Search This Blog

Friday, August 21, 2015

In Conclusion






The romance of Egypt is pyramids, hieroglyphs, the Nile River, and Cleopatra. 
http://i.ytimg.com/vi/YtKvRq8k1rc/maxresdefault.jpg
While all of these items influence Egypt, there is much more to this country.  These things were just a small part of its wonderful history.  A deeper look into the country of Egypt gives a better description of the life and history of these people. The various changes in the types of government to the change in their religious stance as a country are all what make Egypt unique and different in that it was the bridge between Africa and the Mediterranean.  The Nile River “…up- or downstream—between Egypt and inner Africa, creating and preserving racial and cultural interrelations and even unity—but a river that provided Egypt with a distinct environmental setting for the emergence and development of an integrated, advanced, and unique civilization;” (Erlikh, Haggai, p. 98). Through the study of the hieroglyphs and tombs, historians have been able to see the vast changes and developments of Egypt through the ages.
http://bc05.ajnm.me/665003303001/201508/3681/
665003303001_4434221129001_
vs-55d5b89ee4b0e3fce616178b-782203298001.jpg?pubId=665003303001

August 20, 2015, Egypt was attacked by the Islamic State again. The attacks are in retaliation to the latest laws put into place regarding terrorism. (BBC, Aug. 20, 2015). These attacks have been happening more frequently throughout Egypt over the past few years as yet another battle for power continues in Egypt. The constant changing government of this country has been religious and economical.  The majority of the changes surround the use of religion to take over Egypt while politically wanting the entrance into the rest of Africa and a short cut to the India.
In the beginning, well before 3000 B.C. by some estimations, Egypt was the first established culture due to the Nile River.  Here the people were able to have fresh water for crops and survival.  However, with the rise and fall of the Nile, many of the people were nomadic versus pastoral.  From the beginning and to today, the Nile River plays an integral part in Egyptian economic development.  The push by most countries that take over Egypt is to irrigate the Sahara for more agriculture and to help with the over population of the urban areas of Egypt.
Image result for humans migrated from africa
Scientists believe they have found that man migrated out of Egypt and Ethiopia into Europe. (El-Awady, June 18, 2015). The belief is man started in Africa and moved into the European countries over the centuries.
Egypt is the English word used for Hikuptah.  Hikuptah means Temple of the Soul of Ptah.  The god Ptah, the first Pharaoh, shows the importance the people of Egypt put on religion and their gods. They believed that the Pharaohs were gods. At the traded with the Mediterranean, they began to include their gods into their beliefs. These beliefs would be the reason Cambyses II was able to conquer Egypt and the way many of the countries conquered Egypt. Cambyses used their god beliefs of the animals by parading the animals first in battle. 
http://www.the-athenaeum.org/art/full.php?ID=108972
The Pharaohs controlled the ruling of Egypt until the invasion of Persia in 525 B.C. (Encyclopedia Britannica). This invasion happened because Cambyses II felt slighted by the Pharaoh of Egypt; therefore, he attacked and won the battle.  The Persians ruled Egypt until Alexander the Great began to rule in 332 B.C.  Rome was able to take Egypt fairly easily because they used Egyptian religious rituals against them.  Rome blended into the society.  Once they blended in, they would proclaim themselves the leader and then proceed to make the area a province of Rome.  In the case of Egypt, they had already incorporated many eastern gods into their culture, so adding Roman gods was nothing new.  However, with Rome, came the entry of St. Mark.  It is believed the St. Mark stopped in Egypt on his way home to Libya.  While in Egypt, he began a church.  This church is the Coptic Church still in Egypt today. 
Rome rule put the taxation on the people that was great and when the Muslims invaded, even the Coptic Church welcomed the change.  Muslim rule was not much different from the Egyptian way of life.  Whoever held power was also the religious leader of the country.  Therefore, Islam was a political religion and fit right into the Egyptian way of life. The reign of Islam only lasted until the Ottoman Empire invaded in the 1500s.  Since the Ottoman Empire was already Muslim, the religious view did not change.  However, the difference in the Ottoman Empire and Muslim rule was that the Ottoman’s incorporated their religion into Egypt and did not force their religion on the people.  Napoleon invaded Egypt from France.  After World War I, the Ottoman Empire was replaced by the British.  The British did not so much get involved in the religion of Egypt as it did in the economics of Egypt.  The Suez Canal is the major event during the British rule.  It was a deal that the French and the British for some time; however, the British completed it.  It was a canal to help with trade between the Mediterranean and the Red Sea.  The canal would open up further trade for Egypt. After World War II, Egypt was declared independent from Britain.  The Suez Canal remains one of the biggest shipping lanes in the world.
All of the above is said to bring us back to Egypt in the 1990s and 2015.  “The New Valley Project was the most ambitious but not the only land reclamation project initiated by the Mubarak regime during the late 1990s.” (Davis, Diana K., pg 50). The jump to this topic is while religion played a huge part in everyday life for Egypt, and the government used this to control the Egyptian nation.  The countries coming into Egypt were doing so to expand trade.  Hosni Mubarak rule was supported by the United States because he kept the Islam militants under control, and he maintain a certain amount of peace with Israel.  His rule in the land was almost thirty years; this was the longest rule since the 1800s.  Since his resignation, Egypt has been in a constant state of revolution.  In the past four years, Egypt has had five rulers and today the continued bombing in Cairo shows the instability of their government. The question is still today whether “Egypt is an emerging democracy.” (Sprusansky, 56-57).  In Egypt, history is still unfolding as to what governmental body will be in place next and will religious freedom prevail or will Islam control the country with continued strife for the Christians of Egypt. The countries around Egypt continue to watch these developments. It is important economically to see who will win because so many countries trade resources with Egypt.  The greatest of these at this time is oil. Therefore, the world still looks to Egypt to see what it is going to do next.
Bibliography
Alfred J., Butler. The Arab Conquest of Egypt and the Last Thirty Years of Roman Dominion. 2nd ed. New York: Oxford University Press, 1978.

