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<text id=93CT1680>
<link 93HT0493>
<link 93HT0388>
<link 91TT0442>
<link 89TT2706>
<title>
Egypt--History
</title>
<history>
Compact ALMANAC--CIA Factbook
Northern Africa
Egypt
</history>
<article>
<source>CIA World Factbook</source>
<hdr>
History
</hdr>
<body>
<p> Egypt has endured as a unified state for more than 5,000
years, archeological evidence indicates that a developed
Egyptian society has existed much longer. Modern leaders urge
Egyptians to take pride in their "pharaonic heritage" and in
their descent from mankind's earliest civilized society. The
Arabic word for Egypt is Misr, which originally connoted
civilization or metropolis.
</p>
<p> Archeological findings show that primitive man lived along
the Nile long before the dynastic history of the pharaohs began.
By 6000 B.C., organized agriculture had appeared.
</p>
<p> In about 3100 B.C Egypt was united under a ruler known as
Mena, or Menes, who inaugurated the 30 pharaonic dynasties into
which Egypt's ancient history is divided--the Old and Middle
Kingdoms and the New Empire. For the first time, the use and
management of vital resources of the Nile River came under one
authority.
</p>
<p> The pyramids at Giza near (Cairo) were built in the 4th
dynasty, showing the power of the pharaonic religion and state.
The Great Pyramid, the tomb of Pharaoh Khufu (also known as
Cheops), is the only surviving example of the Seven Wonders of
the World. Ancient Egypt reached the peak of its power, wealth,
and territorial extent in the period called the New Empire
(1567-1085 B.C.). Authority was again centralized, and a number
of military campaigns brought Palestine, Syria, and northern
Iraq under Egyptian control.
</p>
<p>Persian, Greek, Roman, and Arab Conquerors
</p>
<p> In 525 B.C., the Persian warrior Cambyses, son of Cyrus the
Great, led an invasion force that dethroned the last pharaoh of
the 26th dynasty. The country remained a Persian province until
the conquest of Alexander the Great in 332 B.C. This legendary
figure founded and gave his name to Alexandria, the port city
that became one of the great centers of the Mediterranean world.
After Alexander's death in 323 B.C., the Macedonian commander,
Ptolemy, established personal control over Egypt, assuming the
title of pharaoh in 304 B.C. The Ptolemaic line ended in 30 B.C.
with the suicide of Queen Cleopatra. The Emperor Augustus then
established direct Roman control over Egypt, initiating almost
seven centuries of Roman and Byzantine rule. According to
tradition, St. Mark brought Christianity to Egypt in A.D. 37.
The church in Alexandria was founded about A.D. 40, and the new
religion spread quickly, reaching Upper Egypt by the second
century.
</p>
<p> Following a brief Persian reconquest, Egypt was invaded and
conquered by Arab forces in 642. A process of Arabization and
Islamization ensued. Although a Coptic Christian minority
remained--and remains today, constituting about 10% of the
population--the Arabic language inexorably supplanted the
indigenous Coptic tongue. Ancient Egyptian ways--passed from
pharaonic times through the Persian, Greek, and Roman periods
and Egypt's Christian era--were gradually melded with or
supplanted by Islamic customs. For the next 1,300 years, a
succession of Turkish, Arabic, Mameluke, and Ottoman caliphs,
beys, and sultans ruled the country.
</p>
<p>European Influence
</p>
<p> Napoleon Bonaparte arrived in Egypt in 1798. The 3-year
sojourn in Egypt (1798-1801) of Napoleon's army and a retinue
of French scientists opened Egypt to the direct influence of the
West. Napoleon's adventure awakened Great Britain to the
importance of Egypt as a vital link with India and the Far East
and launched a century-and-a-half of Anglo-French rivalry over
the region.
</p>
<p> An Anglo-Ottoman invasion force drove out the French in
1801, and following a period of chaos, the Albanian Mohammed Ali
obtained control of the country. Ali ruled until 1849, and his
successors retained at least nominal control of Egypt until
1952. He imported European culture and technology, introduced
state organization of Egypt's economic life, improved education,
and fostered training in engineering and medicine. His
authoritarian rule was also marked by a series of foreign
military adventures. Ali's successors granted to the French
promoter, Ferdinand de Lesseps, a concession for construction
of the Suez Canal-begun in 1859 and opened 10 years later. Their
regimes were characterized by financial mismanagement and
personal extravagance that reduced Egypt to bankruptcy. These
developments led to rapid expansion of British and French
financial oversight, producing in turn popular resentment,
unrest, and, finally, revolt in 1879.
