Egypt ( ; , ;
Egyptian Arabic: ; Coptic: , ; Egyptian: Kemet), officially the
Arab Republic of Egypt, is a country mainly in
North Africa, with the Sinai Peninsula
forming a land bridge in the Middle East. Thereby, Egypt is a
transcontinental country, and is
considered to be a major power in North
Africa, Mediterranean
Region, African Continent, Nile Basin, Islamic
World and the Red
Sea
. Covering an area of about , Egypt is bordered
by the Mediterranean
Sea
to the north, the Gaza Strip
and Israel
to the
northeast, the Red
Sea
to the east, Sudan
to the south
and Libya
to the
west.
Egypt is one of the most populous countries in
Africa and the
Middle
East. The great majority of its estimated 77.4 million live
near the banks of the
Nile River, in an
area of about , where the only
arable
agricultural land is found. The large areas of the
Sahara Desert are sparsely
inhabited.
About half of Egypt's residents live in urban
areas, with the majority spread across the densely-populated
centres of greater Cairo
, Alexandria
and other major cities in the Nile Delta
.
Egypt is
famous for its ancient civilization
and some of the world's most famous monuments, including the
Giza pyramid
complex
and its Great Sphinx
. The southern city of Luxor
contains
numerous ancient artifacts, such as the Karnak
Temple and
the Valley of the
Kings
. Egypt is widely regarded as an important
political and cultural nation of the Middle East.
Egypt possesses one of the most developed economies in the Middle
East, with sectors such as tourism, agriculture, industry and
service at almost equal rates in national production. Consequently,
the Egyptian economy is rapidly developing, due in part to
legislation aimed at luring investments, coupled with both internal
and political stability, along with recent trade and market
liberalization.
Etymology
One of the ancient
Egyptian names
of the country,
Kemet ( ), or "black land", referring to
the fertile black soils of the Nile flood plains, distinct from the
deshret ( ), or "red land" of the desert. The name is
realized as and in the
Coptic stage
of the Egyptian language, and appeared in early
Greek as ( ). Another name was "land of the
riverbank". The names of
Upper and
Lower Egypt were
Ta-Sheme'aw ( ) "sedgeland" and
Ta-Mehew ( ) "northland", respectively.
, the
Arabic and modern official
name of Egypt (
Egyptian Arabic: ),
is of
Semitic origin, directly
cognate with other Semitic words for Egypt such as
the
Hebrew ( ), literally meaning
"the two straits" (a reference to the dynastic separation of upper
and lower Egypt). The word originally connoted "metropolis" or
"civilization" and also means "country", or "frontier-land".
The English name
Egypt was borrowed from
Middle French Egypte, from
Latin , from
ancient
Greek Aígyptos ( ), from earlier
Linear B a-ku-pi-ti-yo. The adjective
aigýpti-, aigýptios was borrowed into Coptic as
gyptios, kyptios, and from there into Arabic as , back
formed into , whence English
Copt.
The Greek
forms were borrowed from Late Egyptian
(Amarna) Hikuptah "Memphis", a corruption of the earlier
Egyptian name Hat-ka-Ptah
( ), meaning "home of the ka (soul) of
Ptah", the name of a temple to the god Ptah at
Memphis
.
Strabo attributed the word to a
folk etymology in which
Aígyptos ( )
evolved as a compound from ( ), meaning "below the Aegean".
Geography
At , Egypt is the world's 38th-largest country.
In terms of land area,
it is approximately the same size as all of Central America, twice the size of Spain
, four times
the size of the United
Kingdom
, and the combined size of the US states of Texas
and California
.
Nevertheless, due to the aridity of Egypt's climate, population
centres are concentrated along the narrow Nile Valley and Delta,
meaning that approximately 99% of the population uses only about
5.5% of the total land area.
Egypt is bordered by Libya to the west, Sudan to the south, and by
the Gaza Strip and Israel to the east.
Egypt's important role
in geopolitics stems from its strategic position: a transcontinental nation, it
possesses a land bridge (the Isthmus of Suez) between Africa and
Asia, which in turn is traversed by a navigable
waterway (the Suez
Canal
) that connects the Mediterranean Sea with the
Indian
Ocean
via the Red Sea.
Apart from the Nile Valley, the majority of Egypt's landscape is a
desert. The winds blowing can create
sand dunes
more than high.
Egypt includes parts of the Sahara Desert and of the Libyan Desert
. These deserts were referred to as the "red
land" in ancient Egypt, and they protected the Kingdom of the
Pharaohs from western threats.
Towns and
cities include Alexandria
, one of the greatest ancient cities, Aswan
, Asyut
, Cairo
, the modern
Egyptian capital, El-Mahalla El-Kubra
, Giza
, the site of
the Pyramid of Khufu, Hurghada
, Luxor
, Kom Ombo
, Port
Safaga
, Port
Said
, Sharm el
Sheikh
, Suez
, where the
Suez Canal is located, Zagazig
, and Al-Minya
. Oases include Bahariya
, el
Dakhla
, Farafra
, el
Kharga
and Siwa
.
Protectorates include Ras Mohamed
National Park, Zaranik Protectorate and Siwa.
See
Egyptian Protectorates
for more information.
Climate
Egypt does not receive much rainfall except in the winter months.
South of Cairo, rainfall averages only around per year and at
intervals of many years. On a very thin strip of the northern coast
the rainfall can be as high as , with most of the rainfall between
October and March. Snow falls on Sinai's mountains and some of the
north coastal cities such as Damietta, Baltim, Sidi Barrany, etc.
and rarely in Alexandria, frost is also known in mid-Sinai and
mid-Egypt.
Temperatures average between and in summer, and up to on the Red
Sea coast. Temperatures average between and in winter. A steady
wind from the northwest helps hold down the temperature near the
Mediterranean coast. The
Khamaseen is a
wind that blows from the south in Egypt in spring, bringing sand
and dust, and sometimes raises the temperature in the desert to
more than .
Every year, a predictable flooding of the Nile replenishes Egypt's
soil. This gives the country consistent harvest throughout the
year. Many know this event as
The Gift of the Nile.
The rise in sea levels due to
global
warming threatens Egypt's densely populated coastal strip and
could have grave consequences for the country's economy,
agriculture and industry. Combined with growing demographic
pressures, a rise in sea levels could turn millions of Egyptians
into
environmental refugees
by the end of the century, according to climate experts.
History
Prehistory to the French Invasion
See also
Population history
of Egypt
There is evidence of
rock carvings
along the
Nile terraces and in the desert
oases. In the
10th millennium BC,
a culture of
hunter-gatherers and
fishers replaced a
grain-grinding
culture.
