Egypt (Arabic: مصر Miṣr [mesˁr] ⓘ, Egyptian Arabic pronunciation: [mɑsˤr]), officially the Arab Republic of Egypt, is a country spanning the northeast corner of Africa and southwest corner of Asia via the Sinai Peninsula. It is bordered by the Mediterranean Sea to the north, the Gaza Strip of Palestine and Israel to the northeast, the Red Sea to the east, Sudan to the south, and Libya to the west; the Gulf of Aqaba in the northeast separates Egypt from Jordan and Saudi Arabia. Cairo is the capital, largest city, and leading cultural center, while Alexandria is the second-largest city and an important hub of industry and tourism. With over 109 million inhabitants, Egypt is the third-most populous country in Africa and 15th-most populated in the world.
Egypt has one of the longest histories of any country, tracing its heritage along the Nile Delta back to the 6th–4th millennia BCE. Considered a cradle of civilisation, Ancient Egypt saw some of the earliest developments of writing, agriculture, urbanisation, organised religion and central government. Egypt was an early and important centre of Christianity, later adopting Islam from the seventh century onwards. Cairo became the capital of the Fatimid Caliphate in the tenth century and of the subsequent Mamluk Sultanate in the 13th century. Egypt then became part of the Ottoman Empire in 1517, until its local ruler Muhammad Ali established modern Egypt as an autonomous Khedivate in 1867. The country was then occupied by the British Empire along with Sudan and gained independence in 1922 as a monarchy.
Egypt is a developing country with the second-largest economy in Africa. It is considered to be a regional power in the Middle East, North Africa and the Muslim world, and a middle power worldwide. Islam is the official religion and Arabic is official language. Egypt is a founding member of the United Nations, the Non-Aligned Movement, the Arab League, the African Union, Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, World Youth Forum, and a member of BRICS. (Full article...)
Papyrus Oxyrhynchus 581 (P. Oxy. 581 or P. Oxy. III 581) is a papyrus fragment written in Ancient Greek, apparently recording the sale of a slave girl. Dating from 29 August 99 AD, P. Oxy. 581 was discovered, alongside hundreds of other papyri, by Bernard Pyne Grenfell and Arthur Surridge Hunt while excavating an ancient landfill at Oxyrhynchus in modern Egypt. The document's contents were published by the Egypt Exploration Fund in 1898, which also secured its donation to University College, Dundee, later the University of Dundee, in 1903 – where it still resides. Measuring 6.3 x 14.7 cm and consisting of 17 lines of text, the artifact represents the conclusion of a longer record, although the beginning of the papyrus was lost before it was found. P. Oxy. 581 has received a modest amount of scholarly attention, most recently and completely in a 2009 translation by classicist Amin Benaissa of Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford.
The fragment probably documents the registration of a slaving sale with Oxyrhynchus' agoranomeion, a Roman civic institution involved with record-keeping and the supervision of taxation. P. Oxy. 581 mentions four individuals; the slave herself, likely an eight year-old female; the unnamed purchaser, for whom the transaction is being registered; Demas, brother of the purchaser as well as the slave's previous owner and Caecilius Clemens, an unspecified notary also connected to four other Oxyrhynchus Papyri dating from 86 AD–c.100 AD. An "inadvertent scribal omission", whereby the stated value of 3,000 bronze drachmas, a largely obsolete currency, was not converted into its equivalent worth in silver, is regarded as an unusual mistake and has served to distinguish the record. (Full article...)
The following are images from various Egypt-related articles on Wikipedia.