</p>
<p> In 1882, the arrival of a British expeditionary force, which
crushed this revolt, marked the beginning of British occupation
and the virtual inclusion of Egypt within the British Empire.
During the rule of three successive British High Commissioners
between 1883 and 1914, it was the British Agency-not the
khedive's palace-that was the real source of authority. Under
the "capitulations" to which Egypt submitted, special courts
were set up to enforce foreign laws for foreigners residing in
the country. These capitulations and resultant privileges for
foreigners generated increasing Egyptian resentment. To secure
its interests during World War I, Britain declared a formal
protectorate over Egypt on December 18, 1914. This lasted until
February 28, 1922, when, in deference to growing nationalist
current, Britain unilaterally declared Egyptian independence.
British influence, however, continued to dominate Egypt's
political life and fostered fiscal, administrative, and
governmental reforms.
</p>
<p> In the postindependence period, three political forces
competed with one another: the Wafd, a broadly based,
nationalist political organization strongly opposed to British
influence that had led the effort for independence immediately
after the war; King Fuad, whom the British had installed on the
throne during the war; and the British themselves, who were
determined to maintain control over the Suez Canal. Although
both the Wafd and the king wanted to achieve independence from
the British, they fought one another for control of Egypt. Other
political forces emerging in this period included the Communist
Party (1925) and the Muslim Brotherhood (1928), which eventually
became a potent political and religious force.
</p>
<p> During World War II, British troops used Egypt as a base for
Allied operations throughout the region. British troops were
withdrawn to the Suez Canal area in 1947, but nationalist,
anti-British feelings continued to grow after the war. Violence
broke out in early 1952 between Egyptians and British in the
canal area, and anti-Western rioting in Cairo followed.
</p>
<p> On July 22-23, 1952, a group of disaffected army officers
led by Lt. Col. Gamal Abdel Nasser overthrew King Farouk, whom
the military blamed for Egypt's poor performance in the 1948 war
with Israel. Following a brief experiment with civilian rule,
they abrogated the 1923 constitution and declared Egypt a
republic on June 18, 1953. Nasser evolved into a charismatic
leader, not only of Egypt but of the Arab world as a whole.
</p>
<p> Nasser and his "Free Officer" movement enjoyed almost
instant legitimacy as liberators who had ended 2,500 years of
foreign rule. They were motivated by numerous grievances and
goals but wanted especially to break the economic and political
power of the landowning elite, to remove all vestiges of British
control, and to improve the lot of the people, especially the
fellahin.
</p>
<p> A secular nationalist, Nasser developed a foreign policy
characterized by advocacy of pan-Arab socialism, leadership of
the "nonaligned" or "Third World," and close ties with the
Soviet Union. He sharply opposed the Western-sponsored Baghdad
Pact. When the United States held up military sales in reaction
to Egyptian neutrality vis-a-vis Moscow, Nasser concluded an
arms deal with Czechoslovakia in September 1955. When the United
States and the World Bank withdrew their offer to help finance
the Aswan High Dam in mid-1956, he nationalized the privately
owned Suez Canal Company. The crisis that followed, exacerbated
by growing tensions with Israel over guerrilla attacks from Gaza
and Israeli reprisals, resulted in the invasion of Egypt that
October by France, Britain, and Israel. While Egypt was
defeated, the invasion forces were quickly withdrawn under heavy
U.S. pressure. The Suez war (or, as the Egyptians call it, the
tripartite aggression) instantly transformed Nasser into an
Egyptian and Arab hero. Nasser soon after came to terms with
Moscow for the financing of the Aswan High Dam--a step that
enormously increased Soviet involvement in Egypt and set
Nasser's government on a policy of close ties with the Soviet
Union. In 1958, pursuant to his policy of pan-Arabism, Nasser
succeeded in united Egypt and Syria into the United Arab
Republic. Although this union had failed by 1961, it was not
officially dissolved until 1984.
</p>
<p> Nasser's domestic policies were arbitrary, frequently
oppressive, yet generally popular. All opposition was stamped
out, and opponents of the regime frequently were imprisoned
without trial. Nasser's foreign policies, among other things,
helped provoke the Israeli attack of June 1967 that virtually
destroyed the armed forces of Egypt, Jordan, and Syria and led
to Israel's occupation of the Sinai Peninsula, the Gaza Strip,
the West Bank, and the Golan Heights. Nasser, nonetheless, was
revered by the masses in Egypt and elsewhere in the Arab world
until his death in 1970.
