Prehistoric Egypt mortuary figurine, a
Naqada jar, a
Naqada statuette of the goddess
Bat, the
Four dogs palette, the
Gebel el-Arak Knife, and a
Naqada diorite vase. Evidence of
rock carvings along the
Nile and in surrounding oases indicates early habitation. In the
10th millennium BCE, a culture of
hunter-gatherers and
fishers was replaced by a
grain-grinding culture. Climate changes or
overgrazing around 8000
BCE began to desiccate the pastoral lands of Egypt, forming the
Sahara. Early
tribal peoples migrated to the Nile River where they developed a settled agricultural
economy and more centralised society. By about 6000 BCE, a
Neolithic culture took root in the Nile Valley. During the Neolithic era, several predynastic cultures developed independently in
Upper and Lower Egypt. The
Badarian culture and the successor
Naqada series are generally regarded as precursors to
dynastic Egypt. The earliest known Lower Egyptian site, Merimda, predates the Badarian by about seven hundred years. Contemporaneous Lower Egyptian communities coexisted with their southern counterparts for more than two thousand years, remaining culturally distinct, but maintaining frequent contact through trade. The earliest known evidence of
Egyptian hieroglyphic inscriptions appeared during the predynastic period on Naqada III pottery vessels, dated to about 3200 BCE.
Ancient Egypt (3150 BCE–305 BCE) is the oldest of the
ancient Wonders and the only one still in existence. Around BCE, King
Menes unified Egypt, establishing a succession of
dynasties that ruled for three millennia.
Egyptian civilisation thrived with distinctive achievements in
religion,
art, and
writing. The
Old Kingdom ( BCE) saw the construction of the
pyramids, including those at
Giza. A brief
interregnum followed, succeeded by the
Middle Kingdom ( BCE), a phase of renewed stability and prosperity under rulers such as
Amenemhat III. After the
Second Intermediate Period and the
Hyksos occupation, Egypt was reunified by
Ahmose I, founder of the
Eighteenth Dynasty and the
New Kingdom ( BCE). This era marked Egypt's height as a major power in the region, extending influence into
Nubia and the
Levant. It produced many of Egypt's most renowned
Pharaohs,
Hatshepsut,
Thutmose III,
Akhenaten,
Tutankhamun, and
Ramesses II, and witnessed the rise of
Atenism, one of the earliest forms of
monotheism. Despite later invasions by
Libyans,
Nubians, and
Assyrians, native dynasties eventually reasserted control. '' In 525 BCE,
Cambyses II of Persia conquered Egypt, beginning the
Achaemenid satrapy period (the
Twenty-seventh Dynasty). Although several revolts occurred, Egypt remained under Persian control until briefly regaining independence before falling again in 343 BCE. The
Thirtieth Dynasty was the last native royal house. Following renewed Persian domination,
Alexander the Great conquered Egypt in 332 BCE, after which his general
Ptolemy I Soter established the
Ptolemaic dynasty.
Ptolemaic and Roman Egypt (305 BCE–641 CE) and her son by Julius Caesar,
Caesarion, at the
Temple of Dendera The
Ptolemaic Kingdom was a
Hellenistic state from southern Syria to
Cyrene and south to Nubia, with
Alexandria as its capital and a centre of
Greek culture and trade. The Ptolemies adopted pharaonic traditions to legitimise their rule, appearing on monuments in Egyptian style and participating in local religious life. The
Lighthouse of Alexandria, built c. 280 BCE, was one of the
Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, later destroyed by earthquakes. The last ruler,
Cleopatra VII, committed suicide after
Octavian captured Alexandria, ending the dynasty and paving the way for Roman annexation. Native rebellions and dynastic disputes weakened the kingdom, facilitating its annexation by Rome. Egypt was a wealthy imperial province of the
Roman Empire, supplying grain and hosting the major city of Alexandria. Governed with Roman administration and Hellenistic culture, its population primarily spoke
Greek in major cities and
Coptic Egyptian in rural areas. Christianity reached Egypt in the 1st century, brought by
Saint Mark the Evangelist.