Climate changes and/or overgrazing around 8000 BC began to
desiccate the pastoral lands of Egypt, forming the Sahara. Early
tribal peoples migrated to the Nile River where they developed a
settled agricultural
economy and
more centralized
society.
By about 6000 BC the Neolithic culture rooted in the Nile Valley.
During the
Neolithic era, several
predynastic cultures developed
independently in
Upper and Lower
Egypt.
The Badarian
culture and the successor Naqada
series are
generally regarded as precursors to Dynastic Egyptian civilization. The
earliest known Lower Egyptian site, Merimda, predates the Badarian
by about seven hundred years. Contemporaneous Lower Egyptian
communities coexisted with their southern counterparts for more
than two thousand years, remaining somewhat culturally separate,
but maintaining frequent contact through trade.
The earliest known
evidence of Egyptian
hieroglyphic inscriptions appeared during the predynastic
period on Naqada
III pottery
vessels, dated to about 3200 BC.
A unified kingdom was founded circa 3150 BC by King Menes, giving rise to a series of dynasties that ruled Egypt for the next three millennia. Egyptians subsequently referred to their unified country as tawy, meaning "two lands", and later kemet (Coptic: kīmi), the "black land", a reference to the fertile black soil deposited by the Nile river. Egyptian culture flourished during this long period and remained distinctively Egyptian in its religion, arts, language and customs. The first two ruling dynasties of a unified Egypt set the stage for the Old Kingdom period, c.2700−2200 BC., famous for its many pyramids
, most notably the Third Dynasty pyramid of Djoser
and the Fourth Dynasty Giza Pyramids
.
The
First
Intermediate Period ushered in a time of political upheaval for
about 150 years. Stronger Nile floods and stabilization of
government, however, brought back renewed prosperity for the
country in the
Middle
Kingdom c. 2040 BC, reaching a peak during the reign
of Pharaoh
Amenemhat III. A
second period of
disunity heralded the arrival of the first foreign ruling
dynasty in Egypt, that of the
Semitic
Hyksos.
The Hyksos invaders took over much of Lower
Egypt around 1650 BC and founded a new capital at Avaris
.
They were
driven out by an Upper Egyptian force led by Ahmose I, who founded the Eighteenth Dynasty and relocated
the capital from Memphis
to Thebes.
The
New Kingdom (c.1550−1070 BC) began with
the Eighteenth Dynasty, marking the rise of Egypt as an international power that
expanded during its greatest extension to an empire as far south as
Tombos
in Nubia, and included parts of the Levant in the east. This period is noted for
some of the most well-known
Pharaohs,
including
Hatshepsut,
Thutmose III,
Akhenaten and his wife
Nefertiti,
Tutankhamun
and
Ramesses II. The first historically
attested expression of
monotheism came
during this period in the form of
Atenism.
Frequent contacts with other nations brought new ideas to the New
Kingdom. The country was later invaded by
Libyans,
Nubians and
Assyrians, but native Egyptians drove them out and
regained control of their country.
The
Thirtieth Dynasty was
the last native ruling dynasty during the Pharaonic epoch. It
fell to the
Persians in 343 BC after the last native Pharaoh, King
Nectanebo II, was defeated in battle. Later,
Egypt fell to the
Greco–Macedonians
and
Romans, beginning over
two thousand years of foreign rule. The last ruler from the
Ptolemaic line was
Cleopatra VII, who committed suicide with her
lover Marc Antony, after Caesar Augustus had captured them.
Before Egypt became part of the
Byzantine realm,
Christianity had been brought by
Saint Mark the Evangelist in the
AD first century.
Diocletian's reign
marked the transition from the
Roman to
the
Byzantine era in Egypt, when a
great number of Egyptian Christians were persecuted. The
New Testament had by then been translated into
Egyptian. After the
Council of
Chalcedon in AD 451, a distinct
Egyptian Coptic Church
was firmly established.
The Byzantines were able to regain control of the country after a
brief
Persian
invasion early in the seventh century, until in AD 639, Egypt was
absorbed into the Islamic
Empire by the
Muslim Arabs. When they defeated the Byzantine Armies in
Egypt, with the help of some revolutionary Egyptians, the Arabs
brought
Sunni Islam to the country.
Early in this period, Egyptians began to blend their new faith with
indigenous beliefs and practices that had survived through
Coptic Christianity that was expanded in
Egypt by the Byzantines, giving rise to various
Sufi orders that have flourished to this day.
Muslim
rulers nominated by the Islamic Caliphate
remained in control of Egypt
for the next six centuries, with Cairo
as the seat
of the Caliphate under the Fatimids. With the end of the
Ayyubid dynasty, the
Mamluks, a
Turco-
Circassian
military caste, took control about AD 1250. They continued to
govern the country until the
conquest of Egypt by the
Ottoman Turks in 1517, after which it became a
province of the
Ottoman Empire. The
mid-14th-Century
Black Death killed
about 40% of the country's population. The
famine that afflicted Egypt in 1784 cost it roughly
one-sixth of its population.
Modern history
The brief
French invasion of
Egypt led by
Napoleon
Bonaparte began in 1798. The expulsion of the French in 1801 by
Ottoman, Mamluk, and British forces was followed by four years of
anarchy in which Ottomans, Mamluks, and Albanians who were
nominally in the service of the Ottomans, wrestled for power.
Out of
this chaos, the commander of the Albanian regiment, Muhammad Ali (Kavalali Mehmed Ali
Pasha) emerged as a dominant figure and in 1805 was acknowledged by
the Sultan in Istanbul
as his viceroy in Egypt; the
title implied subordination to the Sultan but this was in fact a
polite fiction: Ottoman power in Egypt was finished and Muhammad
Ali, an ambitious and able leader, established a dynasty that was to rule Egypt (at first really and
later as British puppets) until the revolution of 1952.
His
primary focus was military: he annexed Northern Sudan (1820–1824),
Syria
(1833), and parts of Arabia
and Anatolia
; but in 1841 the European powers, fearful lest he
topple Byzantium itself, checked him: he had to return most of his
conquests to the Ottomans, but he kept the Sudan and his title to
Egypt was made hereditary. A more lasting consequence of his
military ambition is that it made him the moderniser of Egypt.
Anxious to learn the military (and therefore industrial) techniques
of the great powers he sent students to the West and invited
training missions to Egypt. He built industries, a system of canals
for irrigation and transport, and reformed the
civil service. For better or worse, the
introduction in 1820 of long-staple
cotton,
the Egyptian variety of which became famous, transformed Egyptian
agriculture into a cash-crop monoculture before the end of the
century. The social effects of this were enormous: it led to the
concentration of agriculture in the hands of large landowners, and,
with the additional trigger of high cotton prices caused by the
United States'
civil war
production drop, to a large influx of foreigners who began in
earnest the exploitation of Egypt for international commodity
production.