</p>
<p> One of the original Free Officers, Vice President Anwar
el-Sadat, was elected president after Nasser's death. In 1971,
Sadat concluded a treaty of friendship with the Soviet Union
but, a year later, ordered Soviet advisers to leave Egypt. In
1973, he launched the October war with Israel, in which the
Egyptian Armed Forces performed effectively. With his country's
credibility restored, Sadat felt able, in 1974 and 1975, with
U.S. participation, to negotiate two Sinai disengagement
agreements with Israel by which Egypt regained the Suez Canal
and parts of the Sinai. In 1977, Sadat journeyed to Jerusalem
to meet with Prime Minister Menahem Begin and to address the
Israeli Knesset. This breakthrough foreshadowed the Camp David
accords of September 1978 and the Egypt-Israel Peace Treaty of
1979, both negotiated with intensive U.S. participation.
Throughout this period, U.S.-Egyptian relations steadily
improved, but Sadat's willingness to break ranks by making peace
with Israel earned him the enmity of most Arab states.
</p>
<p> In domestic policy, Sadat introduced greater political
freedom and a new economic policy, the most important aspect of
which was the infitah, or "open door." This policy relaxed
government controls over the economy and encouraged private
investment. Sadat dismantled much of Nasser's police apparatus
and brought to trial a number of former government officials
accused of criminal excesses during his predecessor's rule. This
liberalization also included the reinstitution of due process
and the banning of torture. Sadat tried to expand participation
in the political process in the mid-1970s but later abandoned
this effort. In the last years of his life, Egypt was racked by
violence arising from discontent with Sadat's rule and sectarian
tensions, and it experienced a renewed measure of repression.
</p>
<p> On October 6, 1981, President Sadat was assassinated by
Islamic extremists. Hosni Mubarak, vice president since 1975 and
Air Force Commander during the October 1973 war, was elected
president later that month. Mubarak has maintained Egypt's
commitment to the Camp David process, while at the same time
improving ties with the Arab world and resuming a more active
role in such international forums as the United Nations and the
Nonaligned Movement. Domestically, he has supported the public
sector of the economy while also encouraging the private sector.
His most notable achievements have been to strengthen democratic
institutions, to increase greatly freedom of the press, and to
put an end to sectarian strife. President Mubarak was re-elected
to a second term in October 1987.
</p>
<p>Current Political Conditions
</p>
<p> The Egyptian constitution provides for a strong executive.
Authority is vested in an elected president who can appoint one
or more vice presidents, a prime minister, and a cabinet. The
president's term runs for 6 years. Egypt's legislative body,
the People's Assembly, has 458 members--448 popularly elected
and 10 appointed by the president. The constitution reserves 50%
of the Assembly seats for workers and peasants. The Assembly
sits for a 5-year term but can be dissolved earlier by the
president. There is also a 210-member National Shura
(Consultative) Council, in which 70 members are appointed and
140 elected under a system in which the party receiving the
majority of votes takes all the seats. The council's functions
are more advisory than legislative. Below the national level,
authority is exercised by and through governors, mayors
appointed by the central government, and by popularly elected
councils.
</p>
<p> Although power is concentrated in the hands of the president
and the National Democratic Party's majority in the People's
Assembly, opposition parties organize, publish their views, and
represent their followers at various levels in the political
system. In addition to the National Democratic Party there are
five legally constituted parties: the New Wafd Party, the
Socialist Labor Party, the Nationalist Progressive Unionist
Grouping, the Socialist Liberal Party, and the Umma Party. The
New Wafd Party and the Socialist Labor Party (in alliance with
the Socialist Liberals and the Muslim Brotherhood) won seats in
the People's Assembly in elections of April 1987. The law
prohibits the formation of parties on religious or class lines,
thereby making it illegal for Islamic or communist groups to
organize formally as political parties. However members of the
Muslim Brotherhood, an organization legally proscribed under the
provisions of this law, are members of the Assembly as part of
the Socialist Labor Party delegation.
</p>
<p> Egypt's judicial system is based on European (primarily
French) legal concepts and methods. Under the Mubarak
government, the courts have demonstrated increasing
independence, and the principles of due process and judicial
review have gained greater respect. The legal code is derived
from the Napoleonic code, and within the Muslim community,
Islamic law plays a significant role.
</p>
<p> The process of gradual political liberalization begun by
Sadat has continued under Mubarak. Egypt now enjoys
unprecedented freedom of the press, and opposition political
activity is regarded by the government as both desirable and
natural. The April 1987 parliamentary elections were marked by
the greatest freedom of political expression seen in Egypt for
more than three decades. Although some electoral irregularities
were reported, there were no accusations of widespread
involvement by the internal security forces in these
activities-a charge frequently leveled in the past.
</p>
<p>Source: U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Public Affairs,
December 1987.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>