During the Middle Kingdom foreigners are first found:93.0909
LUFT, Ulrich, Asiatics in Illahun: A preliminary report, in: Atti VI Congresso. II, 291-297.
In the M.K. Asiatics of unknown origin were present in Egypt in considerable number. They were designated aAm, "Asiatic." The toponym RTnw is also known; the combination of aAmw of RTnw is
attested. Some names look Egyptian, but are foreign. A safe indication is the addition aAm before the name.
In Illahun Asiatics are mentioned in registers and letters. The names of the Asiatics are Egyptian for the
most part. Asiatic names appear as parent's names or nicknames. Some nicknames seem to be Egyptian. The
presence of Hurrian names in the Egyptian during the 19th century B.C. can be assumed. In P. Berol 10002 a
large part of the singers (Smaw) is Asiatic, but also titles and activities are attested. It seems that the
Asiatics lived under the same circumstances as the Egyptians. Pap. Berol 10004, known as a document
concerning the sale of slaves, needs further study. On the basis of the Illahun evidence, Asiatics were
appreciated as workers inside and outside of Egypt in the later XIIth Dynasty.
Wall pantings in the tomb of Khnumhotep at Beni hassan depict the
vist of a bedouin Cheiftain named Abisha,while numerous Egyptians
statuettes and scarabs have been found at Near Eastern
sites,reaffriming Asiatic links.
Page 163
Oxford History of Ancient Egypt
Ian Shaw
During the New Kingdom we find Asiatics of Mitanni origin living even in villages of Deir El Medina in modern Luxor:
94.1133
WARD, William A., Foreigners Living in the
Village, in: Pharaoh's Workers, 61-85 and
163-174.
Having pointed out the problem of identifying
foreign personal names in Egyptian texts in
general, the author turns to the Deir
el-Medina material, where he has identified 22
masculine and 10 feminine names of
West-Asiatic origin, most Semitic, but also
Hurrian and Hittite. Their bearers lived
almost all in the village; the women were
mostly married to workmen, but the social
status of the men is harder to determine.
Appendix A lists 22 foreign names at Deir
el-Medina published earlier by him (in "Essays
in Ancient Civilization ... H.J. Kantor,"
Chicago 1989, 255-299) and 13 new ones from
the Deir el-Medina texts, among which the
extensively discussed knr (kl) and kr.
Appendix B concentrates on the occurrences of
the name knr (kl) at Deir el-Medina (nos.
1-11) and outside during the N.K. (12-28), and
in the T.I.P. (29-30). Appendix C lists 10
occurrences of the name kr(i/y).
Also during the New Kingdom was infiltraition of Sea People that were either captured during battles or came to Egypt as mercenaries:
The greatest threat to Egypt during the
Ramesside Period was the so-called '' Peoples
of the Sea,'' a confederation of peoples from
the Aegean or Western Anatolia,who attacked
northeast Africa and the eastern
Mediterranean. From early in the reign of
Merneptah,the ships of these people,known more
specifically as the Sherdan[perhaps from Ionia
and Sardinia], Shekelesh,and Peleset,attacked
the western and eastern Mediterranean
approaches of Egypt while others attempted to
colonize via land routes.Much of the
thirty-one year reign of Ramesses II was
devoted to thwarting their attacks,and records
of great sea battles are carved on the north
side of the king's temple at Medinet Abu. The
''People of the Sea'' ultimatley changed the
entire balance of power in the Near
East,sweeping away the Hittites and setting
the stage for the Assyria to step into the
void as the new dominant power in the Near
East.
page 48
Egypt and the Egyptians
by Douglas J. Brewer and Emily Teeter
Cambridge University Press
Due/Published June 1999, 236 pages, paper
ISBN 0521449847
Libyans also came as captives or mercenaries and were settled around the modern Delta area:
Glazed from the decorative scheme used probabaly in the throne room
of the palace of King Rameses III at Tell el-Yahudiya. It shows a
bound Libyan captive.
page 30
Ancient Egypt
The Land and Legacy
T.G.H. James
copyright @ 1988
First Unversity of Texas Press Paperback Printing,1990
After the Ramesside dyansty we know that Libyans ruled all over Egypt except southern Upper Egypt which remained independent.
After the 25th dyansty you have interludes from Assyrians,and finally an independent dyansty at Sais.
