The Nile River is the milestone of
the history of Egypt. The furtile coasts of the
river gave an impulse to the dawn of the kingdom-
the melting pot of our civilisations, the kingdom
that has invented the written language and erected
the first stone monuments. The river has been the
source of the economic, social, politic and
religious life since the days of the first
settlement.
About 5000 years
ago two independent Kingdoms, two « Niles », red
and black were unified according to the order of
Menes, the founder of the first dynasty of the
Pharaohs.
The Pharaohs were
considered to be godlike, they ruled the
well-structured society. The first pyramide was
constructed in about the 27-th century B.C.; the
monument became even more impressive during next 5
centuries. The 4-th dynasty - Khufu, Khafre and
Mycerinus enjoyed the culmination of the pharaonic
power ; at this period the famous pyramids at Giza
were erected. The 6-th and the 7-th dynasties
conquered the new lands and extended the borders of
the Kingdom, established small principalities, and
built the second metropolis: Herakleopolis (near the
Suez Canal); the rivalry caused the civil war.
An independent
Kingdom was established in Thebes (Luxor) and
Montuhotep II turned to be the unique Pharaoh of
Egypt. From 1550 to 1069 B.C. The new Kingdom
enjoyed the period of prosperity during the reign of
Tuthmosis I, the first Pharaoh who was burried in
the Pharaoh’s valley; his daughter Hatshepsut, one
of the few women-pharaohs of Egypt; and Tuthmosis
III, the most famous conqueror, who extended the
borders of Egypt to Asia.
Amenhotep IV
renounced learning of the traditional theology
(amon) and took the title of Akhenaton in honour of
Aten, the God and Disk of the Sun; together
with
his wife Nefertiti he established the new Akhenaton,
the city, dedicated to the Aten. The son of another
wife of Akhenaton, Toutankhamon, ruled in Egypt
about nine years. After that Egypt was run by the
following descendants : Ramses I, II and III, and
Seti I who reestablished the ancient theology and
the cult of Amon-Re, constructed the great monuments
and temples in honour of the God. But the empire was
at the point of collapse, the social strata were
completely destroyed ; in 332 B.C. Alexander the
Great conquered Egypt and established the new
capital Alexandria.
In the epoch of
Ptolemy I, Alexandria became a big city. The
Ptolemies ruled in Ehypt during 300 years, but this
period was marked by the rivalry among the noble,
many people were exiled or assassinated. At this
particular time another empire, The Roman empire was
beginning to take power, and it was interested to
conquer the territory of Egypt.
From 51 to 48 B.C.
Egypt was governed by Ptolemy XIII and his sister
Cleopatra VIII, when Julius Caesar sent there his
roman rival: Pompey. He was killed near Alexandria.
When Caesar came to Egypt, he diposed of Ptolemy
XIII and declared Ptolemy XIV the king and became
a lover of Cleopatra. In 47 B.C. Cleopatra gave
birth to the son of Caesar. A year after Julius
Caesar’s assassination Mark Antony came from Rome to
become a lover of Cleopatra too. After the defeat of
their navy under commission of Octave in Actium in
31 B.C. Antony and Cleopatra committed suicide, and
Egypt turned to be a a province of Rome.
Despite of a sort
of dissipation of Roman empire if the III-rd and
IV-th centuries that facilitated the invasions of
the Nubians, Africans from the North and the
Persians, the situation in Egypt was comparatively
stable till 640 when the Arabs came. The Arabs
brought the Islam to Ehypt; the Fatimides ruled in
Egypt and established the city of Al-Qahira (Cairo).
Egypt enjoyed the period of prosperity under the
Fatimides and Cairo became a metropolis.
During the epoch
of crusades of the XI-th century the christians
occupied the major
part
of Egypt ; later the territory was reconquered by
Saladin in 1187 with the help of the mercenary turks
- the mamelouks, who overthrew their employers and
became the governers of Egypt for the next 250 years
till the time the Turks came in 1517. The Ottoman
empire confined itself by collecting taxes.
In 1789 Napoleon
drove the Turks out of Egypt, his military campaign
laid the foundation of the egyptology, since it was
the first real scientific expedition. Some time
after the English took control of the territory,
but very soon they had to leave it being expelled by
the Ottoman empire. In 1869 after the opening of the
Suez Canal the immense national debt of Egypt
facilitate the military invasion of France and Great
Britain in 1879 and put an end to Turkish yoke.
After the World War II Egypt has become one of the
founders of the Arab League. In 1952 colonel Abdel
Gamal Nasser with a group of officers-nationalists
carried out a coup d’etat, nationalized the Suez
Canal, and made a stout resistance to the troops of
France and Great Britain. Repudiated by UNO, the two
great powers withdrew their troops.
After several
months of tension, in June, 5th of
1967, Egypt and Israel broke out the war (the war of
6 days). Having destroyed the Egypt air-force and
invaded Sinai, Israel bloked the Suez Canal. Anwar
Sadat, the successor of Nasser (died in 1970),
attacked unexpectedly the Israel army during the
holiday Yom Kipour, in October, 6th of
1973. But the Egyptian army was defeated again. In
1877 Sadat started to negotiate with Israel for
peace; the negotiations resulted in the Camp David
Agreement appointing the restauration of Sinai and
common consent. This agreement was considered a
sort of treason by the radical Arabs, and as a
result, Sadat was assassinated in October, 6th
of 1981.
Husni Mubarak, the
ex-vice-president of Sadat, took the oath and became
the president of the country. Owing to his irenic
diplomacy, he succeeded in stabilizing of the
relations with Israel and the Arabic countries of
the Middle East. Nevertheless, his politics proved
to be dangerous, since some murder attempts took
place. The relations with the countries of the West
became stable on condition that Egypt should join
the coalition against Irak in 1991.
In 1992 the
islamic fundamentalists broke out violent
destabilizing activities : they attacked some
tourists and Egyptian security forces. In 1995 they
organized an attempt to assassinate their president
Moubarak; the massacre of 70 persons, tourists
mostly, at the foot of the pyramids set the
population of Egypt on the alert.
The unemployment
rate decreasing, the economic growth, the notable
rise in the sphere of education and the collapse of
the fundamentalistic influence brought the stability
to Egypt and made the country one of the
world-famous resorts.