The Ottoman ad British occupation
Although the real hold of the Ottoman Turks over Egypt was
to last only until the 17th century, the country remained
nominally part of the Ottoman Empire until 1915. Rather than
exterminate the Mamelukes, the Ottomans used them in their
administration. They established a governor and settled six
ocaks (regiments) in Egypt as a garrison. In time the roman
ocaks intermarried with the native people, playing an
important role in the country's economic and political life.
Rural areas were treated as crown lands, parceled into plots
called iqta, the produce of which went to the Ottoman elite.
The Mameluke come back:
As time went on, an inflationary trend that historians have
noted in 16th-century Europe had repercussions in Egypt as
well. Rising prices led to rivalry among the ocaks over the
country's wealth. This weakened their control, and the
Mamelukes stepped into the breach. By the mid-17th century
the Mameluke emirs, or beys, had established their
supremacy. Land taxes were farmed out among them, and the
urban guilds, which were closely allied with the roman ocaks,
were heavily taxed as a means of diminishing Ottoman
influence and of increasing revenue. The Ottomans acquiesced
in the system so long as the tribute was regularly paid.
The period from the 16th to the mid-18th century was an age
of commercial prosperity when Egypt, at the crossroads of
several commercial routes, was the center of a flourishing
intermediary trade in coffee, textiles, and spices.
The Ottoman governor quickly became a puppet, first in the
hands of the regiments, which held the military power, and
then in the hands of the Mamelukes, who came to control the
ocaks. The leading Mameluke bey, called the Shaikh al-Balad
(“chief of the city”), thus became recognized as the real
ruler of the land. The beys imposed higher taxes to finance
their military expeditions in Syria and Arabia. Although
defeated in Syria by the Ottomans, who once more sought to
reinforce their authority, the Mamelukes dominated Egypt
until 1798. The last 30 years of the 18th century were
marked by plagues and famine that reduced the population to
a bare 4 million.
The Time of Muhammad Ali:
The French occupation of Egypt in 1798, led by Napoleon
Bonaparte, was a brief interlude, for the French never
acquired full dominion or control. The grain-producing
regions of Upper Egypt remained in Mameluke hands.
Napoleon's invasion was too short-lived to have any lasting
impact, but it marked the beginning of a renewed European
interest in Egypt. In 1801 an Anglo-Ottoman force expelled
the French. For the next few years, struggles between
Mamelukes and Ottomans for mastery ruined the country until
Muhammad Ali, an Ottoman general of Albanian origin, seized
power with the cooperation of the local population. In 1805
the Ottoman sultan declared him the governor of Egypt.
Muhammad Ali, a man of genius, slowly and methodically
destroyed or bought off all his opponents until he became
the only source of power in the country. To gain control of
all the trade routes into Egypt, he embarked on wars of
expansion. He first conquered Al Hijaz (the Hejaz, now in
Saudi Arabia) in 1819 and Sudan from 1820 to 1822; by 1824
he was ready to help the Ottoman sultan put down an
insurrection in Greece. The European powers, however,
intervened to halt Egyptian advances in Greece, and Muhammad
Ali was forced to withdraw his army.
At home, Muhammad Ali encouraged the production of cotton to
supply the textile mills of Europe, and he used the profits
to finance industrial projects. He established a monopoly
over all commodities and imposed trade barriers to nurture
industry. He sent Egyptians abroad for technical education
and hired experts from Europe to train his army and build
his manufacturing industries (which, however, were never as
successful as he hoped they would be).
In 1831 Muhammad Ali invaded Syria, thereby coming into
conflict with his Turkish overlord. The Egyptians defeated
the Ottoman armies, and by 1833 they were threatening the
Turkish capital, Constantinople (present-day Istanbul). Once
again, Russia, Britain, and France intervened, this time to
protect the sultan. Muhammad Ali's forces withdrew, but he
was left in control of Syria and Crete.
Egyptian expansion and control over trade routes conflicted
with Britain's growing interest in the Middle East as a
market for its burgeoning industrial production. The threat
to the integrity of the Ottoman Empire also disturbed
Britain and roused fears of Russian encroachment in the
Mediterranean. For these reasons the British opposed Egypt,
and when Muhammad Ali again rebelled against the sultan in
1839, they stepped in for the third time to make him back
down. He was offered hereditary possession of Egypt, but had
to give up his other conquests and remain an Ottoman vassal.
