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The
Culture of Egypt has five thousand years of recorded history.
Ancient Egypt was among the earliest civilizations. For millennia, Egypt maintained a strikingly complex and stable culture that influenced later cultures of Europe, the Middle East and
Africa. After the Pharaonic era, Egypt itself came under the influence of
Hellenistic civilization, for a time Christianity, and later, Arab and Islamic culture. Today, many aspects of Egypt's ancient culture exist in interaction with newer elements, including the influence of modern
Western culture, itself with roots in Ancient Egypt.
Language
s, as this example from a sarcophagus from
Thebes, Egypt of about 530 BC, represent both
ideograms and phonograms.
The Egyptian language, which formed Egyptian languages among the family of
Afro-Asiatic languages, was among the first written languages, and is known from Egyptian hieroglyph inscriptions preserved on monuments and sheets of
papyrus. The Coptic language, the only extant descendant of Egyptian, is today the liturgical language of the
Coptic Orthodox Church.
The "Koiné" dialect of the Greek language was important in Hellenistic Alexandria, and was used in the philosophy and science of that culture, and was later studied by Arabic scholars.
Arabic language came to Egypt in the seventh century and
Egyptian Arabic has since become the modern speech of the country. Of the many varieties of Arabic, it is the most widely spoken
second language, probably due to the influence of Egyptian cinema throughout the Arabic-speaking world.
In the Upper Nile Valley, around
Kom Ombo and Aswan, there are about 300,000 speakers of Nubian languages, mainly
Nobiin language, but also Kenuzi-Dongola. The
Berber languages are represented by
Siwi language, spoken by about 5,000 around the
Siwa Oasis. There are over a million speakers of the Domari language (an
Indo-Aryan languages related to
Romany language), mostly living north of
Cairo, and there are about 60,000 Greek language speakers in
Alexandria. Approximately 77,000 speakers of Bedawi (a
Beja language) live in the Eastern Desert.
Literature
Nebqed,
c.
1300 BC.
Ancient Egyptian literature dates back to the
Old Kingdom, in the third millennium BC. Religious literature is best known for its
hymns to various gods and its mortuary texts. The oldest extant Egyptian literature are the
Pyramid Texts: the mythology and rituals carved around the tombs of rulers. The later, secular literature of ancient Egypt includes the 'wisdom texts', forms of philosophical instruction. The
Instruction of Ptahhotep, for example, is a collation of moral proverbs by an Egyptian administrator. The authors of the literature of the Old and
Middle Kingdom of Egypt (through to the middle of the second millennium BC) seem to have been drawn from an elite administrative class, and were celebrated and revered into the New Kingdom (to the end of the second millennium). In time, the Pyramid Texts became Coffin Texts (perhaps after the end of the Old Kingdom), and finally the mortuary literature produced its masterpiece, the
Book of the Dead, during the New Kingdom.
The Middle Kingdom of Egypt was the golden age of Egyptian literature. Some notable texts include the Tale of Neferty, the Instructions of
Amenemhat I, the The Story of Sinuhe, the Story of the Shipwrecked Sailor and the Story of the Eloquent Peasant.
Instructions became a popular literary genre of the
New Kingdom, taking the form of advice on proper behavior. The
Story of Wenamun and the Instructions of Ani are well-known examples from this period.
During the
Greco-Roman (
332 BC − AD 639), Egyptian literature was translated into other languages, and Greco-Roman literature fused with native art into a new style of writing. From this period comes the
Rosetta Stone, which became the key to unlocking the mysteries of Egyptian writing to modern scholarship. The great city of
Alexandria boasted its famous Library of Alexandria of almost half a million handwritten books during the third century BC. Alexandria's centre of learning also produced the Greek translation of the
Hebrew Bible, the Septuagint.
, a 1985 novel by Nobel Literature Laureate Naguib Mahfouz.