Muhammad Ali was succeeded briefly by his son
Ibrahim (in September 1848), then by
a grandson
Abbas I (in November
1848), then by
Said (in 1854), and
Isma'il (in 1863).
Abbas I was cautious. Said and Ismail were ambitious developers;
unfortunately they spent beyond their means. The Suez Canal, built
in partnership with the French, was completed in 1869. The expense
of this and other projects had two effects: it led to enormous debt
to European
banks, and caused popular
discontent because of the onerous
taxation it
necessitated. In 1875 Ismail was forced to sell Egypt's share in
the canal to the British government. Within three years this led to
the imposition of British and French
controllers who sat in the Egyptian cabinet,
and, "with the financial power of the bondholders behind them, were
the real power in the government." Local dissatisfaction with
Ismail and with European intrusion led to the formation of the
first
nationalist groupings in
1879, with
Ahmad Urabi a prominent
figure. In 1882 he became head of a nationalist-dominated ministry
committed to democratic reforms including parliamentary control of
the budget. Fearing a diminishment of their control, Britain and
France intervened militarily, bombarding Alexandria and crushing
the Egyptian army at the
battle
of Tel el-Kebir. They reinstalled Ismail's son
Tewfik as figurehead of a
de facto
British protectorate. In 1914 the Protectorate was made official,
and the title of the head of state, which had changed from
pasha to
khedive in 1867, was changed to
sultan, to repudiate the vestigial suzerainty of the
Ottoman sultan, who was backing the
Central powers in World War I.
Abbas II was deposed as khedive and
replaced by his uncle,
Husayn Kamil, as
sultan.
In 1906, the
Dinshaway Incident
prompted many neutral Egyptians to join the nationalist movement.
After the First World War,
Saad Zaghlul
and the
Wafd Party led the Egyptian
nationalist movement, gaining a majority at the local
Legislative Assembly.
When the British
exiled Zaghlul and his associates to Malta
on 8 March
1919, the country arose in its first modern revolution.
Constant revolting by the Egyptian people throughout the country
led Great Britain to issue a unilateral declaration of Egypt's
independence on 22 February 1922. The
Kingdom of Egypt lasted from 1922 to its
dissolution in 1953.
The Revolution
The new Egyptian government drafted and implemented a new
constitution in 1923 based on a
parliamentary representative
system. Saad Zaghlul was popularly-elected as
Prime Minister of Egypt in 1924. In
1936 the
Anglo-Egyptian
Treaty was concluded. Continued instability in the government
due to remaining British control and increasing political
involvement by the king led to the ousting of the monarchy and the
dissolution of the parliament in a military
coup d'état known as the
1952 Revolution. The officers,
known as the
Free Officers
Movement, forced King
Farouk to
abdicate in support of his son
Fuad.
On 18 June 1953, the Egyptian Republic was declared, with General
Muhammad Naguib as the first
President of the Republic. Naguib was forced to resign in 1954 by
Gamal Abdel Nasser the real
architect of the 1952 movement and was later put under
house arrest. Nasser assumed
power as President and declared the full
independence of Egypt from the United Kingdom on 18 June 1956. His
nationalization of the Suez Canal on
26 July 1956 prompted the 1956
Suez
Crisis.
Three
years after the 1967 Six Day War, during
which Israel had invaded and occupied Sinai
, Nasser died
and was succeeded by Anwar Sadat.
Sadat switched Egypt's
Cold War allegiance
from the Soviet Union to the United States, expelling Soviet
advisors in 1972. He launched the
Infitah
economic reform policy, while violently clamping down on religious
and secular opposition alike.
In 1973,
Egypt, along with Syria, launched the October War, a surprise attack against the
Israeli forces occupying the Sinai Peninsula and the Golan Heights
. It was an attempt to liberate part of the
Sinai territory Israel had captured 6 years earlier. Sadat hoped to
seize some territory via military force, and then regain the rest
of the peninsula by diplomacy. The conflict sparked an
international crisis between the two world superpowers: the US and
the USSR, both of whom intervened. Two UN-mandated ceasefires were
needed to bring military operations to a halt. While the war ended
in a military stalemate, it presented Sadat with a political
victory that later allowed him to regain the Sinai in return for
peace with Israel.
Sadat made a historic visit to Israel in 1977, which led to the
1979
peace treaty in
exchange for the complete Israeli withdrawal from Sinai. Sadat's
initiative sparked enormous controversy in the
Arab world and led to Egypt's expulsion from the
Arab League, but it was supported by the vast majority of
Egyptians. A fundamentalist military soldier assassinated Sadat in
Cairo in 1981. He was succeeded by the incumbent
Hosni Mubarak. In 2003, the
Egyptian Movement for Change, popularly known as
Kefaya, was launched to seek a return to
democracy and greater
civil liberties.
Identity
The Nile Valley was home to one of the
oldest cultures in the world, spanning three
thousand years of continuous history. When Egypt fell under a
series of foreign occupations after
343 BC, each left an indelible mark on the country's
cultural landscape. Egyptian identity
evolved in the span of this long period of occupation to
accommodate, in principle, two new religions,
Islam and
Christianity;
and a new language,
Arabic, and its
spoken descendant,
Egyptian Arabic.
The degree to which Egyptians identify with each layer of Egypt's
history in articulating a sense of
collective identity can vary. Questions
of identity came to fore in the last century as Egypt sought to
free itself from foreign occupation for the first time in two
thousand years. Three chief ideologies came to head:
ethno-territorial Egyptian nationalism, secular
Arab nationalism and
pan-Arabism, and
Islamism. Egyptian nationalism predates its Arab
counterpart by many decades, having roots in the nineteenth century
and becoming the dominant mode of expression of Egyptian
anti-colonial activists and intellectuals until the early 20th
century. Arab nationalism reached a peak under
Nasser but was once again relegated under
Sadat; meanwhile, the ideology espoused by
Islamists such as the
Muslim Brotherhood is present in small
segments of the lower-middle strata of Egyptian society.
Politics
National
Egypt has been a republic since 18 June 1953. President
Mohamed Hosni Mubarak has been the
President of the Republic since 14
October 1981, following the assassination of former-President
Mohammed Anwar El-Sadat. Mubarak is
currently serving his fifth term in office (28 years). He is the
leader of the ruling
National Democratic Party.
Prime Minister Dr.