Image 1Rectangular fishpond with ducks and lotus planted round with date palms and fruit trees, Tomb of Nebamun, Thebes, 18th Dynasty (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 2Khafre enthroned (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 3Coffin of Khnumnakht in 12th dynasty style, with palace facade, columns of inscriptions, and two Wedjat eyes (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 4Soad Hosny, Egyptian film star. Among the most famous Egyptian and Arabic actresses. (from Culture of Egypt)
Image 5The Qattara Depression in Egypt's north west (from Egypt)
Image 6Wooden figures of soldiers, from the tomb of nomarch Mesehti ( 11th dynasty) (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 7The well preserved Temple of Isis from Philae is an example of Egyptian architecture and architectural sculpture. (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 8Arabic calligraphy has seen its golden age in Cairo. This adornment and beads being sold in Muizz Street (from Culture of Egypt)
Image 11Egyptian tomb models as funerary goods (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 12Egypt under Muhammad Ali dynasty (from Egypt)
Image 13Painted limestone relief of a noble member of Ancient Egyptian society during the New Kingdom (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 14Protesters from the Third Square movement, which supported neither the former Morsi government nor the Armed Forces, 31 July 2013 (from Egypt)
Image 15The preserved Temple of Horus at Edfu is a model of Egyptian architecture. (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 16Egyptian literacy rate among the population aged 15 years and older by UNESCO Institute of Statistics (from Egypt)
Image 17The Book of the Dead was a guide to the deceased's journey in the afterlife. (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 18Lower-class occupations (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 19Female nationalists demonstrating in Cairo, 1919 (from Egypt)
Image 21Anubis, the god associated with mummification and burial rituals, attending to a mummy (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 22Ruins of Deir el-Medina (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 23Early tomb painting from Nekhen, c. 3500 BC, Naqada, possibly Gerzeh culture (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 25Pharaohs' tombs were provided with vast quantities of wealth, such as the golden mask from the mummy of Tutankhamun. (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 26Napoleon defeated the Mamluk troops in the Battle of the Pyramids, 21 July 1798, painted by Lejeune. (from Egypt)
Image 27Hieroglyphs on stela in Louvre, c. 1321 BC (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 28Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser in Mansoura, 1960 (from Egypt)
Image 29Cairo grew into a metropolitan area with a population of over 22 million. (from Egypt)
Image 31Glassmaking was a highly developed art. (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 34Hunting game birds and plowing a field, tomb of Nefermaat and his wife Itet ( c. 2700 BC) (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 35Seagoing ship of an expedition to Punt, from a relief of Hatshepsut's Mortuary temple, Deir el-Bahari (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 36Soad Hosny, film star (from Egypt)
Image 37A tomb relief depicts workers plowing the fields, harvesting the crops, and threshing the grain under the direction of an overseer, painting in the tomb of Nakht. (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 38The Temple of Dendur, completed by 10 BC, Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York City) (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 39The Egyptian Museum of Cairo (from Egypt)
Image 40The fully electric MCV C127 EV, made in Egypt for the German market (from Egypt)
Image 41The Eastern Imperial Eagle is the national animal of Egypt. (from Egypt)
Image 43The central business district in Egypt's new capital (from Egypt)
Image 44Al-Azhar Park is listed as one of the world's sixty great public spaces by the Project for Public Spaces. (from Egypt)
Image 45Menna and Family Hunting in the Marshes, Tomb of Menna, c. 1400 BC (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 46Egypt's population density (people per km 2) (from Egypt)
Image 47Temple of Derr ruins in 1960 (from Egypt)
Image 48Green irrigated land along the Nile amidst the desert and in the Nile Delta (from Egypt)
Image 49Smoke rises from oil tanks beside the Suez Canal hit during the initial Anglo-French assault on Egypt, 5 November 1956. (from Egypt)
Image 50The gods Osiris, Anubis, and Horus in the tomb of Horemheb ( KV57) in the Valley of the Kings (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 51Measuring and recording the harvest, from the tomb of Menna at Thebes (Eighteenth Dynasty) (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 52Frontispiece of Description de l'Égypte, published in 38 volumes between 1809 and 1829 (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 53The Ptolemaic Queen Cleopatra VII and her son by Julius Caesar, Caesarion, at the Temple of Dendera (from Egypt)
Image 54The pharaoh was usually depicted wearing symbols (scepter, ankh, head-dress, beard etc) of royalty and power. (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 55Ancient Egyptians playing music (from Egypt)
Image 56The Narmer Palette depicts the unification of the Two Lands. (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 57Naguib Mahfouz, the first Arabic-language writer to win the Nobel Prize in Literature (from Egypt)
Image 59The halls of Karnak Temple are built with rows of large columns. (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 60The Amr ibn al-As mosque in Cairo, recognised as the oldest in Africa (from Egypt)
Image 61The High Court of Justice in Downtown Cairo (from Egypt)
Image 62Hosni Mubarak — president of Egypt from 1981 to 2011 (from Egypt)
Image 63Tanoura dancers performing in Wekalet El Ghoury, Cairo (from Egypt)
