a time of increasing anti-British turmoil within
Egypt. The relaxation of wartime restrictions in 1945 is followed by a rush of
heightened resentment at the continuing presence of British troops on Egyptian
soil.
To this there is added a religious and terrorist element in the activities of
the Muslim Brotherhood, responsible in December 1948 for the assassination of
both the Egyptian prime minister (Nokrashi Pasha) and the chief of the Cairo
city police. Acts of violence against British forces become increasingly common,
until an encounter between British troops and rebels at the police headquarters
in Ismailia, in January 1952, results in forty-six Egyptian deaths.
The response, on the following day, is widespread rioting in Cairo and the
destruction of numerous buildings and businesses owned by foreigners. There are
a few British deaths.
For the next few months Farouk and his government attempt, unsuccessfully, to
cope with a deteriorating situation. But the pleasure-loving king, widely
regarded as a playboy, is soon deprived of these responsibilities. On the night
of 22 July 1952 a group of officers, led by Gamal Abdel Nasser, seizes power in
a bloodless coup. Farouk, forced to abdicate, sails into exile on his luxury
yacht. He is succeeded by his nine-month-old son as Ahmed Fuad II. But the
council of regency soon dispenses with the need for an infant monarch.
Nasser
and the Aswan dam: AD 1952-1956
The group which has toppled Farouk is a small secret organization, the Free
Officers, founded by Nasser with Anwar el-Sadat and others in the Egyptian army
in the 1940s. Their aim is to rid Egypt not only of the monarchy but also of the
hated British presence.
After the coup of 1952 Nasser wields the real power behind the scenes. But the
government is headed at first by Mohammed Naguib, who becomes president when
Egypt is declared a republic in June 1953. Meanwhile political parties have been
banned. In 1954 after a brief power struggle (Naguib has a greater following
than his colleagues realize), Nasser takes open control.
He intends to create a non-aligned socialist state occupying a position of
leadership in the Arab and Muslim world. But the proximity of Israel makes
non-alignment difficult. Israel's western allies are reluctant to sell arms to
Egypt (the Egyptian-Israeli border in Gaza is a dangerous flashpoint), so in
1955 Nasser arranges for a supply of eastern-bloc weapons from Czechoslovakia.
At the same time Nasser is greatly increasing Egypt's trade with the communist
nations (China is by now the main market for Egyptian cotton). Nasser considers
these economic links compatible with non-alignment. But soon they jeopardize the
great domestic undertaking which he is above all determined to achieve.
Nasser's pet project is the construction of a high dam at Aswan, to form a
massive lake (inevitably Lake Nasser) some 300 miles in length. The dam will
control the annual flooding of the Nile, crucial to Egypt's agriculture, as well
as generating vast amounts of electricity.
Early in 1956 Nasser seems able to demonstrate that non-alignment is viable. He
secures the offer of loans from the USA and Britain to finance the Aswan dam.
But in July of this year the USA withdraws its offer, shortly followed by
Britain. Nasser's response is prompt. Within days he declares that the Suez
canal is nationalized. Income from the canal will fund his dam - and there is
soon Soviet finance on offer, to offset the rebuff from the west.
The Suez Crisis: AD 1956
Nasser's seizing of the Suez Canal, in July 1956, is made possible by the
success of an agreement which he has negotiated two years earlier with Britain.
This has provided for the withdrawal over twenty months of all British troops
from the canal zone, thus removing the last cause of Egyptian resentment against
British imperialism.
Any cause for resentment is now on the British side. The 99-year lease granted
to the Suez Canal Company still has twelve years to run, and Nasser is not
proposing to pay compensation. In the short term there is little that can be
done about this by Britain or France (the other main shareholder in the company)
except make forceful protests at the United Nations.
During the autumn of 1956 Britain and France build up their forces in the
Mediterranean, but the tension escalates abruptly on October 29 when Israeli
troops move into the Sinai peninsula, a province of Egypt. Their pretext is
provocation from the Egyptians in successive border incidents. But the Suez
Canal lies in the path of the invading Israelis, making the issue of immediate
international urgency.
Britain and France issue an ultimatum to both Israel and Egypt, ordering each to
withdraw ten miles from the canal. It is a somewhat one-sided demand. Israel as
yet has hardly any troops near the canal, of which Egypt is in full possession.
The Israelis accept the ultimatum. Egypt disregards it.
The British and the French, in defiance of the wishes of the UN security council
and general assembly, begin bombing Egyptian airfields. On November 5 they land
marines and paratroops near Port Said. Egyptian forces on the canal (now blocked
with sunken vessels) are soon at a disadvantage. But the occupation is still
incomplete when international outrage causes Britain and France, along with
Israel and Egypt, to accept a ceasefire at midnight on November 6.
Within weeks UN forces arrive. The French and British withdraw after a
disastrous fiasco. Israel gains nothing. Nasser has lost his air force (soon
replaced by the USSR), but he has secured his ownership of the canal and has
gained immeasurably in local prestige.
Egypt and Israel: AD 1956-1973
Nasser's standing in the Arab world after the Suez crisis brings him the
chance of wider leadership. This soon becomes evident in the 1958 merger of
Egypt and Syria as the United Arab Republic (to be joined a month later by the
kingdom of Yemen, to form the United Arab States).