Ahmed Nazif was sworn in as Prime
Minister on 9 July 2004, following the resignation of Dr.
Atef Ebeid from his office.
Although power is ostensibly organized under a
multi-party semi-presidential system, whereby
the executive power is theoretically divided between the President
and the
Prime Minister, in
practice it rests almost solely with the President who
traditionally has been elected in single-candidate elections for
more than fifty years. Egypt also holds regular multi-party
parliamentary elections. The last presidential election, in which
Mubarak won a fifth consecutive term,
was held in September
2005.
In late February 2005, President Mubarak announced in a surprise
television broadcast that he had ordered the reform of the
country's presidential election law, paving the way for
multi-candidate polls in the upcoming presidential election. For
the first time since the
1952
movement, the Egyptian people had an apparent chance to elect a
leader from a list of various candidates. The President said his
initiative came "out of my full conviction of the need to
consolidate efforts for more freedom and democracy." However, the
new law placed draconian restrictions on the filing for
presidential candidacies, designed to prevent well-known candidates
such as
Ayman Nour from standing against
Mubarak, and paved the road for his easy re-election
victory.Concerns were once again expressed after the 2005
presidential elections about government interference in the
election process through fraud and vote-rigging, in addition to
police brutality and violence by pro-Mubarak supporters against
opposition demonstrators. After the election, Egypt imprisoned
Nour, and the U.S. Government stated the "conviction of Mr. Nour,
the runner-up in Egypt's 2005 presidential elections, calls into
question Egypt's commitment to democracy, freedom, and the rule of
law."
As a result, most Egyptians are skeptical about the process of
democratization and the role of the
elections. Less than 25 percent of the country's 32 million
registered voters (out of a population of more than 72 million)
turned out for the 2005 elections. A proposed change to the
constitution would limit the president to two seven-year terms in
office.
Thirty-four constitutional changes voted on by parliament on 19
March 2007 prohibit parties from using religion as a basis for
political activity; allow the drafting of a new anti-terrorism law
to replace the emergency legislation in place since 1981, giving
police wide powers of arrest and surveillance; give the president
power to dissolve parliament; and end judicial monitoring of
election. As opposition members of parliament withdrew from voting
on the proposed changes, it was expected that the referendum would
be boycotted by a great number of Egyptians in protest of what has
been considered a breach of democratic practices. Eventually it was
reported that only 27% of the registered voters went to the polling
stations under heavy police presence and tight political control of
the ruling National Democratic Party. It was officially announced
on 27 March 2007 that 75.9% of those who participated in the
referendum approved of the
constitutional amendments
introduced by President Mubarak and was endorsed by opposition free
parliament, thus allowing the introduction of laws that curb the
activity of certain opposition elements, particularly
Islamists.
The CIA World Factbook states that the legal system is based on
Islamic and civil law (particularly Napoleonic codes); and that the
judicial review takes place by a Supreme Court, which accepts
compulsory ICJ jurisdiction only with reservations.
Human rights
Several local and international human rights organizations,
including
Amnesty
International and
Human Rights
Watch, have for many years criticized Egypt's human rights
record as poor. In 2005, President
Hosni
Mubarak faced unprecedented public criticism when he clamped
down on
democracy activists challenging his
rule. Some of the most serious human rights violations, according
to HRW's 2006 report on Egypt, are routine torture, arbitrary
detentions and trials before military and state security
courts.
Discriminatory personal status laws governing marriage, custody and
inheritance which put women at a disadvantage have also been cited.
Laws concerning
Coptic Christians which place restrictions on church
building and open worship have been recently eased, but major
construction still requires governmental approval, while sporadic
attacks on Christians and churches continue. Intolerance of
Bahá'ís and unorthodox Muslim
sects, such as
Sufis and
Shi'a, also remains a problem. The Egyptian legal
system only recognizes three religions:
Islam,
Christianity and
Judaism. When the government moved to computerize
identification cards, members of religious minorities, such as
Bahá'ís, could
not obtain
identification documents. An Egyptian court ruled in early 2008
that members of other faiths can obtain identity cards without
listing their faiths, and without becoming officially recognized.
(For more on the status of religious minorities, see the
Religion section.)
In 2005, the
Freedom House rated
political rights in Egypt as "6" (1
representing the most free and 7 the least free rating),
civil liberties as "5" and gave it the
freedom rating of "Not Free."
See also
Freedom in the World
2006,
List of indices of
freedom It however noted that "Egypt witnessed its most
transparent and competitive presidential and legislative elections
in more than half a century and an increasingly unbridled public
debate on the country's political future in 2005." For
freedom of the press, Egypt was deemed
"Partly Free" in 2008, ranking 124 out of the 196 countries
surveyed.
In 2007, human rights group
Amnesty International released a
report criticizing Egypt for
torture and
illegal detention. The report alleges that Egypt has become an
international center for torture, where other nations send suspects
for interrogation, often as part of the
War on Terror. The report calls on Egypt to
bring its
anti-terrorism
laws into accordance with international human rights statutes
and on other nations to stop sending their detainees to Egypt.
Egypt's foreign ministry quickly issued a rebuttal to this report,
claiming that it was inaccurate and unfair, as well as causing deep
offense to the Egyptian government.
The Egyptian Organization for Human Rights (EOHR) is one of the
longest-standing bodies for the defence of
human rights in Egypt. In 2003, the
government established the National Council for Human Rights,
headquartered in Cairo and headed by former
UN Secretary-General
Boutros Boutros-Ghali who
directly reports to the president. The council has come under heavy
criticism by local NGO activists, who contend it undermines human
rights work in Egypt by serving as a propaganda tool for the
government to excuse its violations and to provide legitimacy to
repressive laws such as the recently renewed Emergency Law. Egypt
had announced in 2006 that it was in the process of abolishing the
Emergency Law, but in March 2007 President Mubarak approved several
constitutional amendments to include "an anti-terrorism clause that
appears to enshrine sweeping police powers of arrest and
surveillance", suggesting that the Emergency Law is here to stay
for the long haul.
Foreign relations
Egypt's foreign policy operates along moderate lines. Factors such
as
population size, historical
events, military strength, diplomatic expertise and a strategic
geographical position give Egypt extensive political influence in
Africa and the Middle East. Cairo has been a crossroads of regional
commerce and culture for centuries, and its intellectual and
Islamic institutions are at the center of the region's social and
cultural development.
The permanent
Headquarters of the Arab
League are located in Cairo and the Secretary General of the
Arab League has traditionally been an Egyptian. Former Egyptian
Foreign Minister
Amr Moussa is the
current Secretary General. The Arab League briefly moved from Egypt
to Tunis in 1978, as a protest to the signing by Egypt of a peace
treaty with Israel, but returned in 1989.
