Though he was
Alexandrian, Ahmad attended
Cairo's Qurabiyya and Tagheeziya
Egyptian Schools, followed by the School of Administration or Madraset El Edaryya. While a student there, he won a competition to become a translator for
Ismailia's provincial government at a monthly salary of ; in 1888, thanks to his command of
French, he moved to the press bureau of the
Interior Ministry. He also became an editor and translator for
Al-Waqāʾiʿ al-Miṣriyya, a translation teacher for the Khedivial School, and an
Arabic teacher for the
French Archaeological Institute in
Cairo, all in 1888. In the following year he won a competition for the post of translator for the Cabinet, for which he became adjunct secretary in 1897 and secretary-general in 1911, serving until he retired in 1921. During
World War I he also recodified Egypt's administrative procedures in keeping with its status as a
British protectorate. Ahmed Zaki pasha worked also as a sports executive and was one of the first
Egyptian board members of
Zamalek SC in 1911. ==Scholarly activities==