Medieval Egypt (641–1517) The Byzantines regained control of Egypt after a brief
Sasanid Persian invasion early in the 7th century, until 639–42, when the country was conquered by Arab Muslim forces under
Amr ibn al-As during the
Early Muslim conquests. The Arabs defeated the Byzantine armies, bringing
Islam to Egypt. Alexandria briefly returned to Byzantine control in 645 but fell again to the Arabs in 646. In 654, an invasion fleet sent by
Constans II was repulsed. The Arabs founded
Fustat, later replaced by Cairo in 969. Under the
Abbasid caliphate, Egypt was governed through deputies residing in Baghdad. Revolts occurred frequently, including the Egyptian revolt of 828 and the uprising of 831 when Copts joined Muslims against the government. Semi-independent dynasties arose, including the
Tulunid dynasty (868–905) and
Ikhshidid dynasty (935–969), which maintained Abbasid allegiance while exercising local authority. The
Fatimid Caliphate ruled Egypt from the 10th century, with
Cairo as their capital. After the Fatimids, the
Ayyubid dynasty governed until 1250, when the
Mamluks, a military caste of
Turco-
Circassian origin, took control. The Mamluks ruled Egypt for the next three centuries and maintained control over parts of the Levant. By the late 13th century, Egypt linked trade routes connecting the Red Sea with India, Malaya, and the East Indies. The mid-14th century
Black Death killed about 40% of Egypt's population.
Ottoman Egypt (1517–1867) Egypt was conquered by the
Ottoman Turks in 1517, following the defeat of the
Mamluk Sultanate, and became a province of the
Ottoman Empire. The Mamluks, who had dominated Egypt's military and political life for centuries, retained influence under Ottoman rule, creating a semi-autonomous power structure. The Ottomans faced repeated challenges in maintaining control, while plagues and famines weakened the economy and civil society. Between 1687 and 1731, Egypt experienced six major famines, including the 1784 famine that killed roughly one-sixth of the population. In 1798,
Napoleon Bonaparte invaded Egypt, defeating the Mamluks at the
Battle of the Pyramids. The French occupation was short-lived, but it destabilised the region and set the stage for Muhammad Ali Pasha's rise. After the French were expelled, power struggles ensued between the Ottomans, the Mamluks, and Albanian mercenaries in Ottoman service, leaving Egypt politically fragmented. In 1805,
Muhammad Ali Pasha seized power, massacring the remaining Mamluks and establishing a dynasty that would rule Egypt until 1952. He reorganised the army along European lines, introduced conscription, and developed a centralised administration. At the same time, he promoted cash-crop agriculture, especially long-staple cotton, to integrate Egypt into global markets. His successors, including
Ibrahim Pasha,
Abbas I,
Sa'id, and
Isma'il Pasha, continued reforms in agriculture, science, and industry, and abolished slavery. Muhammad Ali expanded Egypt's control over
Northern Sudan (1820–1824),
Syria (1833), and parts of
Arabia and
Anatolia, but European powers intervened in 1841, forcing him to relinquish most of his conquests. He modernised Egypt's infrastructure, built factories and irrigation networks, and strengthened the military, while broader education remained largely limited to military and technical training. The centralisation of power and focus on military and economic modernisation laid the foundation for Egypt's transformation into a regional power.
Monarchical Egypt (1867–1952) In 1867, Egypt was formally granted autonomous status as a
vassal state of the Ottoman Empire. The
Suez Canal, completed in 1869 with French assistance, became a key strategic and commercial asset. Financial mismanagement and mounting debts led Isma'il Pasha to sell Egypt's shares in the canal to Britain in 1875, increasing European influence. Rising discontent culminated in the
Urabi revolt, after which Britain occupied Egypt in 1882, establishing a de facto protectorate while maintaining nominal Ottoman sovereignty. The Anglo-Egyptian Condominium Agreement of 1899 placed Sudan under joint Egyptian and British administration, though Britain retained real control. Incidents such as the
Denshawai incident in 1906 intensified nationalist sentiment, laying the groundwork for political movements that challenged both Ottoman and European dominance. during the
1919 revolution, 1919 In 1914, as the
Ottoman Empire joined World War I alongside the Central Powers, Khedive
Abbas II declared support for the Ottoman side. In response, the British deposed him and installed his brother
Hussein Kamel, who assumed the title of
Sultan of Egypt. Egypt was formally declared independent from the Ottoman Empire but remained under British protection. After
World War I, nationalist sentiments surged.