Nasser is the most prominent figure in this unwieldy political unit, which comes
to an abrupt end in 1961 when Syria withdraws. Significantly, Nasser continues
till the end of his life to use the name United Arab Republic for Egypt on its
own (the nation becomes Egypt again in 1971). But at this time leadership of the
Arab world means only one thing - leadership of the opposition to Israel.
While successfully maintaining non-alignment in relation to the power blocs of
the Cold War, Nasser is inflexibly antagonistic to his northern neighbour. When
hostilities flare up between Israel and Syria in 1967, he is quick to involve
Egypt in the escalating crisis.
The Arab side is decisively defeated in the resulting Six Day War, as a result
of which Egypt loses both Gaza and the Sinai peninsula (including, at first,
even the east bank of the Suez canal). Nasser offers to resign, but he is able
to stay in office thanks to vociferous popular demonstrations on his behalf -
orchestrated no doubt, but with an undercurrent of genuine enthusiasm.
The war leaves the Suez Canal closed, to the great detriment of Egypt's
finances. Negotiations for an Israeli withdrawal are still under way when Nasser
dies of a sudden heart attack in 1970. He is succeeded as president by Anwar
el-Sadat.
Sadat at first follows Nasser's hawkish policy towards Israel, launching with
Syria the surprise attack on Israel during the holiday of Yom Kippur in 1973. In
this war Egypt recovers some of the Sinai peninsula, becoming the first Arab
nation to win territory from the Israelis. This success prompts Sadat to risk a
dramatic volte-face. He attempts to lead the Arab world in negotiation with the
shared enemy.
In 1977 Sadat takes the unprecedented step of travelling to Jerusalem to propose
a peace plan to the Israeli parliament. His advance is well received by another
politician who has been equally hardline in the past, Menachem Begin. Together
the two leaders enter a process of negotiation which leads to a peace treaty
between their two nations, signed at Camp David in 1978.
But in this important achievement Sadat has moved too far ahead of majority Arab
opinion, and in particular of Muslim sentiment.
Fundamentalist Muslims have long been disenchanted with the Egyptian leadership.
In 1954 an assassination attempt on Nasser is traced to the Muslim Brotherhood,
which as a result is forcefully suppressed (putting an end to the only organized
opposition group in Egypt).
Now, in the early 1980s, the peace treaty with Israel revives Muslim opposition
- which in its turn provokes repressive measures by Sadat's government. In
October 1981 the peacemaker pays with his life. At a military parade to
commemorate the war of 1973 Anwar el-Sadat, reviewing the march past from the
podium, is gunned down by Muslim terrorists.
Mubarak: from AD 1981
Sadat is peacefully succeeded by his vice-president, Hosni Mubarak, who
in broad terms follows the same policies - keeping to the terms of Camp David,
and thus ensuring the agreed return of the Sinai peninsula to Egypt in April
1982.
Relations with Israel take a temporary turn for the worse two years later as a
result of the Israeli invasion of Lebanon, but by the 1990s Mubarak is again
following Sadat's example. He becomes the most prominent peacemaker in the
middle east, restoring Egypt's position of leadership in the Arab world. He is
helped in this role by his own enhanced status in the west - the result of
Egypt's role in the Gulf War.
In 1994 Mubarak is the broker in peace moves between Israel and the PLO. In 1995
he hosts a summit in Cairo attended by Yitzhak Rabin, King Hussein and Yasser
Arafat. But as with Sadat, these initiatives do not endear him to Muslim
fundamentalists.
During the 1990s Muslim terrorism becomes an increasing problem for Egypt,
severely harming the nation's crucial income from tourism. A prolonged campaign
of violence begins in March 1992, leading to some 200 deaths in the following
eighteen months. During the decade there are several attempts on Mubarak's life.
The most damaging incident in terms of Egypt's economy is the killing in 1997 of
some sixty tourists on a visit to the famous funerary temple of Queen
Hatshepsut.
From the start the government reacts vigorously, introducing martial law and
eventually imprisoning some 20,000 militants. The largest and oldest
fundamentalist group, the Muslim Brotherhood, is by now a mainstream movement
(though still officially banned) with followers at all levels of society. The
premises of Muslim Brotherhood lawyers and other professionals are frequently
raided and their occupants arrested, on suspicion of being linked to groups
engaged in terrorism.
There are several such groups. One is al-Jihad, responsible for the 1981
assassination of Sadat. The largest and most active is the Islamic Group
(Al-Jama'a al-Islamiya), which perpetrated the massacre at the Hatshepsut
temple.
There are other causes of tension within contemporary Egypt. The Coptic
Christians, amounting to some 10% of the population, feel ill-served by the
government (as well as frequently suffering Muslim terrorist attacks). And the
prevailing end-of-century demand for democracy gets short shrift.
From the early 1990s, as in many other African nations, the ban on political
parties is relaxed. But Mubarak's National Democratic Party (a development of
Nasser's original Free Officers) contrives to keep a firm grip on power. In 1993
Mubarak is the only presidental candidate, winning a third six-year term. In
elections in 1995, widely regarded as fraudulent, his party secures 93% of the
seats.
Other articles in this category |
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Egypt at a glance |
Geography (1) |
Geography (2) |
History |
Culture |
Economy(1) |
Economy(2) |
Politics |
Military |