During the first few centuries of the Christian era, Egypt was the ultimate source of a great deal of ascetic literature in the
Coptic language. Egyptian monasteries translated many Greek language and Syriac language works, which are now only extant in Coptic. Under
Islam, Egypt continued to be a great source of literary endeavour, now in the
Arabic language. In 970,
al-Azhar University was founded in
Cairo, which to this day remains the most important centre of
Sunni Islamic learning. In the
12th century Egypt, the Jewish talmudic scholar Maimonides produced his most important work.
Egyptian novelists and poets were among the first to experiment with modern styles of Arabic literature, and the forms they developed have been widely imitated. The first modern Egyptian novel
Zaynab (novel) by
Muhammad Husayn Haykal was published in 1913 in the
Egyptian Arabic. Egyptian novelist Naguib Mahfouz was the first Arabic-language writer to win the
Nobel Prize in Literature. Many Egyptian books and films are available throughout the Middle East. Other prominent Egyptian writers include
Nawal El Saadawi, well known for her feminism works and
activism, and Alifa Rifaat who also writes about women and tradition. Vernacular poetry is perhaps the most popular literary genre amongst Egyptians, represented most significantly by
Mahmud Bayram al-Tunisi, Ahmed Fuad Nigm (Fagumi) and Abdel Rahman el-Abnudi.
See also: List of African writers (by country)#Egypt
Religion
was an Ancient Egyptian
pharaoh. He lived from c. 1314 BC to 1224 BC
Egyptian mythology was a polytheistic system that saw the world as in conflict between forces of order and chaos. The Pharaoh, representative of order on Earth, was seen as divine and descended of the falcon god Horus. There was a strong cult of resurrection in the next life centered around the god Osiris.
Coptic Christianity became popular in the Roman and Byzantine periods, and Egypt was indeed one of the strongest early Christian communities. Today, Christians constitute about 10% of the population.
Islam in Egypt came to the country with the successors of the Prophets of Islam Muhammed, and is today the dominant faith with 90% of the population adherents, almost all of the Sunni denomination.
Visual art
Egyptian art in antiquity
The Egyptians were one of the first major civilizations to codify design elements in art. The wall paintings done in the service of the
Pharaohs followed a rigid code of visual rules and meanings. Early Egyptian art is characterized by absence of linear perspective, which results in a seemingly flat space. These artists tended to create images based on what they knew, and not as much on what they see. Objects in these artworks generally do not decrease in size as they increase in distance and there is little shading to indicate
Distance. Sometimes, distance is indicated through the use of
tiered space, where more distant objects are drawn higher above the nearby objects, but in the same scale and with no overlapping of forms. People and objects are almost always drawn in profile.
.
Early Egyptian artists did have a system for maintaining dimensions within artwork. They used a grid system that allowed them to create a smaller version of the artwork, and then scale up the design based upon proportional representation in a larger grid.
See also: African art#Egypt
Egyptian art in modern times
modern art and
contemporary art Egyptian art can be as diverse as any works in the world art scene. Some well-known names include
Mahmoud Mokhtar, Abdel-Hadi el Gazzar, Farouk Hosny,
Gazbia Sirry and many others. Many artists in Egypt have taken on modern media such as digital art and this has been the theme of many exhibions in Cairo, in recent times. There has also been a tendency to use the world wide web as an alternative outlet for artists and there is a strong Art-focused internet community on egroups that has found origin in Egypt *.
Science
Egypt's cultural contributions have included great works of
science, art, and
mathematics, dating from Ancient history to modern times.
Ancient Egypt
Mathematics
Medicine
Technology
Library of Alexandria
The
Library of Alexandria was once the largest in the world. It is usually assumed to have been founded at the beginning of the
3rd century BC during the reign of
Ptolemy II of Egypt after his father had set up the
Temple of the Muses or
Museum. The initial organization is attributed to Demetrius Phalereus. The Library is estimated to have stored at its peak 400,000 to 700,000
Scroll (parchment).
One of the reasons so little is known about the Library is that it was lost centuries after its creation. All that is left of many of the volumes are tantalizing titles that hint at all the history lost due to the building's destruction. Few events in ancient history are as controversial as the destruction of the Library, as the historical record is both contradictory and incomplete. Its destruction has been attributed by some authors to, among others, Julius Caesar, Augustus Caesar, and Catholic zealots during the purge of the Arian heresy, Not surprisingly, the Great Library became a symbol of knowledge itself, and its destruction was attributed to those who were portrayed as ignorant barbarians, often for purely political reasons.