Bankruptcy and Foreign influance
After the death of Muhammad Ali in 1849, Egypt came
increasingly under European influence. His son, Said Pasha,
made some attempt to modernize the government, but left a
huge debt when he died. His successor, Ismail , increased
the national debt by borrowing lavishly from European
bankers to develop the country and pay for the Suez Canal,
which was opened in 1869. These spendthrift rulers drove the
country into bankruptcy and ultimately into the control of
their British and French creditors. In 1876 an Anglo-French
commission took charge of Egypt's finances, and in 1879 the
sultan deposed Ismail in favor of his son Tawfik Pasha. Army
officers, disgusted by the government's weakness, then led a
rebellion to end foreign control. Tawfik appealed to the
British for help, and they occupied Egypt in 1882.
Egypt Under the British:
British interest in Egypt stemmed from the Suez Canal as the
short route to India. Promises to evacuate the country once
order had been restored were broken, and the British army
remained in occupation until 1954. Although Tawfik remained
on the throne as a figurehead prince, the British consul
general was the real ruler of the country. The first and
most important consul general was Sir Evelyn Baring (known
after 1892 as Lord Cromer).
A nationalist movement led by Mustafa Kamil, a
European-educated lawyer, was backed by Tawfik's successor,
Abbas II, during the late 1800s and early 1900s. Kamil
agitated for self-government and an end to the British
occupation but was ignored by British authorities.In this
period Egyptian agriculture was so completely dominated by
cotton grown to feed the textile mills of Lancashire,
England, that grain had to be imported to feed the rural
population. Irrigation projects were carried out to increase
the arable land, and in due course the entire debt to
Britain was paid.British promises to evacuate diminished as
Egypt and the Suez Canal became an integral part of British
Mediterranean defense policy. The illegal occupation was, in
fact, internationally sanctioned in 1904, when France
recognized British rights in Egypt in return for British
acknowledgment of French rights in Morocco.
Protectorate Declared:
The outbreak of World War I in 1914 brought nationalist
activities in Egypt to an end. When Turkey entered the war
on the side of Germany, Britain declared Egypt a
protectorate and deposed Abbas II in favor of his uncle,
Hussein Kamil, who was given the title of sultan. Legal ties
between Egypt and Turkey were finally severed, and Britain
promised Egypt some changes in government once the war was
over.
The war years resulted in great hardship for Egyptian
peasants, the fellahin, who were conscripted to dig ditches
and whose livestock was confiscated by the army. Inflation
was rampant. These factors were responsible for increasing
resentment against the British and set the stage for the
violent upheaval that was to come after World War I ended in
1918.
llied promises that former Ottoman territories would be
allowed self-determination raised hopes in Egypt of
independence once the war was over. A new nationalist
movement, the Wafd (“delegation”), was formed in 1918 to
plan for the country's future. Hopes were dashed when
Britain refused to consider Egyptian needs, and Saad Zaghlul,
the leader of the Wafd, was exiled. The country erupted in
violent revolt, and Britain was forced to reconsider its
decision. Zaghlul was released, but his efforts to get a
hearing at the Paris Peace Conference were thwarted by the
British. Violence continued until 1922, when Britain
unilaterally declared Egypt an independent monarchy under
Hussein's successor, who became king as Fuad I. The British,
however, reserved the right to intervene in Egyptian affairs
if their interests were threatened, thereby robbing Egypt of
any real independence and allowing British control to
continue unabated.
The new constitution of 1924 set up a bicameral legislature
but, under pressure from the British and Fuad, gave the
latter the right to nominate the premier and to suspend
Parliament. The result was a tripartite struggle for mastery
over Egypt involving the king, the British ambassador, and
the Wafd, which was the only grass-roots party. One
government after another fell after trying unsuccessfully to
extract concessions from the British. In 1936, under
pressures caused by the Italian invasion of Ethiopia, an
Anglo-Egyptian treaty was finally signed, but it continued
the physical occupation of Egypt by the British army and the
involvement of the British army in internal affairs.