Saad Zaghlul and the
Wafd Party secured popular support, but the British exiled Zaghlul and his colleagues to Malta on 8 March 1919, prompting the
first modern revolution. This uprising pressured the UK to issue a
declaration of independence on 22 February 1922. Sultan
Fuad I then assumed the title of King of Egypt. Despite nominal independence, Britain retained military presence and political influence. with
Edward, Prince of Wales, 1932|left|223x223px During
World War II, Egypt served as a strategic base for
Allied operations, particularly in
North Africa. Although Egypt declared martial law and severed diplomatic relations with
Axis powers, the Egyptian army did not engage directly. Political tensions persisted, highlighted by the 1942
Abdeen Palace Incident, in which British forces pressured King Farouk to install a Wafd-coalition government. After the war, nationalist and anti-British sentiments intensified. British troops largely withdrew in 1947, leaving a residual presence around the Suez Canal. Egypt's defeat in the
First Arab-Israeli War fuelled anti-monarchy feeling. The Wafd Party's 1950 election victory forced King Farouk to appoint
Mostafa El-Nahas as prime minister. In 1951, Egypt unilaterally renounced the
1936 treaty and demanded British troop withdrawal. The situation around the Suez Canal escalated, culminating in violent confrontations that led to the killing of 43 Egyptian policemen in 1952 by British troops. The Ismailia incident outraged Egypt and led to the subsequent
Black Saturday anti-British riots, which saw widespread destruction in Cairo. These events precipitated the
Free Officers Movement coup on 22–23 July 1952, led by
Muhammad Naguib and
Gamal Abdel Nasser. King Farouk abdicated in favour of his infant son,
Fuad II, but real power rested with the
Egyptian Revolutionary Command Council. By 18 June 1953, the monarchy was formally abolished, the 1923 constitution suspended, and Egypt was declared a republic, with Naguib as president and Nasser as prime minister. In October 1954, Egypt and the United Kingdom agreed to end the
Anglo-Egyptian Condominium Agreement of 1899, granting Sudan full independence, which came into effect on 1 January 1956. In June 1956, Nasser assumed the presidency and immediately became the central figure in Egypt's domestic and foreign policy. British forces completed their withdrawal from the Suez Canal Zone on 13 June 1956. Later that year, on 26 July, Nasser
nationalised the Suez Canal, provoking the
Suez Crisis when Israel, with support from France and the United Kingdom, invaded the Sinai Peninsula and targeted the Canal. The conflict ended following diplomatic pressure from the United States and the Soviet Union, restoring the pre-war status quo. in
Mansoura, 1960 In 1958, Egypt formed a political union with Syria, creating the
United Arab Republic. The union, also loosely connected with
North Yemen in the
United Arab States, was short-lived; Syria seceded in 1961. During this period, Egypt became heavily involved in the
North Yemen Civil War, with military interventions and peace conferences ultimately leading to a prolonged stalemate. In May 1967, tensions with Israel escalated after warnings from the Soviet Union, deployment of Egyptian forces to Sinai, expulsion of UN peacekeepers, and closure of the
Straits of Tiran. These measures precipitated the
Six-Day War, during which Israel captured the
Sinai Peninsula and the
Gaza Strip. In response to the conflict, an
Emergency Law was enacted, greatly expanding police powers, restricting constitutional rights, and legalising censorship; it remained in force until 2012, except for a brief break in 1980–81. Socially and economically, Nasser's policies transformed Egypt. At the time of the monarchy's fall, less than half a million Egyptians were considered upper class, four million were middle class, and seventeen million were lower class or poor. Education was expanded, with school enrolment more than doubling from 1953 to 1966. Land reforms, industrial support, and growth in public-sector employment created a larger middle class, including doctors, engineers, teachers, lawyers, and journalists. However, by the late 1960s, the Egyptian economy faced stagnation, political freedoms had declined, and Nasser's personal popularity began to wane.
Egypt under Sadat and Mubarak (1971–2011) during the
Yom Kippur War, 1973 and
Minister of War Ahmad Ismail Ali attending the re-opening ceremony of Suez Canal after the Yom Kippur war, 1975 After the death of
Gamal Abdel Nasser in 1970,
Anwar Sadat assumed the presidency of Egypt. Sadat consolidated his power by marginalising Nasserist and leftist factions, while controlling opposition both secular and religious. He shifted Egypt's Cold War alignment from the Soviet Union to the United States, expelling Soviet advisors in 1972, and renamed the country the Arab Republic of Egypt in 1971. Sadat launched the
Infitah ("open door") economic reforms. Some measures of this economic liberalisation caused social tensions, most notably the removal of food subsidies in 1977 which sparked widespread
bread riots. In 1973, Sadat coordinated with Syria in the
Fourth Arab-Israeli War to reclaim the
Sinai Peninsula from Israeli occupation. Though militarily mixed, the war restored Arab morale and strengthened Sadat's domestic legitimacy. His historic 1977 visit to Jerusalem led to the 1979
Egypt-Israel peace treaty, with Israel withdrawing from Sinai and Egypt recognising Israel as a sovereign state. This initiative provoked widespread controversy across the Arab world, resulting in Egypt's temporary expulsion from the
Arab League, but remained popular domestically. Sadat was assassinated in 1981 by an Islamic extremist opposed to his domestic policies and peace initiative.