Egypt was the first Muslim state to establish diplomatic relations
with Israel, with the signing of the
Egypt-Israel Peace Treaty in 1979.
Egypt has a major influence amongst other Arab states, and has
historically played an important role as a mediator in resolving
disputes between various Arab states, and in the
Israeli-Palestinian
dispute.
Former Egyptian
Deputy Prime
Minister Boutros
Boutros-Ghali served as
Secretary-General of the
United Nations from 1991 to 1996.
In the twenty-first century, Egypt has encountered a major problem
with immigration, as millions of Africans attempt to enter Egypt
fleeing poverty and war. Border control methods can be "harsh,
sometimes lethal."
Governorates and regions
Egypt is divided into 29
governorate. The governorates are
further divided into
regions. The
regions are then subdivided into towns and villages.
Each governorate has a capital, often carrying the same name as the
governorate.
The tables (
below) list the governorates in alphabetical
order.In April 2008, Cairo and Giza have divided to 4 governorates,
the new governorates are 6th of October and Helwan beside Cairo and
Giza
Economy
Egypt's economy depends mainly on agriculture, media, petroleum
exports, and tourism; there are also more than three million
Egyptians working abroad, mainly in
Saudi Arabia
, the
Persian
Gulf
and Europe.
The completion of the Aswan High
Dam
in 1970 and the resultant Lake Nasser
have altered the time-honored place of the Nile
River in the agriculture and ecology of Egypt. A
rapidly-growing population, limited
arable
land, and dependence on the Nile all continue to overtax
resources and stress the economy.
The government has struggled to prepare the economy for the new
millennium through economic reform and massive investments in
communications and physical infrastructure. Egypt has been
receiving U.S.
foreign aid (since 1979,
an average of $2.2 billion per year) and is the third-largest
recipient of such funds from the United States following the Iraq
war. Its main revenues however come from tourism as well as traffic
that goes through the Suez Canal.
Egypt has a developed energy market based on coal, oil,
natural gas, and
hydro
power. Substantial coal deposits are in the north-east Sinai,
and are mined at the rate of about per year.
Oil and gas are
produced in the western desert regions, the Gulf of Suez
, and the Nile Delta. Egypt has huge reserves
of gas, estimated at 1,940 cubic kilometres, and
LNG is exported to many
countries.
Economic conditions have started to improve considerably after a
period of stagnation from the adoption of more liberal economic
policies by the government, as well as increased revenues from
tourism and a booming
stock market.
In its
annual report, the IMF
has rated
Egypt as one of the top countries in the world undertaking economic
reforms. Some major economic reforms taken by the new
government since 2003 include a dramatic slashing of customs and
tariffs. A new
taxation law implemented in
2005 decreased corporate taxes from 40% to the current 20%,
resulting in a stated 100% increase in
tax
revenue by the year 2006.

Tourists ride in traditional Nile
boat.
FDI (
Foreign Direct
Investment) into Egypt has increased considerably in the past
few years due to the recent
economic liberalization measures
taken by minister of investment Mahmoud Mohieddin, exceeding $6
billion in 2006.
Although one of the main obstacles still facing the Egyptian
economy is the trickle down of the wealth to the average
population, many Egyptians criticize their government for higher
prices of basic goods while their
standards of living or purchasing power
remains relatively stagnant. Often corruption is blamed by
Egyptians as the main impediment to feeling the benefits of the
newly attained wealth. Major reconstruction of the country's
infrastructure is promised by the government, with a large portion
of the sum paid for the newly acquired 3rd mobile license ($3
billion) by Etisalat.
The best known examples of Egyptian companies that have expanded
regionally and globally are the
Orascom
Group and Raya. The IT sector has been expanding rapidly in the
past few years, with many new start-ups conducting outsourcing
business to North America and Europe, operating with companies such
as Microsoft, Oracle and other major corporations, as well as
numerous SME's. Some of these companies are the Xceed Contact
Center, Raya Contact Center, E Group Connections and C3 along with
other start ups in that country. The sector has been stimulated by
new Egyptian entrepreneurs trying to capitalize on their country's
huge potential in the sector, as well as constant government
encouragement.
Demographics
Egypt is the most populated country in the Middle East and the
third most populous on the
African
continent, with an estimated 83 million people (as of April
2009). The last 40 years have seen a rapid increase in population
due to
medical
advances and massive increase in agricultural productivity,
made by the
Green Revolution.
Egypt's population was estimated at only 3 million when
Napoleon invaded the country in
1798. Almost all the population is concentrated
along the banks of the Nile (notably Cairo and Alexandria), in the
Delta and near the Suez Canal. Approximately 90% of the population
adheres to
Islam and most of the
remainder to Christianity, primarily the
Coptic Orthodox
denomination. Apart from religious affiliation, Egyptians can be
divided demographically into those who live in the major urban
centers and the
fellahin or farmers of rural
villages.
Egyptians are by far the largest ethnic
group in Egypt at 91% of the total population.
Ethnic minorities
include the Abazas, Turks, Greeks, Bedouin Arab tribes living in the eastern deserts
and the Sinai
Peninsula
, the
Berber-speaking Siwis (Amazigh) of the
Siwa
Oasis
, and the Nubian communities
clustered along the Nile. There are also tribal communities of
Beja concentrated in the
south-eastern-most corner of the country, and a number of Dom clans mostly in the Nile Delta and Faiyum
who are
progressively becoming assimilated as urbanization
increases.
Egypt also hosts an unknown number of
refugees and asylum seekers, but they are estimated
to be between 500,000 and 3 million. There are some 70,000
Palestinian refugees, and about 150,000
recently arrived
Iraqi refugees,
but the number of the largest group, the
Sudanese, is contested. The
once-vibrant
Greek and
Jewish communities in Egypt
have virtually
disappeared, with only a small
number remaining in the country, but many Egyptian Jews visit on
religious occasions and for tourism. Several important Jewish
archaeological and historical sites are found in Cairo, Alexandria
and other cities.
Media
Egyptian
media are highly influential
both in Egypt and the
Arab World,
attributed to large audiences and increasing freedom from
government control. Freedom of the media is guaranteed in the
constitution; however, many laws still restrict this right. After
the
Egyptian
presidential election of 2005, Ahmed Selim, office director for
Information Minister Anas al-Fiqi, declared an era of a "free,
transparent and independent Egyptian media."