During the 26th dyansty many Saite pharaohs imported Carian and Greek mercenaries and settled them in various parts of Egypt.
But more importantly he was able to idenity at Nebeira the site of
the ancient city of Naucratis ,which in the reign of Amasis in the
Twenty-six Dyansty[570-526 B.C.] had been granted a monopoly of Greek
trading in Egypt.
page 33
Ancient Egypt
The Land and Legacy
T.G.H. James
copyright @ 1988
First Unversity of Texas Press Paperback Printing,1990
Later during Persian occupation there were settlements of Jewish mercenaries in parts of modern day Aswan:
>"Jewish Life in Ancient Egypt: A Family Archive from the Nile Valley"
>Edward Bleiberg, PhD, Brooklyn Museum of Art
>Thursday, April 29, 2004, 6:30pm
>Mary Gates Hall, Room 389, University of Washington campus
>Admission: FREE.
>
>About the Presentation
>
>This presentation focuses on the private lives of the Jewish temple
official Ananiah, son of Azariah, and his Egyptian wife, Tamut, who
both lived on Elephantine Island in the late 5th century BCE during
Persian rule. Included in the discussion are the arrival of Jews in
Egypt after the destruction of Solomons Temple and the type of
Judaism they practiced.
>Ananiah and Tamuts family life is discussed from their marriage in
447 BCE to the final payment on their daughters bride gift in 402
BCE. In-between these events we learn about marriage, labor
conditions, real estate, and burial in a multi-cultural community of
Egyptians, Jews and Persians.
>
>About the Speaker
>
>Edward Bleiberg is Associate Curator in the Department of Egyptian,
Classical and Ancient Middle Eastern Art at the Brooklyn Museum of
Art. He earned his PhD from the University of Toronto in Egyptology.
He is organizing the tour for the exhibition Jewish Life in Ancient
Egypt and is the author of The Official Gift in Ancient Egypt,
Ancient Egypt 2615-332 BCE, and the exhibition catalog Jewish Life in
Ancient Egypt.
>
>Cosponsors
>The Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilization, the Jewish
Studies Program, the Comparative Religion Program, and the Burke
Museum of Natural History and Culture.
>
>
>For further information contact:
>
>Scott Noegel
>Dept. Near Eastern Languages & Civilizations
>University of Washington
>Box 353120
>Seattle, WA 98195
>
>Office: 206-543-3606
>Dept: 206-543-6033
>FAX: 206-685-7936
>http://faculty.washington.edu/snoegel/
===================================================
March 15, 2002, Friday
LEISURE/WEEKEND DESK
ART REVIEW; Jews at Peace in Egypt, a Tale Told on Papyrus
By GRACE GLUECK
Led by Moses, the Jews fled en masse from Egypt around 1250 B.C., after centuries of bondage. So says the Bible's book of Exodus. But later books -- II Kings and Jeremiah -- report that 800 years later, during the fifth century B.C., Jews were once again living and worshiping there.
The later biblical account was confirmed by the 1893 discovery of hundreds of papyrus scrolls from a settlement on Elephantine Island in the Nile. Eight were given to the Brooklyn Museum of Art in 1947 by Theodora Wilbour, daughter of Charles Edwin Wilbour, a pioneering American Egyptologist. Ms. Wilbour found them in a trunk after her father's death, but they were not opened and studied until 1953.
Now, thanks to Edward Bleiberg, associate curator of the museum's famed collection of Egyptian and other ancient art, the scrolls are the focus of a small show, ''Jewish Life in Ancient Egypt: A Family Archive From the Nile Valley.'' They tell, over a period of time, the story of Ananiah, a Jewish temple official, and his wife, Tamut, a slave of Meshullam, a military man and fellow Jew. All of them lived on Elephan tine, apparently in harmony with their Egyptian, Greek and Persian neighbors.
The scrolls, written in Aramaic, the daily language of Egyptian Jews and Persians, include a marriage contract, a deed of release from slavery, real estate transactions and a loan agreement, but no other objects associated with the family exist.
Not too visually engaging by themselves, the scrolls have been bolstered by nearly 40 works of ancient Egyptian and Persian art -- from the museum's own collection -- that relate to the life of the period. Further embellishments include a lovely 1870 view of the island with Roman structures by the well-known British photographer Antonio Beato, a lush painting of it done around 1893 by the American Edwin Blashfield (son-in-law of Charles Wilbour) and a padded recent video presentation.
