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History
Egyptian history begins about 5000 B.C. with the first Neolithic settlements in the Nile valley and Delta. At about 3000 B.C. the fertile Nile Delta and the southern area of Upper Egypt were united under a single monarch, Pharaoh, who was considered divine by birth. Despite numerous attempts at conquest 30 royal families or dynasties ruled Egypt. The Old Kingdom or Pyramid age with the capital of Memphis lasted for nearly 600 years, followed by a period of unrest and civil war called the First Intermediate Period, during which the country was fragmented. A new unity under the reign of the Pharaohs of the 11th dynasty began the so called Middle Kingdom with Thebes, modern Luxor, as its capital. When Egypt was overrun by nomadic tribes from Asia, the Hyksos, another period of unrest began.

Only after the Egyptians managed to adapt their conquerors’ fabulous new weapon, the horse-drawn chariot, they could drive the Hyksos kings out of the Nile Delta where they had their capital of Avaris. Thanks to their chariots the Egyptian kings of the New Kingdom conquered nearly all surrounding countries and laid the foundation for an Empire that reached from Nubia in the South to the area of modern Lebanon and Syria, where the rich coastal towns paid tributes to Egypt. Even after the conquest by Nubians, Assyrians, Persians and Greeks Egypt retained its own culture and religion and so all newcomers until the times of the Roman emperors were depicted in the manner of the very first Pharaohs giving offerings to the gods on the walls of temples and tombs.
Egypt was also the first country to be Christianized and gave rise to early monasticism. The Egyptian Christians flourished during the 5th – 7th century and left a rich heritage of churches and monasteries. Many of these were constructed from reused blocks and columns taken from Pharaonic temples. After the advent of Islam in the 7th century some of these were converted once more to become mosques.
Fourteen centuries of Islamic history have left their traces in Egypt, beginning with the conquest by Amr ibn el As. The oft-renovated mosque of the conqueror is still open to visitors near the site of the old Roman castle of Babylon in Old Cairo. Egypt had several provincial governors holding the country for the caliph, and was later ruled nearly autonomously by Saladin and his descendants, as well as soldier-kings or Mameluks, originally slaves who were bought in Eastern Europe and trained for the military. Only the arrival of Napoleon in Egypt in 1799 marked the end of the Mameluke rule and the beginning of more modern times. The Greek born Mohammed Ali became the first khedive or viceroy of Egypt holding the country for the sultan in Istanbul. Mohammed Ali, much impressed by French science and culture, established an exchange program to train his countrymen in modern achievements and “imported” foreign consultants to modernize the country. The descendants of Mohammed Ali ruled the country until 1952, when King Farouk, the last of his line, was sent into exile by the revolutionary government of the Free Officers. Afterwards, Egypt became a democracy.
The rich heritage of temples, tombs and other monuments from the Pharaonic era, between 3000 and 323 B.C., have been attracting visitors for hundreds of years. Even when you plan to spend most of your time in the desert, a trip to the Pyramids of Giza and the treasures of the Egyptian museum is a must. Nile cruises provide a comfortable means for visiting the major temples in Upper Egypt between Luxor and Aswan. Besides, Egypt can boast of numerous Christian churches and monasteries as well as the stations of the Holy Family’s visit to Egypt, and of course hundreds of mediaeval Islamic mosques, houses and bazaars.
 
 

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