Today, the Egyptian media is experiencing more freedom that wasn't
available in the near past. Several Egyptian
Talk shows, like (90 Minutes) and (Al- Ashera
Masa'an), which operate on private channels, and even the state
television programs such as (El-beit beitak) are criticizing the
government; this was banned before because the government was
controlling all television programs, but now the public is feeling
the freedom that the government allowed for media.
Religion
Egypt is a predominantly Muslim country with
Islam as its state religion. Between 80% and 90% are
identified as Muslim. Almost the entire population of Muslims are
Sunni. A significant number of Muslim
Egyptians also follow native
Sufi orders, and there is a minority of
Shi'a.
There is a large minority of
Christians
in Egypt, who make up the remainder of the population (between 10%
and 20%).
Over 90% of Egyptian Christians belong to the
native
Coptic
Orthodox Church of Alexandria. Other native Egyptian Christians
are adherents of the
Coptic
Catholic Church, the
Evangelical
Church of Egypt and various other
Protestant denominations.
Non-native Christian communities are largely found in the
urban regions of Cairo
and Alexandria
.
There is also a small, but nonetheless historically significant,
non-immigrant
Bahá'í
population of around 2000, and an even smaller community of Jews of
about 200, then a tiny number of Egyptians who identify as
atheist and
agnostic. The
non-Sunni, non-Coptic communities range in size from several
hundreds to a few thousand.
According to the
constitution of
Egypt, any new legislation must at least implicitly agree with
Islamic law; however, the constitution bans
political parties with a religious agenda. Egypt hosts two major
religious institutions.
Al-Azhar University
, founded in 970 A.D by the
Fatimids as the first Islamic
University in Egypt and the main Egyptian Church the Coptic Orthodox Church of
Alexandria established in the middle of the 1st century by
Saint Mark.
Religion plays a central role in most Egyptians' lives, The
Adhan (Islamic call to prayer) that is heard
five times a day has the informal effect of regulating the pace of
everything from business to media and entertainment. Cairo is
famous for its numerous
mosque minarets and is justifiably dubbed "the city of
1,000 minarets", with a significant number of
church towers. This religious
landscape has been marred by a history of religious extremism,
recently witnessing a 2006 judgement of Egypt's
Supreme Administrative Court, which
made a clear legal distinction between "recognized religions"
(i.e., Islam, Christianity, and Judaism) and all other religious
beliefs. This ruling effectively delegitimizes and forbids practice
of all but the three
Abrahamic
religions. This judgment had made it necessary for
non-Abrahamic religious communities to either commit perjury or be
denied Egyptian identification cards (see
Egyptian identification
card controversy), until a 2008 Cairo court case ruled that
unrecognized religious minorities may obtain birth certificates and
identification documents, so long as they omit their religion on
court documents.
In 2002, under the
Mubarak government,
Coptic
Christmas (January the 7th) was
recognized as an official holiday, though
Copts
report being minimally represented in law enforcement, state
security and public office, and of being discriminated against in
the workforce on the basis of their religion. The Coptic community,
as well as several human rights activists and intellectuals,
maintain that the number of Christians occupying government posts
is not proportional to the number of Copts in Egypt.
Culture
Egyptian culture has six thousand
years of
recorded history.
Ancient Egypt was among the earliest
civilizations and for millennia, Egypt
maintained a strikingly complex and stable culture that influenced
later cultures of Europe, the Middle East and other African
countries. After the Pharaonic era, Egypt itself came under the
influence of
Hellenism,
Christianity, and Islamic culture. Today, many aspects of Egypt's
ancient culture exist in interaction with newer elements, including
the influence of modern
Western
culture, itself with roots in ancient Egypt.
Egypt's capital city, Cairo, is Africa's largest city and has been
renowned for centuries as a center of learning, culture and
commerce. Egypt has the highest number of
Nobel Laureates in Africa and the
Arab World.
Some Egyptian born politicians were or are
currently at the helm of major international organizations like
Boutros Boutros-Ghali of the
United Nations and Mohamed ElBaradei of the IAEA
.
Egypt is a recognized cultural trend-setter of the Arabic-speaking
world, and contemporary Arab culture is heavily influenced by
Egyptian literature, music, film and television. Egypt gained a
regional leadership role during the 1950s and 1960s, which gave a
further enduring boost to the standing of Egyptian culture in the
Arab world.
Renaissance
The work of early nineteenth-century scholar Rifa'a et-Tahtawi gave
rise to the Egyptian Renaissance, marking the transition from
Medieval to
Early Modern Egypt. His work renewed
interest in
Egyptian antiquity and
exposed Egyptian society to
Enlightenment principles. Tahtawi
co-founded with education reformer
Ali
Mubarak a native
Egyptology school
that looked for inspiration to medieval Egyptian scholars, such as
Suyuti and
Maqrizi,
who themselves studied the
history,
language and
antiquities of Egypt. Egypt's
renaissance peaked in the late 19th and early 20th centuries
through the work of people like
Muhammad
Abduh,
Ahmed Lutfi
el-Sayed,
Muhammad Loutfi
Goumah,
Tawfiq el-Hakim,
Louis Awad,
Qasim
Amin,
Salama Moussa,
Taha Hussein and
Mahmoud Mokhtar. They forged a
liberal path for Egypt expressed as a commitment
to individual freedom,
secularism and
faith in science to bring progress.
Art and architecture
The Egyptians were one of the first major civilizations to codify
design elements in art and architecture. The wall paintings done in
the service of the
Pharaohs followed a rigid
code of visual rules and meanings. Egyptian civilization is
renowned for its colossal pyramids,
colonnades and monumental tombs.
Well-known examples
are the Pyramid of
Djoser
designed by ancient architect and engineer Imhotep, the Sphinx, and the
temple of Abu
Simbel
. Modern and contemporary Egyptian art can be
as diverse as any works in the world art scene, from the vernacular
architecture of
Hassan Fathy and
Ramses Wissa Wassef, to
Mahmoud Mokhtar's famous sculptures, to the
distinctive
Coptic iconography of
Isaac Fanous.
The
Cairo Opera
House
serves as the main performing arts venue in the
Egyptian capital. Egypt's media and arts industry has
flourished since the late nineteenth century, today with more than
thirty satellite channels and over one hundred motion pictures
produced each year. Cairo has long been known as the "Hollywood of
the Middle East;" its annual film festival, the
Cairo International Film
Festival, has been rated as one of 11 festivals with a top
class rating worldwide by the International Federation of Film
Producers' Associations.
To bolster its media industry further,
especially with the keen competition from the Persian Gulf Arab States and
Lebanon
, a large media city was built. Some
Egyptian-born actors, like
Omar Sharif,
have achieved worldwide fame.
