History of Egypt

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(Redirected from Egyptian history)
This article is part of the
History of Egypt series.
Ancient Egypt
Greek and Roman Egypt
Early Arab Egypt
Ottoman Egypt
Muhammad Ali and his successors
Modern Egypt
List of Egyptians

The history of Egypt is the longest continuous history, as a unified state, of any country in the world althouh they are not to be confused woth the current egyptians the ancients had a civilization that lasted over 3000 years. The Nile valley forms a natural geographic and economic unit, bounded to the east and west by deserts, to the north by the sea and to the south by the Cataracts of the Nile. The need to have a single authority to manage the waters of the Nile led to the creation of the world's first state in Egypt in about 3000 BC. Egypt's peculiar geography made it a difficult country to attack, which is why Pharaonic Egypt was for so long an independent and self-contained state. Late 20th Century author Pellegrino's re-coinage of the word " Riverworld " ( riverworld ) to apply to the co-equal, and co-temporal "River-world's" of Mesopotamia and the the Nile during this evolution of human settlements, helps contrast the "Riverworld" developments against the Huge "Land area/developments" of the surrounding Peoples. (There was another smaller, nearby "riverworld" in India.)

Once Egypt did succumb to foreign rule; however, it proved unable to escape from it, and for 2,300 years Egypt was governed by foreigners: Persians, Greeks, Romans, Byzantines, Arabs, Turks and British. When Gamal Abdel Nasser (President of Egypt 1954–1970) remarked that he was the first native Egyptian to exercise sovereign power in the country since Pharaoh Nectanebo II, deposed by the Persians in 343 BC, he was only exaggerating slightly.

In this encyclopedia Egyptian history has been divided into six periods:

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