The first contact between the two people dates back nearly seven thousand years ago when the ancient Egyptians launched their earliest recorded expedition to the
Land of Punt under
Sahure of the
Fifth Dynasty although Punt gold dates back to even earlier times during the rule of King
Khufu of the
Fourth Dynasty. Ancient Egyptians called this place
Ta netjer (The Gods' Land) and viewed it as a mysterious and unknown land of great fortune. They frequently engaged in trade expeditions with their partners in Punt where they acquired gold, incense, ebony, ivory, slaves, exotic animals and skins. The history of Ethiopian-Egyptian conflict would begin in
Medieval Ethiopia when the Christian kingdom and
Mamluk Sultanate were in conflict over the persecution of Copts, leadership of Ethiopia's own church, and Mamluk support for Muslim regional enemies. Under the
Muhammad Ali Pasha dynasty attempted to modernize and form an Egyptian empire, engaging in many wars, against the Ottomans, the Sudanese and others. The
Ethiopian–Ottoman border conflict was an undeclared war between the
Ottoman province of Egypt and various Ethiopian warlords occurring soon after the
Egyptian conquest of Sudan and as an extension of the greater
Ottoman-Ethiopian wars. By the middle of the 19th century, the Ethiopians and Turco-Egyptians faced each other across an undefined and contested border.
Muhammad Ali initially entertained the idea of conquering all of Tigray and Amhara, but by the middle of the 19th century Egypt had only limited objectives in Ethiopia, namely to establish its authority over the mineral rich slopes of the Ethiopian peripheral areas. In the 1870s,
Egypt invaded Ethiopia resulting in an Ethiopian victory in the resulting
Hewett Treaty. Relations eventually cooled down, and in 1905, Ethiopia first bank was founded in Cairo. During the
Second Italian invasion of Ethiopia, Egyptians sympathized with Ethiopia. The Egyptian Red Cross was sent to Ethiopia, while Egyptians denounced the Italian invasion. , Sept. 6, 1935, front page. After
World War II, where Egypt and Ethiopia fought for the Allies, Egypt and Ethiopia were founding members of the
United Nations. After the
1952 Egyptian revolution, Egypt's pro-British monarchy was replaced with a military junta, eventually consolidating under
Gamal Abdel Nasser. As African nations that suffered under colonialism, revolutionary
anti-colonialism after World War II led to both states attending the
Bandung Conference, a meeting of newly independent African and Asian states. Ethiopia and Egypt were founding members of the
Organization of African Unity in 1963. Ethiopian Emperor
Haile Selassie visited Cairo in 1959 and 1970. Two major events in these countries led to a major deterioration in relations. The
Ethiopian Revolution overthrow the Selassie government and replaced it with a socialist government ruled by the
DERG, and the
Corrective Revolution in Egypt, a period of anti-
Nasserist purges and the change in Egyptian foreign policy towards the
West during the Cold War led by Egyptian president
Anwar Sadat. Egypt joined the
Safari Club, a clandestine network of anti-communist intelligence services during the Cold War. Egypt covertly supported Somalia during the
Ogaden War, a war between Somalia and Ethiopia over the
Ogaden region. Sadat's successor,
Hosni Mubarak, sought to repair ties with Ethiopia. Egypt promised neutrality in the
Ethiopian civil war Relations between the two countries began to become strained after the military alliance between Egypt and
Somalia. == Religious relations ==