A Bibliotheca Alexandrina was inaugurated in 2003 near the site of the old library.
Ptolemy
styling, in a
16th century engraved book frontispiece
Ptolemy is one of the most famous astronomers and geographers from Egypt, famous for his work in
Alexandria. Born Claudius Ptolemaeus (Greek: Κλαύδιος Πτολεμαίος; c. 85 – c.
165), he was an Upper Egyptian geographer, astronomer, and astrologer.Martin Bernal (1992). "Animadversions on the Origins of Western Science",
Isis 83 (4), p. 596-607 606. He is considered by many to be the father of
astronomy.
Ptolemy was the author of two important scientific treatises. One is the astronomical treatise that is now known as the
Almagest (in Greek
Η μεγάλη Σύνταξις, "The Great Treatise"). In this work, one of the most influential books of Antiquity, Ptolemy compiled the astronomical knowledge of the ancient Greek and Babylonian world. Ptolemy's other main work is his
Geography. This too is a compilation, of what was known about the world's
geography in the Roman Empire in his time.
In his
Optics, a work which survives only in an Arabic translation, he writes about properties of light, including Reflection (physics), refraction and
colour. His other works include
Planetary Hypothesis,
Planisphaerium and
Analemma. Ptolemy's treatise on astrology, the
Tetrabiblos, was the most popular astrological work of antiquity and also enjoyed great influence in the Islamic world and the
medieval Latin
Western world.
Ptolemy also wrote an influential work
Harmonics on music theory. After criticizing the approaches of his predecessors, Ptolemy argued for basing musical intervals on mathematical ratios (in contrast to the followers of Aristoxenus) backed up by empirical observation (in contrast to the overly-theoretical approach of the
Pythagoreans). He presented his own divisions of the
tetrachord and the
octave, which he derived with the help of a
monochord. Ptolemy's astronomical interests also appeared in a discussion of the
music of the spheres.
Tributes to Ptolemy include
Ptolemaeus (lunar crater) on
the Moon and Ptolemaeus crater on
Mars (planet).
Eratosthenes
Another important astronomer and mathematician of Hellenistic Egypt was Eratosthenes. He was the first to measure Earth's circumference. He also measured a number of other important astronomic distances, such as the Sun-Earth distance, and introduced the
Sieve of Eratosthenes – a way of finding prime numbers.
Medieval Egypt
Abu Kamil Shuja ibn Aslam
Ibn Yunus
Modern Egypt
Egyptology
In modern times,
archaeology and the study of Egypt's ancient heritage as the field of Egyptology has itself become a major scientific pursuit in the country itself. The field began in
History of Arab Egypt during the Middle Ages, but was later led by Europeans and Westerners in modern times. The study of Egyptology, however, has in recent decades been taken up by Egyptian archæologists such as Zahi Hawass and the Supreme Council of Antiquities he leads.
The discovery of the Rosetta Stone, a tablet written in ancient Greek, Egyptian
Demotic (Egyptian) script, and Egyptian hieroglyphs, has partially been credited for the recent stir in the study of Ancient Egypt. Greek language, a well known language, gave linguists the ability to decipher the mysterious Egyptian hieroglyphic language. The ability to decipher hieroglyphics facilitated the translation of hundreds of the texts and inscriptions that were previously indecipherable, giving insight into Egyptian culture that would have otherwise been lost to the ages. The stone was discovered on July 15, 1799 in the port town of Rosetta, Egypt,and has been held in the
British Museum since 1802.
Ahmed Zewail
Ahmed Zewail (
Arabic language: أحمد زويل) (born February 26,
1946) is an
Egyptian chemistry, and the winner of the
1999 Nobel Prize/Chemistry for his work on
femtochemistry. Born in
Damanhur (60 km south-east of Alexandria) and raised in Disuq, he moved to the
United States to complete his PhD at the University of Pennsylvania. He was awarded a faculty appointment at Caltech in 1976, where he has remained since.
