Tahrir Square has been the traditional site for numerous major protests and demonstrations over the years, including the
1977 Egyptian Bread Riots, and the March 2003 protest against the
War in Iraq. in Tahrir Square
2011 revolution Tahrir Square was the focal point of the 2011 Egyptian revolution against former president
Hosni Mubarak. Over 50,000 protesters first occupied the square on 25 January, during which the area's wireless services were reported to be impaired. In the following days, Tahrir Square continued to be the primary destination for protests in Cairo. On 29 January, Egyptian
fighter aircraft flew low over the people gathered in the square. On 30 January, the seventh day of the protests, PIK
BBC and other correspondents reported that the number of demonstrators had grown to at least 100,000, and on 31 January,
Al Jazeera correspondents reported that the demonstrations had grown to at least 250,000 people. On 1 February, Al Jazeera reported that more than one million protesters peacefully gathered in the square and adjacent streets. However, such media reports that so many people congregated in Cairo's largest public square are believed to be exaggerated for political purposes and, according to
Stratfor's analysis, the real number of gathered protesters never exceeded 300,000 people. Other independent crowd-size analyses provided similar estimates, suggesting a maximum capacity of 200,000 to 250,000 individuals within the square and surrounding areas. The square became established as a focal point and a symbol for the ongoing Egyptian democracy demonstrations. On 2 February, violence erupted between the pro-
Mubarak and pro-democracy demonstrators there, followed by the 3 February 'Friday of Departure' demonstration, one of the named "day of" events centered in the square. Within a week, due to international media coverage, the image and name of Tahrir Square became known worldwide. A
Facebook page called "Tahrir Square" ميدان التحرير was maintained by a rotating staff of twenty during the uprising, particularly to offset the lack of and/or distorted coverage of events and responses in state-run and state-aligned media outlets. The 18-day revolt centered in the square provided the
Egyptian Armed Forces an opportunity to remove Mubarak from power on 11 February 2011, when the president officially stepped down from office. The announcement that Mubarak had passed all authority to the
Council of the Armed Forces was made by longtime intelligence chief and new vice president
Omar Suleiman. Tahrir Square erupted in a night-long celebration after the twilight announcement, with shouts such as "Lift your head up high, you're Egyptian", "Everyone who loves Egypt, come and rebuild Egypt", and others. The next day, Egyptian Cairen women and men came to clean up the square, "they came and cleaned up after their revolution," relaying 'projectiles' in the cobblestone paving and removing eighteen days' worth of trash and
graffiti. British Prime Minister
David Cameron,
Catherine Ashton, the
High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy of the
European Union, U.S.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton,
John Kerry, Chairman of the American
Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, Australian Foreign Minister
Kevin Rudd, and American actor
Sean Penn visited Tahrir Square after the 2011 Revolution. One of the ships in the planned
Freedom Flotilla II, intended to break the Israeli blockade of Gaza, was named Tahrir after the square. Among its passengers was
Haaretz reporter Amira Hass. Ultimately, the sailing did not take place.
June 2013 protests and Morsi overthrow On 29 June 2013, thousands of Egyptians converged on Tahrir Square to demonstrate against the Egyptian President
Mohamed Morsi, demanding his resignation from office. The demonstrators used the slogan "
the people want the ouster of the regime," used in the protests that led to the 2011 revolution. By the 30th, their number had increased and demonstrations were reported to be in progress in 18 locations across Cairo. The demonstration had hundreds of thousands of protesters, although the Egyptian Government claims there were 33 million in the street, this number is highly suspected of since the largest square in Egypt, Tahrir Square, can only hold 200,000-225,000 people maximum, according to earlier crowd-size analyses. but when combined with the protests, it has instead been described by its supporters, as well as other media outlets, as a
revolution.
Pharaoh's Golden Parade On 3 April 2021, the square witnessed a huge
parade in which twenty-two mummies were moved from the
Egyptian Museum to the
National Museum of Egyptian Civilization. ==See also==