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The
history
of
Egypt
is one of the richest, oldest and most varied of any country in the
world and the country's place in the
Middle East
is as central now as it was in the fourth millennium BC.
The unification of the Lower
and the Upper Kingdoms, in about 3180 BC, marks a convenient starting
point for Egyptian history.
This
dynamic, culturally sophisticated and powerful kingdom on the banks of
the Nile grew into one of the greatest civilizations of the ancient
world.
The
pre-Hellenic period is reckoned in Kingdoms (Old, Middle and New) and
subdivided into dynasties.
The
IVth dynasty saw the construction of such architectural
masterpieces as the Great Pyramid, while the XIth and XIIth
saw the zenith of Egyptian power at the start of the second millennium.
Tutankhamun, whose famous tomb was discovered in 1922, ruled briefly
during the XVIIIth dynasty.
From
the XXth dynasty onwards, the power of Egypt was on the wane
and the country was overrun on several occasions by foreign powers.
The latest and most permanent of these invasions,
which brought the
Pharaonic period
to an end, was that of
Alexander the Great, in 332 BC.
During the Hellenic and
Augustan Roman period (circa AD 30), the emergence of law and literature
in Alexandria allowed for seven centuries of comparative peace and
economic stability.
From the
middle of the fourth century,
Egypt became part of the Eastern Empire.
Then,
in AD 642, an invading Arab army โ one manifestation of the rapid
Islamic conquests that followed the death of Muhammad โ was welcomed by
the Coptic Christians in preference to their previous Greek rulers.
The
Fatimids gained control of the country in the late 10th
century, however, their power declined after a century or so.
The subsequent revival of Muslim fortunes
and the reawakening of the spirit of
Jihad
(holy war) was largely associated with the
career of Saladin, whose control of Egypt enabled him to reunite much of
the Muslim world.
Under Ottoman rule, Egypt became a somewhat
neglected corner of a large and increasingly moribund empire. The
arrival of Napoleon in AD 1798 brought Egypt once more into violent
contact with a European power.
By 1805, however, the
struggle for independence had been won, with Muhammad Ali being
recognized as Sultan.
This
was a period of great rivalry between the European powers, during which
Egypt was buffeted between them.
The
Suez Canal was opened in 1869, although subsequent financial problems
and internal struggles led to British occupation in 1882, which lasted
until 1936.
Thereafter, Egypt was formally independent but severely constrained by
the British, who retained ultimate political and economic control over
the country.
Discontentment against the Government culminated in the 1952 revolution,
orchestrated by young army officers led by Colonel Gamal Abdel Nasser.
After consolidating his position as President of the new Government,
Nasser took the Suez Canal into public ownership with all revenues
directed to the Egyptian treasury. This led to the Suez Crisis of 1956,
in which a combined Anglo-French-Israeli military operation attempted to
seize and depose Nasser.
The
failure of that operation greatly
enhanced Nasser's standing and inspired supporters throughout the Middle
East who shared his vision of a united Arab world, free from foreign
interference.
Disputes between Arab
countries hindered these plans. The defeat of Arab forces by Israel in
the 1967 Six Day War deprived Egypt of the Sinai Peninsula and the Gaza
Strip, land that was recovered only after another defeat by the Israelis
in the Yom Kippur War of 1973 and the subsequent Egyptian-Israeli peace
initiative, which culminated in the 1979 Camp David accord.
The treaty was signed on the Egyptian side
by Nasser's successor,
Anwar El-Sadat,
and this, along with the rise of Islamic fundamentalism in Egypt after
the Iranian revolution, accounted for his assassination in 1981.
Sadat was succeeded by his deputy,
Hosni Mubarak,
who pursued similar policies to his former boss.
However, the rapprochement with the Arab world (especially Saudi Arabia)
at the Amman Summit in 1987 instigated a new phase of diplomatic
relations within the Middle East and marked the rehabilitation of the
Mubarak government into the wider Arab community.
Egypt
was closely involved in the Israeli-Palestinian negotiations during the
early 1990s and broadly supportive of the 1994 Oslo agreement between
the two sides.
Since then, it has played a
largely back-seat role in the Arab-Israel dispute. Not least, this is
because it is disinclined to do anything to disturb relations with the
USA โ after Israel, Egypt is the world's largest single recipient of US
aid.
Of more immediate concern has been the
domestic rise of militant Islam.
Mubarak
is aware that Egypt's deep-rooted social and economic problems render
fundamentalism an attractive option for many young Egyptians.
The
government's strategy
has been to defuse the
movement by holding controlled multi-party elections, at which selected
Islamic candidates are allowed to stand (although the pro-government
National Democratic Party won the October 2000 elections to the
Majlis
) coupled with fierce repression of Islamic
paramilitaries.
There
has been no repeat to date of the notorious 1997 Luxor incident when 70
people, mostly foreign tourists, lost their lives.
Many
of the leading militants have since left the country: a number of these,
including senior figures in Jema'a Islamiya, the most prominent of the
militant groups, subsequently linked up with Osama bin Laden's al-Qaeda
organization.
President Mubarak,
in power for 26 years, won with 88.6 per cent of the votes - in the
first presidential election held in September 2005. The election was
marked by a low turnout of just 23 per cent.
Mr. Mubarak
had been elected only in single-candidate referendums.
Parliamentary elections took place on 9 November 2005, with a second
stage being held on 20 November and a third stage on 1 December. |