Though thin, the show is of interest not only because its documents confirm the return of Jews to Egypt but also because it points up the good relationships among the various ethnic groups who inhabited the small island. Under the religiously tolerant Persians who ruled Egypt at the time, members of these groups were serving on Elephantine as mercenary forces guarding the country's southern frontier.
Not Ananiah, the scrolls' original owner, however. For 47 years (from 449 to 402 B.C.) he was a member of the Jewish priesthood attached to the Temple of Yahou (Jehovah), where animal sacrifices took place. And what were Jews doing back in Egypt? They were descendants of those who had fled from the Babylonians, who had conquered Jerusalem in 586 B.C. and consigned the Jewish elite to exile in Babylonia. Those who made it to Egypt were the soldiers and common people, who practiced a more rudimentary form of Judaism that still involved the worship of more than one god.
Ananiah first comes to notice in a marriage document dated Aug. 9, 449 by the Aramaic calendar, that legalized his union with Tamut, an Egyptian woman whose father had sold her to Meshullam, a not uncommon practice in payment of debts. By the time they got around to wedlock, the couple already had a 6-year-old son, not an unusual circumstance for that time and place. The contract freed their son, Palti, from slavery, but not Tamut.
Written by Aramaic scribes in proper legalese, all the contracts were signed by witnesses, who seemed to have some literacy. Ananiah's wedding contract provided a small dowry from Tamut, including a wool garment worth seven shekels, a mirror, a pair of sandals and six handfuls of castor oil. This civilized document also declared that if Ananiah wanted a divorce, he had to pay Tamut, or vice versa, and that on the death of one, the other inherited their joint property.
Another important scroll, 427 B.C. and signed by Meshullam, releases Tamut and the couple's daughter, Yehoishema, from their bondage to him. ''You are freed to God,'' says the declaration, on the condition that Tamut and her daughter look to the welfare of Meshullam and his son Zakkur for life.
In 437 B.C., 12 years after his marriage, Ananiah bought a house from Bagazust, a Persian soldier, and his wife. The rather decrepit property was in a town called Khnum, named for an Egyptian god, right across the street from the temple. The sale is recorded in a third papyrus scroll, assuring clear title to the house, which is described as having a court, standing walls and windows, but no beams.
Four more scrolls are concerned with gifts of various parts of the house to Tamut and Yehoishema by Ananiah, and then the sale of the house, in 402 B.C., to Yehoishema's husband, also named Ananiah. (By this time the house had beams and two doors.)
The last of the scrolls, dated 402 B.C., is a receipt for the borrowing of two months' rations of grain by the son-in-law -- at no interest, but with a penalty for failure to repay on time -- from Pakhnum, an Aramaean. Despite the expulsion of the Persians two years earlier, good business relations apparently continued between Jews and other ethnic groups.
Although the papyri, even enlarged, are not much to look at, there are some fine 3-D objects from the museum's vast collection of ancient art. Many of them predate or postdate the period covered here, although a wonderful small but sharply delineated limestone fragment from Persepolis showing a Persian soldier, with stylized hair and beard, comes from Ananiah's time.
So does a headless but still impressive stone statue of Ptahhotep, an Egyptian treasury official, dressed in Persian costume with a Persian bracelet but an Egyptian chest ornament. The sculpture, about one-quarter life size and probably from Memphis, illustrates the accommodating mix of Persian and Egyptian costumes during the period of Egypt's rule by Persian kings.
Not to be overlooked is a quirky sarcophagus lid (664-332 B.C.) topped by an expressive relief face said to be from a Jewish cemetery at Tura, Egypt.
A wooden palette, dating from 404 to 333 B.C., hollowed to hold reed pens and shaped to contain cakes of ink, suggests the typical implement used by the scribes who prepared Ananiah's papyri. And some elegant bowls and a jar of silver and gilded bronze illustrate vessels used in the period, perhaps for offerings to gods.
Several very tiny but finely made objects include an amulet of a kneeling ram (664-332 B.C.) worn for protection by Egyptians (but not Jews), and a ram-headed aegis of about the same period, an iconic protective symbol carried by Egyptian priests. (Rams were sacrificed by Jews as well as Egyptians.) A miniature bronze bull (664-425 B.C.)representing the Egyptian god Apis also dates from the show's period. Slightly earlier (664-525 B.C.) is a statuette of the Egyptian goddess Mut, protector of pregnancy and birth, from whose name Tamut derives.