Literature
Literature constitutes an important
cultural element in the life of Egypt. Egyptian novelists and poets
were among the first to experiment with modern styles of
Arabic literature, and the forms they
developed have been widely imitated throughout the Middle East. The
first modern Egyptian novel
Zaynab by
Muhammad Husayn Haykal was published
in 1913 in the
Egyptian vernacular.
Egyptian novelist
Naguib Mahfouz was
the first Arabic-language writer to win the
Nobel Prize in Literature.
Egyptian women writers include
Nawal El
Saadawi, well known for her
feminist
activism, and
Alifa
Rifaat who also writes about women and tradition. Vernacular
poetry is perhaps the most popular
literary genre amongst Egyptians, represented
by the works of
Ahmed Fouad Negm
(Fagumi),
Salah Jaheen and
Abdel Rahman el-AbnudiIn their
belief, boats were used by the dead to accompany the sun around the
world, as Heaven was referred to as “Upper Waters”. In Egyptian
mythology, every night the serpentine god Apophis would attack the
Sun Boat as it brought the sun (and as such order )back to the
Kingdom in the morning. It is referred to as the “Boat of Millions”
as all of the gods and all of the souls of the blessed dead may at
one point or another be needed to defend or operate it.
Music
Egyptian music is a rich mixture of
indigenous, Mediterranean, African and Western elements. In
antiquity, Egyptians were playing
harps and flutes, including two indigenous instruments: the
ney and the
oud.
Percussion and vocal music also became an
important part of the local music tradition ever since.
Contemporary Egyptian music traces its beginnings to the creative
work of people such as Abdu-l Hamuli, Almaz and Mahmud Osman, who
influenced the later work of Egyptian music giants such as
Amr Diab,
Mohamed
Mounir,
Sayed Darwish,
Umm Kulthum,
Mohammed Abdel Wahab and
Abdel Halim Hafez. From the 1970s onwards,
Egyptian pop music has become increasingly important in Egyptian
culture, while Egyptian folk music continues to be played during
weddings and other festivities.
Festivals
Egypt is famous for its many festivals and religious carnivals,
also known as
mulid. They are usually associated with a
particular Coptic or Sufi saint, but are often celebrated by all
Egyptians irrespective of creed or religion.
Ramadan has a special flavor in Egypt, celebrated
with sounds, lights (local lanterns known as
fawanees) and
much flare that many Muslim tourists from the region flock to Egypt
during Ramadan to witness the spectacle. The ancient spring
festival of
Sham en Nisim (
Coptic:
shom en nisim) has been
celebrated by Egyptians for thousands of years, typically between
the
Egyptian months of
Paremoude (April) and
Pashons (May), following
Easter Sunday.
Egypt is one of the boldest countries in the middle east in the
music industry. The next generation of the Egyptian music is
considered to be the rise, as the music was disrupted by some
foreign influences, bad admixing, and abused oriental styles.The
new arising talents starting from the late 90's are taking over the
rein now as they play many diffenet genres of many different
cultures.Rock And Metal music are prevailing widely in Egypt now,as
much as the oriental jazz and folk music are becoming well-known
now to the Egyptian and non-Egyptian fans
Sports
Football is the Popular
National Sport of Egypt. Egyptian Soccer
clubs
El Ahly,
El
Zamalek,
Ismaily,
El-Ittihad El-Iskandary and
El Masry are the most popular teams and enjoy the
reputation of long-time regional champions. The great rivalries
keep the streets of Egypt energized as people fill the streets when
their favorite team wins. The
Cairo
Derby is one of the fiercest derbies in Africa nd the world,
the BBC even picked it as one of the toughest 7 derbies in the
world
[387876]. Egypt is rich in soccer history as
soccer has been around for over 100 years. The country is home to
many African championships such as the
Africa Cup of Nations. While,
Egypt's national team has not
qualified for the
FIFA World Cup
since 1990, the Egyptian team won the Africa Cup Of Nations an
unprecedented six times, including two times in a row in 1957 and
1959 and again in 2006 and 2008, setting a world record.
Squash and
tennis are other popular sports in Egypt. The
Egyptian squash team has been known for its fierce competition in
international championships since the 1930s.
Amr Shabana is Egypt's best player and the
winner of the world open three times and the best player of
2006.
The Egyptian Handball team also holds another record; throughout
the 34 times the
African Handball Nations
Championship was held, Egypt won first place five times
(including 2008), five times second place, four times third place,
and came in fourth place twice. The team won 6th and 7th places in
1995, 1997 at the World Men's Handball Championship, and twice won
6th place at the 1996 and 2000 Olympics.
In 2007,
Omar Samra joined Ben Stephens
(England), Victoria James (Wales) and Greg Maud (South Africa) in
putting together an expedition to climb Mount Everest from its
South side. The Everest expedition began on 25 March 2007 and
lasted for just over 9 weeks. On the 17th of May at precisely 9:49
am Nepal time, Omar became the first and youngest Egyptian to climb
8,850m Mount Everest. He also became the first Egyptian to climb
Everest from its South face, the same route taken by Sir Edmund
Hilary and Sherpa Tenzing in 1953.
Egypt has a long history of
participation at the Summer Olympics
since 1912.
Best results
Military

Two Egyptian Mi-17 helicopters after
unloading troops during an exercise.
The
Egyptian Armed forces have a
combined troop strength of around 450,000 active personnel.
According to the Israeli chair of the former Knesset Foreign
Affairs and Defense Committee,
Yuval
Steinitz, the
Egyptian Air
Force has roughly the same number of modern warplanes as the
Israeli Air Force and far more
Western tanks, artillery, anti-aircraft batteries and warships than
the
IDF. The Egyptian military
has recently undergone massive military modernization mostly in
their Air Force. Egypt is speculated by Israel to be the first
country in the region with a
spy
satellite,
EgyptSat 1, and is
planning to launch 3 more satellites (DesertSat1, EgyptSat2,
DesertSat2) over the next two years. In Israel, Egypt is considered
to be the second strongest military power in the Middle East,
behind Israel.
See also
Lists
- Main list: List of
basic Egypt topics
Notes and references
- Biblical Hebrew E-Magazine. January, 2005
- World Factbook area rank order
- More changes ahead for Egypt
- E. A. Pearce, Charles Gordon Smith, The Times Books World
Weather Guide, (Times Books/Random House: 1990), p.40
- Sun, sand and searing heat
- Robert Pateman, Salwa El-Hamamsy, Egypt, (Marshall
Cavendish: 2003), p.7
- Hamza, Waleed. Land use and Coastal Management in the Third
Countries: Egypt as a case. Accessed= 2007-06-10.