Zewail's key work has been as the pioneer of femtochemistry. He developed a method using a rapid laser technique (consisting of
ultrashort pulse laser flashes), which allows the description of reactions at the
atomic level. It can be viewed as a highly sophisticated form of
Flash (photo).
In 1999, Zewail became the third Egyptian to receive the
Nobel Prize, following Anwar Sadat (
1978 in Peace) and
Naguib Mahfouz (1988 in Literature). In
1999 he received Egypt's highest state honour, the
Grand Collar of the Nile.
Sports
The most played most-watched sport in Egypt is Football (Soccer). Egyptian Soccer clubs especially Al Ahly and Al Zamalek are known throughout the
Arab World and
Africa and enjoy the reputation of long-time champions of the sport regionally. They enjoy popularity even among non-Egyptians in the
Arab countries.
Among the most-watched sports in Egypt are basketball,
team handball, Squash (sport) and tennis. The Egyptian Squash team is always known for its fierce competition in world-wide championship in the 1930s and today. Handball has become another growingly popular sport among Egyptians as well. Since the early 1990s, the Egyptian Handball Team has become a growing international force in the sport, winning regional and continental tournaments as well as reaching up to fourth place internationally in 2001.
Local sports clubs receive financial support from the local governments, and many sporting clubs are financially and administratively supported by the government.
Cinema
Egyptian cinema is a flourishing film industry with a long history. As a result, the Egyptian capital has been dubbed the "Hollywood of the Middle East", where the world-renowed
Cairo International Film Festival is held every year.
Music and dance
Egyptian music is a rich mixture of indigenous Egyptian, Arabic, African and Western influences.
As early as 4th millennium BC, ancient Egyptians were playing
harps and flutes, as well as two indigenous instruments: the
ney and the oud. However, there is little notation of Egyptian music before the 7th century AD, when Egypt became part of the
Muslim world. Percussion instrument and vocal music became important at this time, and has remained an important part of Egyptian music today.
Contemporary
Music of Egypt traces its beginnings to the creative work of luminaries such as Abdu-l Hamuli, Almaz and Mahmud Osman, who were all patronized by Isma'il Pasha and who influenced the later work of Sayed Darwish, Umm Kulthum, Mohammed Abdel Wahab,
Abdel Halim Hafez and other Egyptian music giants.
From the
1970s onwards, Egyptian
pop music has become increasingly important in Egyptian culture, particularly among the large youth population of Egypt. Egyptian
folk music is also popular, played during weddings and other festivities. In the last quarter of the
20th century, Egyptian music was a way to communicate social issue and social class issues. The most popular Egyptian pop singer is Amr Diab.
Belly dance, or
Raqs Sharqi in Arabic, may have originated in Egypt, and today the country is considered the international center of the art.
The Egyptian Center for Culture & Art (ECCA)
Makan
ECCA records and promotes traditional Music of Egypt styles that are increasingly in danger of being relegated to the status of an exotic and de-contextualised tourist curiosity, or placed on the shelves of academic archives far from the daily lives of their dwindling practitioners. ECCA encourages efforts to return Egyptian music to the critical role it has played in the daily life and imagination of the Egyptian people, and to share this rich resource with the world community. A number of strategies and activities that support these aims include the systematic recording, documenting and archiving of current practice so as to make it available to scholars, musicians and to an increasingly broad-based audience.
Cuisine
Egyptian cuisine consists of local culinary traditions such as Ful medames, Kushari and Molokhia. It also shares similarities with food found throughout the eastern Mediterranean like kebab and
falafel.
See also
References
External links
- Egyptian Center for Culture and Art
- "The Library of Alexandria" by Ellen N. Brundige
- Bibliotheca Alexandrina
- Ahmed H. Zewail's website at CalTech
- The Art of Ancient Egypt
- Egyptian contributions to art
- Cairo Opera House
- Egypt a cultural profile
- Display of Egyptian art in Japan
The
Culture of Egypt has five thousand years of recorded history.