These and other objects, like an earlier statue (680-650 B.C.) of an Egyptian worshipper, Padimahes, made from a monolithic granite block and depicting him watching a divine procession with his face tilted upward, add depth to the show and make it more of a visual event. But the soul of it is Ananiah's papyri.
''Jewish Life in Ancient Egypt: A Family Archive From the Nile Valley'' remains at the Brooklyn Museum of Art, 200 Eastern Parkway, at Prospect Park, (718) 638-5000, through May 12.
Published: 03 - 15 - 2002 , Late Edition - Final , Section E , Column 1 , Page 41 http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9F03E2D81039F936A25750C0A9649C8B63
After the Persian occupation was a short rule of indigenous pharaohs until the 32nd when Necho II fled Egypt.
When Alexzander the Great invaded Egypt it was under Persian occupation. Egyptians welcome Alexzander against the Persians. Alexzander entrusted Egypt to one of his generals to rule Egypt. The general's name was Ptolomey.
Ptolomey was corinated a pharaoh. Still the
indigenous Egyptians were despised and looked
down upon by the indigenous Ptolomies. Still
marriages between Ptoloemiac and native
Egyptians did exist amungst the elite and
commoners. Only in two regions where Greeks
went back to mainland Greece was such marriage
banned. This means that regions like Naucratis and Alexzandria would not permit marriage between Egyptians and Greek. Greeks were not the only foreigners,and Syrians were settled in assorted regions across Egypt including parts of Middle Egypt like Fayyyum,Minya,and Beni Suef. These mercenaries intermarried with the local population.
See the following:
Minshah (Ptolemais)
In Graeco-Roman times the city of Ptolemais, in Middle Egypt, was the
second or third most important city in Egypt. The remain of Ptolemais
are now buried under the modern town of Minshah, but even on the
modern rubbish dump remains of the ancient city can be found, like
this pillar fragment: Not only on the rubbish dump, but
everywhere in Minshah remnants of its former glory can be seen poking
through the surface, as is true for many places in Egypt. Here two
different types of grinding-stones can be seen laying in one of the
squares of the town with a decorated pillar capital lurking in the
background:
Objective of visit: To evaluate the possibilities for
archaeological fieldwork in Minshah (Ptolemais).
Date of visit: February 2002.
Fellow visitors: Willeke Wendrich.
Results: A concise report and photo-CD.
Approximate position and date of the site: Minshah is
located in Middle Egypt, on the west bank of the Nile about 15 km.
south of Sohag and 120 km. north of Luxor. The remains of Ptolemais,
once one of the most important cities in Egypt, are covered
completely by this modern village. Literary sources indicate that the
ancient city must date to at least the Ptolemaic period (3rd century
BC - 1st century AD), but it was probably also active before and
after that.
Short description of the site: Minshah is a small town with
narrow, unpaved streets. Most older buildings are nicely designed and
well maintained and the streets are kept very clean. The higher,
central parts of the town (the kom or tell) are littered with ancient
worked stones, often moved to the corners of buildings to protect
them from the traffic in the street. In other places ancient remains
can still be seen in situ.
Additional remarks: This work would not have been
possible without the indirect support of the Berenike Project http://www.archbase.com/berenike/index.html and the help of several
individuals, among which Joe Manning.
HOME http://www.barnard.nl/fotos.html http://www.barnard.nl/egypt/index.html http://www.barnard.nl/egypt/index.html http://www.barnard.nl/fotos.html http://www.barnard.nl/fotos.html BACK http://www.barnard.nl/egypt/index.html http://www.barnard.nl/egypt/minshah.htm
In addition to roman high officals,occupying the important
administrative posts in Alexzandria and in the larger towns,and to
more numerous mirrior functionannes,one must also distinguish from
the indigenous populations the Greeks,established in Egypt before the
Ptolomies,and the war veterns. often of diverse origins to whom lands
had been granted . Some of these latter,at Faiyum or Antione,may have
been Romans;others ---as for example ;at Ahnas El medinehin Upper
Egypt--originally came from Palmyra. All brought with them their own
customs ,and doubtless their own relgions,which can be
idenitfied ,even when became intergrated with the relgions of the
country,as is evident at Ahnas El Medineh;
1. E. Drioton 'Art syrien et art copte;B.S.A.C. III 1937 ,pp 29-40
page 72
Du Bourguet, Pierre M., The Art of the Copts. Art of the World
series, New York, Crown Publishers, 1971.
