




The Thirtieth Dynasty was the last native ruling dynasty during the  Pharaonic epoch. It fell to the Persians in 343 BC after the last native  Pharaoh, King Nectanebo II, was defeated in battle. Later, Egypt fell  to the Greco–Macedonians and Romans, beginning over two thousand years  of foreign rule. The last ruler from the Ptolemaic line was Cleopatra  VII, who committed suicide with her lover Marc Antony, after Caesar  Augustus had captured them.
Before Egypt became part of the Byzantine realm, Christianity had been  brought by Saint Mark the Evangelist in the AD first century.  Diocletian’s reign marked the transition from the Roman to the Byzantine  era in Egypt, when a great number of Egyptian Christians were  persecuted. The New Testament had by then been translated into Egyptian.  After the Council of Chalcedon in AD 451, a distinct Egyptian Coptic  Church was firmly established.

A unified kingdom was founded circa 3150 BC by King Menes, giving rise   to a series of dynasties that ruled Egypt for the next three millennia.   Egyptians subsequently referred to their unified country as tawy,   meaning “two lands”, and later kemet (Coptic: kīmi), the “black land”, a   reference to the fertile black soil deposited by the Nile river.   Egyptian culture flourished during this long period and remained   distinctively Egyptian in its religion, [[Art of Ancient language and   customs. The first two ruling dynasties of a unified Egypt set the stage   for the Old Kingdom period, c.2700−2200 BC., famous for its many   pyramids, most notably the Third Dynasty pyramid of Djoser and the   Fourth Dynasty Giza Pyramids.
The First Intermediate Period ushered in a time of political upheaval   for about 150 years. Stronger Nile floods and stabilization of   government, however, brought back renewed prosperity for the country in   the Middle Kingdom c. 2040 BC, reaching a peak during the reign of   Pharaoh Amenemhat III. A second period of disunity heralded the arrival   of the first foreign ruling dynasty in Egypt, that of the Semitic   Hyksos. The Hyksos invaders took over much of Lower Egypt around 1650 BC   and founded a new capital at Avaris. They were driven out by an Upper   Egyptian force led by Ahmose I, who founded the Eighteenth Dynasty and   relocated the capital from Memphis to Thebes.

 
Tuesday, November 23, 2010
Egypt - Rare Photo Collection...
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