- Soliman, KH. Rainfall over Egypt. Quarterly Journal of
the Royal Meteorological Society, vol. 80, issue 343, p. 104.
- Marsa Matruh, Egypt. Weatherbase.com. Last
accessed February 12, 2008.
- Contingency planning for rising sea levels in Egypt
| IRIN News, March 2008
- Midant-Reynes, Béatrix. The Prehistory of Egypt: From the
First Egyptians to the First Kings. Oxford: Blackwell
Publishers.
- Bard, Kathryn A. Ian Shaw, ed. The Oxford Illustrated
History of Ancient Egypt. Oxford: Oxford University Press,
2000. p. 69.
- " The Fall of the Egyptian Old Kingdom". BBC -
History.
- "The Kushite Conquest of Egypt".
AncientSudan.org.
- Kamil, Jill. Coptic Egypt: History and Guide. Cairo:
American University in Cairo, 1997. p. 39
- El-Daly, Okasha. Egyptology: The Missing Millennium.
London: UCL Press, 2005. p. 140
- Egypt - Major Cities, U.S. Library of
Congress
- " Icelandic Volcano Caused Historic Famine In Egypt,
Study Shows". ScienceDaily. November 22, 2006
- Nejla M. Abu Izzeddin, Nasser of the Arabs, published
circa 1973, p 2.
- Nejla M. Abu Izzeddin, Nasser of the Arabs", p 2.
- Anglo French motivation: Derek Hopwood, Egypt: Politics and
Society 1945-1981. London, 1982, George Allen & Unwin. p
11.
- De facto protectorate: Joan Wucher King, Historical
Dictionary of Egypt. Metuchen, New Jersey, USA; 1984;
Scarecrow. p 17.
- James Jankowski, Egypt, A Short History, p. 111
- Jankowski, op cit., p. 112
- Vatikiotis, p. 443
- Jankowski, James. "Egypt and Early Arab Nationalism" in Rashid
Khalidi, ed. The Origins of Arab Nationalism. New York:
Columbia University Press, 1990, pp. 244–45
- Dawisha, Adeed. Arab Nationalism in the Twentieth
Century. Princeton: Princeton University Press. 2003, pp.
264–65, 267
- Business Today Egypt. Mubarak throws presidential race wide open.
March 2005.
- Lavin, Abigail. Democracy on the Nile: The story of Ayman Nour and
Egypt's problematic attempt at free elections. March 27,
2006.
- Murphy, Dan. Egyptian vote marred by violence. Christian Science Monitor. 26
May 2005.
- United States "Deeply Troubled" by Sentencing of
Egypt's Nour. U.S. Department of State, Published 24 December
2005
- Gomez, Edward M. Hosni Mubarak's pretend democratic election.
San Francisco Chronicle. September
13, 2005.
- Egypt to begin process of lifting emergency
laws. December 5, 2006.
- Anger over Egypt vote timetable BBC News.
- Human Rights Watch. Egypt: Overview of human rights issues in Egypt.
2005
- Church Building Regulations Eased
- Freedom House. Freedom in the World - Egypt.
2006
- Freedom House. Freedom of the Press World Ranking.
2009
- Egypt torture centre, report says.
bbc.co.uk. Written
2007-4-11. Retrieved 2007-4-11.
- Egypt rejects torture criticism. bbc.co.uk. Written 2007-4-13.
Retrieved 2007-4-13.
- Egyptian
Organization for Human Rights
- Official page of the Egyptian National Council for Human
Rights.
- Egyptian National Council for Human Rights Against Human
Rights NGOs. EOHR. June 3, 2003.
- Qenawy, Ahmed. The Egyptian Human Rights Council: The Apple Falls Close
to the Tree. ANHRI. 2004
- Egypt parliament approves changes in
constitution. Reuters. March 20, 2007.
- Desperate on the Border, ALASDAIR SOUSSI, Jerusalem Report,
Nov. 9, 1953, [1]
- IRIN Middle East | Middle East | Egypt: Corruption
hampering development, says opposition report | Other | Breaking
News
- Daily News Egypt - Full Article
- et - Full Story
- BBC NEWS | The limits of a Green
Revolution?
- Food First/Institute for Food and Development
Policy
- Egypt - Population, U.S. Library of
Congress
- Refugees in Egypt.
- Iraq: from a Flood to a Trickle: Egypt
- See The U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants
for a lower estimate. The states on its web site that in 2000 the
World Council of Churches claimed
that "between two and five million Sudanese have come to Egypt in
recent years". Most Sudanese refugees come to Egypt in the hope of
resettling in Europe or the US.
- Country profiles: Egypt BBC
- "Plus ca Change: The Role of the Media in Egypt's First
Contested Presidential Elections", TBS
- Freedom House 2007 report
- Hoffman, Valerie J. Sufism, Mystics, and Saints in Modern
Egypt. University of South Carolina Press, 1995.
- IPS News (retrieved 09-27-2008)
- [2]. The Washington Post. "Estimates
of the size of Egypt's Christian population vary from the low
government figures of 6 to 7 million to the 12 million reported by
some Christian leaders. The actual numbers may be in the 9 to 9.5
million range, out of an Egyptian population of more than 60
million." Retrieved 10-10-2008
- [3]. The New York Times. Retrieved
10-10-2008.
- [4] The Christian Post. Accessed 28 September, 2008.
- Jewish Community Council (JCC) of Cairo. Bassatine News. 2006.
- ArabicNews.com. Copts welcome Presidential announcement on Eastern
Christmas Holiday. December 20, 2002.
- MIDEAST: Egypt Makes Cultural Clout Count (IPS, Oct. 29,
2009)
- El-Daly, op cit., p. 29
- Jankowski, op cit., p. 130
- Cairo Film Festival information.
- Vatikiotis, op cit.
- Egypt Military Strength
- Steinitz, Yuval. Not the peace we expected. Haaretz. December 05,
2006.
- Katz, Yaacov. "Egypt to launch first spy satellite",
Jerusalem
Post, January 15, 2007.
General references
External links
- Government
- General
- Other
- Leonard William King, History of
'Egypt, Chaldæa, Syria
, Babylonia, and Assyria in
the Light of Recent Discovery, Project
Gutenberg.
- Egyptian History (urdu)
- By Nile and Tigris, a narrative of journeys in Egypt
and Mesopotamia on behalf of the British museum between the years
1886 and 1913, by Sir E. A. Wallis
Budge, 1920 (a searchable facsimile at the University of
Georgia Libraries; DjVu & layered
PDF format)
- Napoleon on the Nile: Soldiers, Artists, and the
Rediscovery of Egypt.