There is another good reason for pausing at Kom Aushim;it is the site
of one of the many towns founded in the Faiyum province during the
Ptolemaic Period. here at Karanis it is still possible to walk along
streets,to step into houses,to saunter in squares,as one can never do
in the Nile valley itself. For this was a town which fell into disuse
and was abandoned in the later Roman Period,to be revealed in modern
times by excavations of the Unversity of Michigan.Like its
foundation here and elsewhere in Egypt,Karanis was essentially a
Greek-speaking towns. On its hieght at Kom Aushim,Karanis lies
approximatley at sea-leavel,but when it was founded,like man of its
fellow,it lay on the edge of the lake ,which at that time was about
six feet below sea-level. it
page 61
Ancient Egypt
The Land and Legacy
T.G.H. James
copyright @ 1988
First Unversity of Texas Press Paperback Printing,1990
A substantial Greek-speaking community exised in Men-nefer,and a
number of mummies incorporating potraits and of portraits taken
from mummies have been found at Saqqara;they probably present us with
the closest we may ever get to the likeness of Memphites.
page
58
Ancient Egypt
The Land and Legacy
T.G.H. James
copyright @ 1988
First Unversity of Texas Press Paperback Printing,1990
Although at the end of the Dyanstic period and in Graeco-Roman times
Saqarra was a bustling place throughout the year with constant
pilgrimages to many shrines ,were troubled souls sought comfort from
the mysteries and incubation treatments available and processions and
very occasionally an Apis funeral as special entertainment,the
district was also probably rather ran down suffering from the
excessive usage of almost three thousand years. To some extent its
bustle its bustle reflected the busy life of the city of Men-
nefer,which remained the most important centre of commerce and
administration untill it was supersededby Alexzandria. It was
huge,amorphus,rambling place,with large ''ghettoes'' made over for
foregin communities---for Greeks,for Jews,for Carians,for
Phonecians.Apart from itws temples it probabaly had few imposing
buildings,and was mostly made up of warren-like districts of narrow
streets and three-storey houses where collapse and rebuilding went
on continuously:unsanitary,smelly,dusty or muddy according to the
season,but full of life and interest.
page 46
Ancient Egypt
The Land and Legacy
T.G.H. James
copyright @ 1988
First Unversity of Texas Press Paperback Printing,1990
5.0105
CLARYSSE, W., Greeks in Ptolemaic Thebes, in: Hundred-Gated Thebes, 1-19. (fig., tables).
On the basis of a database (whose building-up is still in progress) which registers all Greeks attested in Ptolemaic documents from Thebes the author concludes that the Greek-speaking or Greek-named section of the population belonged to the upper layers of society. This small elite was so narrow that name identity (except for the most common) is often indicative of family relationship or even personal identity. They had close links with the native upper class. From the 3rd century B.C. onwards Egyptian scribes took up learning and writing Greek, marrying off their children to immigrants, so that in the late Ptolemaic Period the Greek-speaking upper class was ethnically thoroughly mixed with native families. Culturally they could act two ways: as Greeks in the administration, as Egyptians in the temple and in the family.
Under Roman rule more foreigners were brought into Egypt leaving Roman garrisons across Lower and Middle Egypt. During this time Fellahin Egyptians were barred acess to Alexzandria unless they were serving the Romans.
See the following:
From the cemetary at Mallawi [near Beni Suef] which was once the
location of a Roman garrison.
Page 45
Rosalie David Handbook to Life in Ancient Egypt
One old man with long hair and a white beard ,who had been a member
of the local community of foreign Christains which had established
itself near the temple of Philae,is the oldest example and one of the
best illustrations of a case of gout;enormous whitish concretions of
urate of lime had gathered on his feet,especially round his big toe
and also at the ankle ,while chalky ,masses could still be seen
deforming his knee-caps and ankles.
page 43
Ange-Pierre Leca: The Egyptian Way of Death: Mummies and the Cult of
the Immortal
Garden City, NY: Doubleday & Company, 1981. Reveals the beliefs,
techniques and rituals comprising the elaborate process of
mummification. 292 pages
In Later times right before the Arab invasion of Egypt there were loads of Syrians,Greeks,and other groups in Lower Egypt.