Armanios, Febe. Coptic Christianity in Ottoman Egypt. New York: Oxford University Press, 2011.

Davis, Diana K., and Burke, Edmund, eds. Ecology and History: Environmental Imaginaries of the Middle East and North Africa. Athens, OH, USA: Ohio University Press, 2011. Accessed August 20, 2015. ProQuest ebrary.

"Egyptian Security Building in Cairo Rocked by Bomb Blast - BBC News." BBC News. August 20, 2015. Accessed August 21, 2015. http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-33998536.

El-Awady, Nadia. "Egypt Identified as Ancient Gateway out of Africa." Nature Middle East. June 18, 2015. Accessed August 20, 2015. http://www.natureasia.com/en/nmiddleeast/article/10.1038/nmiddleeast.2015.101.

Encyclopædia Britannica Online, s. v. "Cambyses II", accessed August 20, 2015,http://www.britannica.com/biography/Cambyses-II.

Erlikh, Haggai, and Isreal Gershoni. The Nile: Histories, Cultures, Myths. Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2000.

Goody, Jack. The Logic of Writing and the Organization of Society. Cambridge [Cambridgeshire]: Cambridge University Press, 1986. Accessed August 20, 2015. ProQuest ebrary.

Jackson, Jack. Accessed August 21, 2015. http://www.worldatlas.com/aatlas/infopage/aaaphotos/suezcanal.jpg.

Johansen, Julian. Sufism and Islamic Reform in Egypt: The Battle for Islamic Tradition. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1996.

Sprusansky, D. (2014). Egyptian Ministers Discuss Politics, Economy. The Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, 33(4), 56-57. Retrieved from http://search.proquest.com/docview/1544159612?accountid=12085




Pictures:




El-Awady, Nadia. "Egypt Identified as Ancient Gateway out of Africa." Nature Middle East. June 18, 2015. Accessed August 20, 2015. http://www.natureasia.com/en/nmiddleeast/article/10.1038/nmiddleeast.2015.10


No comments:

Post a Comment