Ancient Egypt was among the earliest
civilizations. For millennia, Egypt maintained a strikingly complex and stable culture that influenced later cultures of
Europe, the Middle East and
Africa. After the Pharaonic era, Egypt itself came under the influence of
Hellenistic civilization, for a time
Christianity, and later, Arab and
Islamic culture. Today, many aspects of Egypt's ancient culture exist in interaction with newer elements, including the influence of modern Western culture, itself with roots in Ancient Egypt.
Language
s, as this example from a sarcophagus from
Thebes, Egypt of about 530 BC, represent both ideograms and phonograms.
The Egyptian language, which formed
Egyptian languages among the family of
Afro-Asiatic languages, was among the first written languages, and is known from
Egyptian hieroglyph inscriptions preserved on monuments and sheets of
papyrus. The
Coptic language, the only extant descendant of Egyptian, is today the liturgical language of the Coptic Orthodox Church.
The "Koiné" dialect of the
Greek language was important in Hellenistic Alexandria, and was used in the philosophy and science of that culture, and was later studied by Arabic scholars.
Arabic language came to Egypt in the
seventh century and
Egyptian Arabic has since become the modern speech of the country. Of the many
varieties of Arabic, it is the most widely spoken second language, probably due to the influence of Egyptian cinema throughout the Arabic-speaking world.
In the Upper Nile Valley, around Kom Ombo and Aswan, there are about 300,000 speakers of
Nubian languages, mainly
Nobiin language, but also Kenuzi-Dongola. The Berber languages are represented by Siwi language, spoken by about 5,000 around the Siwa Oasis. There are over a million speakers of the
Domari language (an
Indo-Aryan languages related to
Romany language), mostly living north of Cairo, and there are about 60,000 Greek language speakers in Alexandria. Approximately 77,000 speakers of Bedawi (a Beja language) live in the Eastern Desert.
Literature
Nebqed,
c.
1300 BC.
Ancient Egyptian literature dates back to the Old Kingdom, in the third millennium BC. Religious literature is best known for its
hymns to various gods and its mortuary texts. The oldest extant Egyptian literature are the
Pyramid Texts: the mythology and rituals carved around the tombs of rulers. The later, secular literature of ancient Egypt includes the 'wisdom texts', forms of philosophical instruction. The
Instruction of Ptahhotep, for example, is a collation of moral proverbs by an Egyptian administrator. The authors of the literature of the Old and
Middle Kingdom of Egypt (through to the middle of the second millennium BC) seem to have been drawn from an elite administrative class, and were celebrated and revered into the New Kingdom (to the end of the second millennium). In time, the Pyramid Texts became
Coffin Texts (perhaps after the end of the Old Kingdom), and finally the mortuary literature produced its masterpiece, the
Book of the Dead, during the New Kingdom.
The
Middle Kingdom of Egypt was the golden age of Egyptian literature. Some notable texts include the Tale of Neferty, the Instructions of Amenemhat I, the The Story of Sinuhe, the Story of the Shipwrecked Sailor and the Story of the Eloquent Peasant.
Instructions became a popular literary genre of the
New Kingdom, taking the form of advice on proper behavior. The Story of Wenamun and the Instructions of Ani are well-known examples from this period.
During the
Greco-Roman (332 BC − AD 639), Egyptian literature was translated into other languages, and Greco-Roman literature fused with native art into a new style of writing. From this period comes the Rosetta Stone, which became the key to unlocking the mysteries of Egyptian writing to modern scholarship. The great city of
Alexandria boasted its famous Library of Alexandria of almost half a million handwritten books during the third century BC. Alexandria's centre of learning also produced the Greek translation of the
Hebrew Bible, the
Septuagint.
, a 1985 novel by Nobel Literature Laureate Naguib Mahfouz.
