The Africa Zone |
Egypt is a country mainly in North Africa, with the Sinai Peninsula forming a land bridge in Western Asia. Covering an area of about 1,010,000 square kilometers (390,000 sq mi), Egypt borders 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 82 million[1] live near the banks of the Nile River, in an area of about 40,000 square kilometers (15,000 sq mi), 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. 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. The Great
Sphinx and the Pyramids of Giza, built during the Old Kingdom,
are modern national icons that are at the heart of Egypt's thriving
tourism industry.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 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 Greeks and Romans, beginning over two thousand years of foreign rule. 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 invaded by the Muslim Arabs. The form of Islam the Arabs brought to Egypt was Sunni. Early in this period, Egyptians began to blend their new faith with indigenous beliefs and practices that had survived through Coptic Christianity, 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, including a period for which it was 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 even after the conquest of Egypt by the Ottoman Turks in 1517. The mid-14th-Century Black Death killed about 40% of the country's population.
| |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||