Hosni Mubarak succeeded Sadat in a 1981 referendum in which he was the sole candidate. He maintained Egypt's peace treaty with Israel and improved relations with Arab neighbours. Domestically, he faced widespread poverty, high unemployment, and urban overcrowding. The 1986 Security Police riots, sparked by reports of extended military service, led to violent protests, destruction of businesses, and 107 deaths. Terrorist attacks, particularly by Islamist groups like
Al-Gama'a al-Islamiyya, targeted government officials, foreigners, and Christian
Copts, devastating tourism, Egypt's primary source of hard currency. The political scene was dominated by the
NDP, which curtailed freedoms of association, expression, and political participation through laws such as the 1993 Syndicates Law, 1995 Press Law, and 1999 NGOs Law. with a population of over 22 million. In 1997, the
Luxor massacre left 62 dead, mostly tourists, highlighting the continuing threat to security and the economy. In 2005, limited reforms allowed multi-candidate presidential elections, but restrictions on candidates and alleged government interference ensured Mubarak's easy reelection. Voter turnout was less than 25%, and opposition leader
Ayman Nour was subsequently imprisoned.
Human Rights Watch and
Amnesty International reported widespread human rights abuses, including torture, arbitrary detention, and the use of Egypt as an international "torture hub" in the context of the
war on terror. Constitutional changes in 2007 further expanded presidential powers, restricted religious parties, and broadened police authority. Egypt remained under strong military influence, described by officials as a "pharaonic" system, with democracy as a distant aspiration.
Contemporary (2011–present) On 25 January 2011,
widespread protests erupted against President Hosni Mubarak's government, triggered by demands for political freedom, social justice, and the end of long-standing corruption. Demonstrations rapidly spread across major cities, particularly in
Cairo's
Tahrir Square, capturing global attention. After 18 days of escalating unrest, Mubarak resigned on 11 February 2011 and fled Cairo. The
Egyptian military assumed control, with
Mohamed Hussein Tantawi, chairman of the
Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, acting as interim head of state. On 13 February, the military dissolved parliament and suspended the constitution. A constitutional referendum followed on 19 March 2011. Later that year, Egypt held its first parliamentary elections since the previous regime, with high voter turnout and no major reported irregularities.
Mohamed Morsi, affiliated with the
Muslim Brotherhood, won the
presidency on 24 June 2012 and was sworn in on 30 June. His cabinet, announced in August 2012, included significant representation from the Muslim Brotherhood, prompting liberal and secular groups to withdraw from the
Constituent Assembly of Egypt over concerns of imposing strict Islamic law. In November 2012, Morsi issued a decree granting immunity to his decisions and protecting the constituent assembly's work, sparking
mass protests and violent clashes across the country. Tensions escalated, with the largest confrontations between Islamist supporters and opponents since the 2011 revolution occurring on 5 December 2012. Authorities cracked down on the Muslim Brotherhood, jailing thousands and conducting mass trials. Violence during
dispersals of pro-Morsi camps left hundreds dead. A new
constitution was approved by referendum on 18 January 2014 with 98.1% voting in favour.
Abdel Fattah el-Sisi won the
presidential elections in June 2014 with 96.1% of the vote and was sworn in on 8 June. Under his rule, Egypt intensified security on the Gaza border, dismantled tunnels between Sinai and Gaza, and consolidated political power. Presidential terms were extended to six years in 2019, allowing El-Sisi to run for a third term in 2024. Parliamentary elections in 2020 confirmed a pro-El-Sisi majority for the
Mostaqbal Watan Party. The constitutional reforms and strengthened military authority under El-Sisi have been described as a return to authoritarianism. In December 2023, El-Sisi won the elections that gave him a third six-year term. == Geography ==