During the first few centuries of the Christian era, Egypt was the ultimate source of a great deal of ascetic literature in the Coptic language. Egyptian monasteries translated many
Greek language and Syriac language works, which are now only extant in Coptic. Under
Islam, Egypt continued to be a great source of literary endeavour, now in the
Arabic language. In
970, al-Azhar University was founded in
Cairo, which to this day remains the most important centre of
Sunni Islamic learning. In the
12th century Egypt, the Jewish talmudic scholar Maimonides produced his most important work.
Egyptian novelists and poets were among the first to experiment with modern styles of Arabic literature, and the forms they developed have been widely imitated. The first modern Egyptian novel
Zaynab (novel) by Muhammad Husayn Haykal was published in
1913 in the Egyptian Arabic. Egyptian novelist
Naguib Mahfouz was the first Arabic-language writer to win the Nobel Prize in Literature. Many Egyptian books and films are available throughout the
Middle East. Other prominent Egyptian writers include
Nawal El Saadawi, well known for her feminism works and
activism, and Alifa Rifaat who also writes about women and tradition. Vernacular poetry is perhaps the most popular literary genre amongst Egyptians, represented most significantly by Mahmud Bayram al-Tunisi, Ahmed Fuad Nigm (Fagumi) and Abdel Rahman el-Abnudi.
See also: List of African writers (by country)#Egypt
Religion
was an Ancient Egyptian
pharaoh. He lived from c. 1314 BC to
1224 BCEgyptian mythology was a polytheistic system that saw the world as in conflict between forces of order and chaos. The Pharaoh, representative of order on Earth, was seen as divine and descended of the falcon god Horus. There was a strong cult of resurrection in the next life centered around the god
Osiris.
Coptic Christianity became popular in the Roman and Byzantine periods, and Egypt was indeed one of the strongest early Christian communities. Today, Christians constitute about 10% of the population.
Islam in Egypt came to the country with the successors of the Prophets of Islam
Muhammed, and is today the dominant faith with 90% of the population adherents, almost all of the Sunni denomination.
Visual art
Egyptian art in antiquity
The Egyptians were one of the first major civilizations to codify design elements in art. The wall paintings done in the service of the Pharaohs followed a rigid code of visual rules and meanings. Early Egyptian art is characterized by absence of
linear perspective, which results in a seemingly flat space. These artists tended to create images based on what they knew, and not as much on what they see. Objects in these artworks generally do not decrease in size as they increase in distance and there is little shading to indicate
Distance. Sometimes, distance is indicated through the use of
tiered space, where more distant objects are drawn higher above the nearby objects, but in the same scale and with no overlapping of forms. People and objects are almost always drawn in profile.
.
Early Egyptian artists did have a system for maintaining dimensions within artwork. They used a grid system that allowed them to create a smaller version of the artwork, and then scale up the design based upon proportional representation in a larger grid.
See also: African art#Egypt
Egyptian art in modern times
modern art and contemporary art Egyptian art can be as diverse as any works in the world art scene. Some well-known names include
Mahmoud Mokhtar, Abdel-Hadi el Gazzar,
Farouk Hosny, Gazbia Sirry and many others. Many artists in Egypt have taken on modern media such as digital art and this has been the theme of many exhibions in Cairo, in recent times. There has also been a tendency to use the world wide web as an alternative outlet for artists and there is a strong Art-focused internet community on egroups that has found origin in Egypt *.
Science
Egypt's cultural contributions have included great works of science, art, and
mathematics, dating from Ancient history to modern times.
Ancient Egypt
Mathematics
Medicine
Technology
Library of Alexandria
The Library of Alexandria was once the largest in the world. It is usually assumed to have been founded at the beginning of the
3rd century BC during the reign of Ptolemy II of Egypt after his father had set up the
Temple of the Muses or
Museum. The initial organization is attributed to Demetrius Phalereus. The Library is estimated to have stored at its peak 400,000 to 700,000
Scroll (parchment).
One of the reasons so little is known about the Library is that it was lost centuries after its creation. All that is left of many of the volumes are tantalizing titles that hint at all the history lost due to the building's destruction. Few events in ancient history are as controversial as the destruction of the Library, as the historical record is both contradictory and incomplete. Its destruction has been attributed by some authors to, among others, Julius Caesar, Augustus Caesar, and Catholic zealots during the purge of the Arian heresy, Not surprisingly, the Great Library became a symbol of knowledge itself, and its destruction was attributed to those who were portrayed as ignorant barbarians, often for purely political reasons.
