Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of maps
- Preface
- Map 1 Egypt and its neighbours
- Map 2 Medieval Cairo
- 1 The Arab conquest of Egypt to the end of the Ayyubi dynasty, 639–1250
- 2 The age of the mamluks, 1250–1516
- 3 The Ottoman age, 1516–1805
- 4 The beginning of the state system, 1805–1922
- 5 The liberal experiment, 1922–52
- 6 The Nasser years, 1952–70
- 7 From Sadat to Mubarak, 1970 to the present day
- Select bibliography
- Index
Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of maps
- Preface
- Map 1 Egypt and its neighbours
- Map 2 Medieval Cairo
- 1 The Arab conquest of Egypt to the end of the Ayyubi dynasty, 639–1250
- 2 The age of the mamluks, 1250–1516
- 3 The Ottoman age, 1516–1805
- 4 The beginning of the state system, 1805–1922
- 5 The liberal experiment, 1922–52
- 6 The Nasser years, 1952–70
- 7 From Sadat to Mubarak, 1970 to the present day
- Select bibliography
- Index
Summary
The major theme of this book is the alienation of the population of Egypt from their rulers. Having suffered foreign occupations of various kinds, from the Arab conquest in 639 AD to the British occupation in 1882 which lasted until 1954, Egyptians through the ages have had to cope with alien rulers, or with rulers who were dominated by aliens so that a truly national government could be said to exist only after 1952. Yet throughout the eras of alien rule the native Egyptian recognized the existence of a fixed and unchanging territory that was Egypt, which had fixed natural boundaries, and which was separate as a territory even when it was the centre of an empire or amalgamated into an empire as a mere province. Thus the native Egyptian, while coping with alien rulers, also clung to the fixed piece of territory that he identified and knew as Egypt. Even before the age of nationalism made people conscious of national affinities Egyptians were conscious of living in a land called Egypt.
With the advent of the first native Egyptian government over fellow Egyptians after 1952 one would have expected the alienation of the rulers and the ruled to come to an end. Yet that alienation has persisted because the governments that came after 1952 were too insecure to adopt a truly representative government, and so opted for authoritarian and repressive rule which ended by representing vested interests rather than the interests of the majority such has been the characteristic of all successive governments.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- A History of EgyptFrom the Arab Conquest to the Present, pp. ix - xPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007