During the Arab rule in Egypt under the Abbasid and Umayyad brought Arab groups into Egypt and even distributed them across Egypt. Eventually, these Arab troops were replaced with Turks and the remaining Arabs either stayed in parts of Middle Egypt or went to Northern Africa and Sudan. The bedouin population in modern Sudan,exlucuding the Rashaida, all claim desent from bedouin groups driven from parts of Upper Egypt.
See the following:
Arab colonization began with the conquest ,and was encouraged by the
Ummayyad Caliphs,notably by Hisham[reigned 724-43],who in 727
authorized the planned migration and settlement of several thousand
Arabs of the Yemenite tribe of Qays in the Nile Valley. During the
eight century and ninth century large numbers of Arab
tribesmen,mainly of Yemenite origin,migrate to Egypt,where many of
them settled on land.
page 457
Harris, J R, ed. (1971) The legacy of Egypt. Oxford
The Arab conquest of Egypt in 640-42,was cocrrently ,the first major bedouin migrations to the Nile Valley. The conquering army was made up very largely of tribemen,apparentenly drawn indiscrimatley from most of the tribesmen of the Arabian Peninsula.. By 642,they are said to have numbered nearly 20,000[15]. This is the figure usually given as the size of the Moselem army which unsucessully invaded Nubia in 642[Chapter 14] [16]. How many of these immigrants settled down in Egypt after the conquest is impossible to say,but probabaly the majority did so.
During the next twqo centuries their numbers sweled through immigration. According to MacMichael,'The cheif occasions of the immigration were the arivals of the new govenors : each one came escorted by an aqrmy of anything up to 20,000 men,many of whom never returned to Syria or Arabia. A portion of the hordes were Persian,Turkish and other tribes, but the majority here Arabs and would normally be members of the govenor's own tribe[17]. In addition to these regular increments numbers of the Qays Alan tribe were induced to settle Lower Egypt as a counter weight to the influcence of the creasingly rebellious Copts. For from reinforcing the security of the control goverment,however,the tribesmen became a pereenial of rebellion.[18]
In the beginning most of the Arabs in Egypt did not go to join the nomad groups alkready resident in the Red Sea Hills and the Western Oases,for unlike bedouins they were not obliged to support themselves entirely or even primarily by pastorial activties They were installed as irregular garrison forces and the provinces of Lower and Middle Egypt,as other Arab groups were similarily installed in the conquest of Iraq and Syria. this enabled them to graze such animals as they had along the margins and over harvested fields of the Nile Valley,with of without the consent of the Fellaheen. More importdantly,to exact tribute from the Fellaheen themselkves.
The Arabs in Egypt,like many other nomad groups before and since,lived more as parasites than as pastoralists
. In order to mainstain their millitary effectiveness and mobility ,the Arabs in Egypt were forbidden to own land or engage in cultivation .[19] This short sighted policy was ro prove diastrous for civil order. The Arabs were not cut out by training or tradition for the military role which was assigned them once the wars or conquest were over; they were too unruly to serve as provincial garrisons and too undependable to serve as house hold troop
. At the same time the prohibition against holding land precluded their settling down to a useful life within the conquered provinces,and pratically condemed them to return to the predatory times,even had they wished to otherwise
. After the Abbsaid revolution of 750[20] the Arabs found their military role increasingly pre-empted by slave armies of Persian and Turkish origin. The long series of Arab revolts which further alienated the tribes from goverment which they had helped to create. Finally in A.D. 834 ,'Caliph al-Mutasin inaugerated his rule by dispatching an order to his governor of Egypt to strike off the names of all Arabs from the register of pensions and stoip paying their salaries. This was indeed a turning point in the history of Arabs in Egypt . In short,their service as fighters was no longer needed:they were replaced by Turkish military slaves ..........[21] The disaplecement of Arabs reached its culmination in 868 when one of the Turkish govenors of Egypt,Ibn Tulan,renouched his allegiances to the Caliph and founded the first Egypt's Turkish dyansties.
Not suprisngly,many of the discontended and dispossed Arabs began drifting awayt from the Nile Valley and back to nomadic life of earlier times. Some followed the Nile to the relatively freer region of Upper Egypt;others moved to Northern Africa,incidentially over running and Arabizing many of the Berber tribes;still others joined Beja in the eastern hills and along the Red Sea coast.