Image 64Graphic of the increase in temperature in Egypt overtime (from Egypt)
Image 67Illustration of various types of capitals, by Karl Richard Lepsius (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 68Tutankhamun charging enemies on his chariot, 18th dynasty (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 69British infantry near El Alamein, 17 July 1942 (from Egypt)
Image 70Change in per capita GDP of Egypt, 1820–2018. Figures are inflation-adjusted to 2011 International dollars. (from Egypt)
Image 71The Giza Necropolis is the oldest of the ancient Wonders and the only one still in existence. (from Egypt)
Image 72The pyramids of Giza are among the most recognizable symbols of ancient Egyptian civilization. (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 75The Fayum mummy portraits epitomize the meeting of Egyptian and Roman cultures. (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 76Statues of two pharaohs of Egypt's Twenty-Fifth Dynasty and several other Kushite kings, Kerma Museum (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 77The Cairo Metro (line 2) (from Egypt)
Image 78A figure wearing the red crown of Lower Egypt, most probably Amenemhat II or Senwosret II. It functioned as a divine guardian for the imiut; the divine kilt suggests that the statuette was not merely a representation of the living ruler. (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 80A typical, Naqada II (Predynastic Period), jar decorated with gazelles (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 81Hatshepsut's trading expedition to the Land of Punt (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 83The Weighing of the Heart from the Book of the Dead of Ani (from Egypt)
Image 84The "weighing of the heart" scene from the Book of the Dead (from Egypt)
Image 85Tourists riding a camel in front of Pyramid of Khafre. The Giza Necropolis is one of Egypt's main tourist attractions. (from Egypt)
Image 86A crowd at Cairo Stadium watching the Egypt national football team (from Egypt)
Image 87Sennedjem plows his fields in Aaru with a pair of oxen, Deir el-Medina. (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 88Muhammad Ali was the founder of the Muhammad Ali dynasty and the first Khedive of Egypt and Sudan. (from Egypt)
Image 89Egyptian honour guard soldiers (from Egypt)
Image 90Tutankhamun's burial mask is one of the major attractions of the Egyptian Museum of Cairo. (from Egypt)
Image 91The Al-Hakim Mosque in Cairo, of Al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah, the sixth caliph, as renovated by Dawoodi Bohra (from Egypt)
Image 92The Edwin Smith surgical papyrus describes anatomy and medical treatments, written in hieratic, c. 1550 BC. (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 93Salah Zulfikar, film star (from Egypt)
Image 95Aziz Pasha Abaza, poet from the aristocratic literary Egyptian family the House of Abaza of Circassian Abazin origin (from Culture of Egypt)
Image 96Two (north side) of the four colossal statues of Ramesses II flank the entrance of his temple Abu Simbel. (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 97Egyptians celebrated feasts and festivals, accompanied by music and dance. (from Ancient Egypt)
Image 98Kushari, one of Egypt's national dishes (from Egypt)
Image 99Egypt's topography (from Egypt)
Image 100An offshore platform in the Darfeel Gas Field (from Egypt)
Image 101Egyptian tanks advancing in the Sinai desert during the Yom Kippur War, 1973 (from Egypt)
Image 102Model of a household porch and garden, c. 1981–1975 BC (from Ancient Egypt)
Muhammad Ali (4 March 1769 – 2 August 1849) was the Ottoman Albanian viceroy and governor who became the de facto ruler of Egypt from 1805 to 1848, widely considered the founder of modern Egypt. At the height of his rule in 1840, he controlled Egypt, Sudan, Hejaz, the Levant, Crete and parts of Greece and transformed Cairo from a mere Ottoman provincial capital to the center of an expansive empire.
Born in a village in Albania, when he was young he moved with his family to Kavala in the Rumelia Eyalet, where his father, an Albanian tobacco and shipping merchant, served as an Ottoman commander of a small unit in the city. Ali was a military commander in an Albanian Ottoman force sent to recover Egypt from French occupation following Napoleon's withdrawal. He rose to power through a series of political maneuvers, and in 1805 he was named Wāli (governor) of Egypt and gained the rank of Pasha. As Wāli, Ali attempted to modernize Egypt by instituting dramatic reforms in the military, economic and cultural spheres. He also initiated a violent purge of the Mamluks, consolidating his rule and permanently ending the Mamluk hold over Egypt. (Full article...)
Egyptian cheese (Egyptian Arabic: جبنه gebna pronounced [ˈɡebnæ]) has a long history, and continues to be an important part of the Egyptian diet. There is evidence of cheese-making over 5,000 years ago in the time of the First Dynasty of Egypt. In the Middle Ages, the city of Damietta was famous for its soft, white cheese. Cheese was also imported, and the common hard yellow cheese, rumi, takes its name from the Arabic word for "Roman".
Although many rural people still make their own cheese, notably the fermented mish, mass-produced cheeses are becoming more common. Cheese is often served with breakfast, and is included in several traditional dishes, and even in some desserts. (Full article...)
Religions in Egypt
Arab states
Other countries
- WikiProject Egypt
- WikiProject Ancient Egypt
- WikiProject Africa
- WikiProject Arab world
- WikiProject Asia
- WikiProject Geography
- WikiProject History
- WikiProject Ancient Near East
- Religion work group
- ... that the Lavon Affair was a failed Israeli false flag operation in which bombs were planted inside Egyptian-, American-, and British-owned civilian targets such as cinemas, libraries, and American educational centers?
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Egypt Buildings and structures in Egypt Organisations based in Egypt
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