A Bibliotheca Alexandrina was inaugurated in
2003 near the site of the old library.
Ptolemy
styling, in a
16th century engraved book frontispiece
Ptolemy is one of the most famous astronomers and geographers from Egypt, famous for his work in
Alexandria. Born Claudius Ptolemaeus (Greek: Κλαύδιος Πτολεμαίος; c. 85 – c. 165), he was an
Upper Egyptian geographer, astronomer, and astrologer.Martin Bernal (1992). "Animadversions on the Origins of Western Science",
Isis 83 (4), p. 596-607 606. He is considered by many to be the father of
astronomy.
Ptolemy was the author of two important scientific treatises. One is the astronomical treatise that is now known as the
Almagest (in Greek
Η μεγάλη Σύνταξις, "The Great Treatise"). In this work, one of the most influential books of Antiquity, Ptolemy compiled the astronomical knowledge of the ancient Greek and
Babylonian world. Ptolemy's other main work is his
Geography. This too is a compilation, of what was known about the world's geography in the Roman Empire in his time.
In his
Optics, a work which survives only in an Arabic translation, he writes about properties of
light, including
Reflection (physics),
refraction and colour. His other works include
Planetary Hypothesis,
Planisphaerium and
Analemma. Ptolemy's treatise on astrology, the
Tetrabiblos, was the most popular
astrological work of antiquity and also enjoyed great influence in the
Islamic world and the medieval Latin Western world.
Ptolemy also wrote an influential work
Harmonics on music theory. After criticizing the approaches of his predecessors, Ptolemy argued for basing musical intervals on mathematical ratios (in contrast to the followers of
Aristoxenus) backed up by empirical observation (in contrast to the overly-theoretical approach of the
Pythagoreans). He presented his own divisions of the tetrachord and the
octave, which he derived with the help of a
monochord. Ptolemy's astronomical interests also appeared in a discussion of the music of the spheres.
Tributes to Ptolemy include Ptolemaeus (lunar crater) on the Moon and Ptolemaeus crater on Mars (planet).
Eratosthenes
Another important astronomer and mathematician of Hellenistic Egypt was Eratosthenes. He was the first to measure Earth's circumference. He also measured a number of other important astronomic distances, such as the Sun-Earth distance, and introduced the Sieve of Eratosthenes – a way of finding prime numbers.
Medieval Egypt
Abu Kamil Shuja ibn Aslam
Ibn Yunus
Modern Egypt
Egyptology
In modern times,
archaeology and the study of Egypt's ancient heritage as the field of
Egyptology has itself become a major scientific pursuit in the country itself. The field began in
History of Arab Egypt during the
Middle Ages, but was later led by Europeans and Westerners in modern times. The study of Egyptology, however, has in recent decades been taken up by Egyptian archæologists such as
Zahi Hawass and the Supreme Council of Antiquities he leads.
The discovery of the
Rosetta Stone, a tablet written in ancient Greek, Egyptian
Demotic (Egyptian) script, and Egyptian hieroglyphs, has partially been credited for the recent stir in the study of Ancient Egypt. Greek language, a well known language, gave linguists the ability to decipher the mysterious Egyptian hieroglyphic language. The ability to decipher hieroglyphics facilitated the translation of hundreds of the texts and inscriptions that were previously indecipherable, giving insight into Egyptian culture that would have otherwise been lost to the ages. The stone was discovered on July 15, 1799 in the port town of Rosetta, Egypt,and has been held in the
British Museum since 1802.
Ahmed Zewail
Ahmed Zewail (Arabic language: أحمد زويل) (born
February 26, 1946) is an
Egyptian
chemistry, and the winner of the
1999 Nobel Prize/Chemistry for his work on femtochemistry. Born in Damanhur (60 km south-east of
Alexandria) and raised in Disuq, he moved to the United States to complete his PhD at the University of Pennsylvania. He was awarded a faculty appointment at Caltech in 1976, where he has remained since.