At the beginning of the ninth century most of the Beja who dwelt in the Red Sea Hills were still pagans,although, a few had adpted a nominal Christianityand others,particulary in the coastl districts,may already have embraced Islam[23]. The tribe soon continued to raid Upper Egypt when opportunity presented itself,and in 831 a punative campaign was under taken against them by Caliph al-Mutasim. According to Yusuf Hassan,this was the decisive event in opening up the Red Sea Hills to Arab settlement
The Beja were defeated and were forced to sign a capitulation recognicing the caliph as their suzerain and paying an annual tribute. The agreement contained many of the same stipulation as did the baqt treaty with the Nubians,[25],but it was a unilateral capitulation which guaranteed nothing to the Beja in return for their submission. The tribesmen were forbidden to enter the village and towns of Egypt,but there was no provision,as in the case with Nubians,against the Egyptians or Arabs to entering and settling the country of the Beja. According to Hassan,'By agreeing to pay tribute the beja were treated as a conquered people. When Kannun[the principal Beja Cheif] recognized the Abbasaid overlordship and became a vassal,the victorious Arabs found an opportunity to extend their own influce ,at least on paper,as far south as Badi. Arab gains were thus immence and the treaty acted as a spearhead which opened up the country to Arab influce . Arabs were free to move about the area or to settle ;their commercial interests,religious freedom,and personal safety were all safeguarded by their agreement[26] MacMichael adds that'The cheif result to Egypt was a cessation ofg the raids on her southern broder,and to the beja the acquisition of all tribal control by an Arab aristocracy.''[27]
551-554
W.Y. Adams
Nubia Corridor to Africa
The Tulunid dyansty in Egypt established independence from the Abbasaid Caliph. The rulers of this dyansty were Turkish in origin.
Later the Fatimid caliph coming from Tunisa established modern day Cairo. Many foreign mercenaries during this time were brought in that included Aremnian,Greek,Sudanese[Nubian],Turkish,and also plenty of European slaves.
See the following:
Al-Qahira
Literally meaning "the Victorious" , al-Qahira was Egypt's fourth
Islamic capital after al-Fustat, al-Askar and al-Qataii. Al-Qahira
is today called Cairo among English speakers. The fortified princely
city built by the Fatimids in 969 A.D. and completed in 971 A.D. was
divided in four quarters by the Fatimid army, and encompassing
communities of Greeks, ethnic Europeans, Armenians, Berbers, Sudanese
and Turks. The core of the city Bayn al-Qasrayn ("Between the Two
Palaces") was a square separating the Eastern and Western palace that
was halfway along its main street (Now Sharia al-Muizz - Walk 1) that
stretched from Bab al-Futuh North to Bab Zuwayla South.
http://www.aucegypt.edu/walking_tours/cairo/glossary/glossary.html
Also brought during the Fatimid times were Berber troops from Morocco.
Meanwhile in Upper Egypt, around the 1200's came a sufi mystic Abul'Hagag that converted the local population in this region to sufism. Of course ancient traditions did not die,for the local mouled in this area still has traces of the old religion.
In Later periods Mamelukes begin to take over in Egypt. The Mamelukes were a combination of Kipak Turks and Circussian[literally people from the caucaos mountains]. Many of these people were blonde haired and blue eyed people. Many prominent families in Egypt,Jordan,and Palestine trace their ancestry to these people.
See the following:
Bahri Mamluks
A succession of strong Mamluk sultans, originally Mamluk slaves
based on barracks in Rhoda Island and hence named Bahri (Arabic for
river), who took over control of Egypt and Syria from 1250 to 1382
A.D. Their reign was characterized by relative stability and
prosperity on the internal arena and powerful military control on
the external level defeating enemy threats. http://www.aucegypt.edu/walking_tours/cairo/glossary/glossary.html
Burgi Mamluks (Circassian)
The turbulent Circassian Mamluk regime that took over the Bahri
Mamluks from 1382 to 1517 A.D. was also known as Burgi Mamluk since
they were based in the towers (Burg) of the Citadel. The reign was
characterized by epidemic outbreaks, heavy taxation to make up for
the decline in revenues that followed the discovery of a new trade
route to India.