Zewail's key work has been as the pioneer of femtochemistry. He developed a method using a rapid
laser technique (consisting of ultrashort pulse laser flashes), which allows the description of reactions at the
atomic level. It can be viewed as a highly sophisticated form of Flash (photo).
In
1999, Zewail became the third Egyptian to receive the
Nobel Prize, following Anwar Sadat (1978 in Peace) and
Naguib Mahfouz (
1988 in Literature). In 1999 he received Egypt's highest state honour, the Grand Collar of the Nile.
Sports
The most played most-watched sport in Egypt is
Football (Soccer). Egyptian Soccer clubs especially
Al Ahly and
Al Zamalek are known throughout the Arab World and
Africa and enjoy the reputation of long-time champions of the sport regionally. They enjoy popularity even among non-Egyptians in the Arab countries.
Among the most-watched sports in Egypt are basketball, team handball, Squash (sport) and
tennis. The Egyptian Squash team is always known for its fierce competition in world-wide championship in the 1930s and today. Handball has become another growingly popular sport among Egyptians as well. Since the early 1990s, the Egyptian Handball Team has become a growing international force in the sport, winning regional and continental tournaments as well as reaching up to fourth place internationally in 2001.
Local sports clubs receive financial support from the local governments, and many sporting clubs are financially and administratively supported by the government.
Cinema
Egyptian cinema is a flourishing film industry with a long history. As a result, the Egyptian capital has been dubbed the "Hollywood of the Middle East", where the world-renowed
Cairo International Film Festival is held every year.
Music and dance
Egyptian music is a rich mixture of indigenous Egyptian, Arabic, African and Western influences.
As early as 4th millennium BC, ancient Egyptians were playing harps and
flutes, as well as two indigenous instruments: the ney and the
oud. However, there is little notation of Egyptian music before the
7th century AD, when Egypt became part of the
Muslim world. Percussion instrument and vocal music became important at this time, and has remained an important part of Egyptian music today.
Contemporary
Music of Egypt traces its beginnings to the creative work of luminaries such as Abdu-l Hamuli, Almaz and Mahmud Osman, who were all patronized by Isma'il Pasha and who influenced the later work of
Sayed Darwish, Umm Kulthum, Mohammed Abdel Wahab, Abdel Halim Hafez and other Egyptian music giants.
From the
1970s onwards, Egyptian pop music has become increasingly important in Egyptian culture, particularly among the large youth population of Egypt. Egyptian
folk music is also popular, played during weddings and other festivities. In the last quarter of the
20th century, Egyptian music was a way to communicate
social issue and social class issues. The most popular Egyptian pop singer is
Amr Diab.
Belly dance, or
Raqs Sharqi in Arabic, may have originated in Egypt, and today the country is considered the international center of the art.
The Egyptian Center for Culture & Art (ECCA)
Makan
ECCA records and promotes traditional Music of Egypt styles that are increasingly in danger of being relegated to the status of an exotic and de-contextualised tourist curiosity, or placed on the shelves of academic archives far from the daily lives of their dwindling practitioners. ECCA encourages efforts to return Egyptian music to the critical role it has played in the daily life and imagination of the Egyptian people, and to share this rich resource with the world community. A number of strategies and activities that support these aims include the systematic recording, documenting and archiving of current practice so as to make it available to scholars, musicians and to an increasingly broad-based audience.
Cuisine
Egyptian cuisine consists of local culinary traditions such as Ful medames, Kushari and Molokhia. It also shares similarities with food found throughout the eastern Mediterranean like kebab and falafel.
See also
References
External links
- Egyptian Center for Culture and Art
- "The Library of Alexandria" by Ellen N. Brundige
- Bibliotheca Alexandrina
- Ahmed H. Zewail's website at CalTech
- The Art of Ancient Egypt
- Egyptian contributions to art
- Cairo Opera House
- Egypt a cultural profile
- Display of Egyptian art in Japan
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