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Egyptian Greeks

The Egyptian Greeks, also known as Egyptiotes (Greek: Αιγυπτιώτες), or simply Greeks in Egypt (Greek: Έλληνες της Αιγύπτου), are the ethnic Greek community from Egypt that has existed from the Hellenistic period until the aftermath of the Egyptian coup d'état of 1952, when most were forced to leave.

Egyptian Greeks
Έλληνες της Αιγύπτου
Total population
200,000 (1920)[1] 300,000+ (c. 1940)[2] estimates vary between 5,000–60,000[3][4][5][6] (today)
Regions with significant populations
Alexandria, Cairo
Languages
Greek · Egyptian Arabic · French · English
Religion
Coptic Orthodox Church · Greek Orthodox Church · Greek Catholic Church · Sunni Islam · Shia Islam
Related ethnic groups
African Greeks · Ethiopian Greeks, Sudanese Greeks · Roman Africans

Antiquity edit

Greeks have been present in Egypt since at least the 7th century BC. Herodotus visited ancient Egypt in the 5th century BC and claimed that the Greeks were one of the first groups of foreigners that ever lived there.[7] Diodorus Siculus claimed that Rhodian Actis, one of the Heliadae, built the city of Heliopolis before the cataclysm; likewise the Athenians built Sais. Siculus reports that all the Greek cities were destroyed during the cataclysm, but the Egyptian cities including Heliopolis and Sais survived.[8]

First historical colonies edit

According to Herodotus (ii. 154), King Psammetichus I (664–610 BC) established a garrison of foreign mercenaries at Daphnae, mostly Carians and Ionian Greeks.

In 7th century BC, after the Greek Dark Ages from 1100 to 750 BC, the city of Naucratis was founded in Ancient Egypt. It was located on the Canopic branch of the Nile river, 45 mi (72 km) from the open sea. It was the first and, for much of its early history, the only permanent Greek colony in Egypt; acting as a symbiotic nexus for the interchange of Greek and Egyptian art and culture.

At about the same time, the city of Heracleion, the closest to the sea, became an important port for Greek trade. It had a famous temple of Heracles. The city later sank into the sea, only to be rediscovered recently.

From the time of Psammetichus I onwards, Greek mercenary armies played an important role in some of the Egyptian wars. One such army was led by Mentor of Rhodes. Another such personage was Phanes of Halicarnassus.

Hellenistic times edit

Rule of Alexander the Great (332–323 BC) edit

Alexander the Great conquered Egypt at an early stage of his conquests. He respected the pharaonic religions and customs and he was proclaimed Pharaoh of Egypt. He established the city of Alexandria. After his death, in 323 BC, his empire was divided among his generals. Egypt was given to Ptolemy I Soter, whose descendants would establish Egypt's last royal dynasty. This dynasty was composed solely of ethnic Greeks and produced dynasts such as Cleopatra. Its capital was Alexandria. Ptolemy added legitimacy to his rule in Egypt by acquiring Alexander's body. He intercepted the embalmed corpse on its way to burial, brought it to Egypt, and placed it in a golden coffin in Alexandria. It would remain one of the famous sights of the town for many years, until probably destroyed in riots in the 3rd century AD.[9]

The Ptolemaic Empire (323–30 BC) edit

 
Ptolemaic soldiers in tunic, 100 BC, detail of the Nile mosaic of Palestrina.

The initial objective of Ptolemy's reign was to establish firm and broad boundaries to his newly acquired kingdom. That led to almost continuous warfare against other leading members of Alexander's circle. At times he held Cyprus and even parts of mainland Greece. When these conflicts were over, he was firmly in control of Egypt and had strong claims (disputed by the Seleucid dynasty) to Palestine. He called himself king of Egypt from 306 BC. By the time he abdicated in 285 BC, in favour of one of his sons, the Ptolemaic dynasty was secure. Ptolemy and his descendants showed respect to Egypt's most cherished traditions – those of religion – and turned them to their own advantage.

Alexandria became the centre of the Greek and Hellenistic world and the centre of international commerce, art and science. The Lighthouse of Alexandria was one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World while during the reign of Ptolemy II Philadelphus, the Library of Alexandria was the biggest library in the world until it was destroyed. The last Pharaoh was a Greek princess, Cleopatra VII, who took her own life in 30 BC, a year after the battle of Actium.[9]

Roman and Byzantine Egypt edit

 
Mummy portrait of a youth with the Greek inscription "Artemidorus, Farewell", 2nd c. AD.[10]
 
Mummy portrait of a boy named Eutyches (Εὐτυχής), 2nd c. AD.[11]

Under Greco-Roman rule, Egypt hosted several Greek settlements, mostly concentrated in Alexandria, but also in a few other cities, where Greek settlers lived alongside some seven to ten million native Egyptians.[12] Faiyum's earliest Greek inhabitants were soldier-veterans and cleruchs (elite military officials) who were settled by the Ptolemaic kings on reclaimed lands.[13][14] Native Egyptians also came to settle in Faiyum from all over the country, notably the Nile Delta, Upper Egypt, Oxyrhynchus and Memphis, to undertake the labor involved in the land reclamation process, as attested by personal names, local cults and recovered papyri.[15]

Coptic Greeks edit

 
Mummy portrait of a woman named Isarous (Ἰσαροῦς), late 1st c. AD.[16]

It is estimated that as much as 30 percent of the population of Faiyum was Greek during the Ptolemaic period, with the rest being native Egyptians;[17] the Faiyum mummy portraits reflect the complex synthesis of the predominant Egyptian culture and that of the elite Egyptian Greek minority in Faiyum.[17]

By the Roman period, much of the "Greek" population of Faiyum was made up of either Hellenized Egyptians or people of mixed Egyptian-Greek origins,[18] and by the time of Roman emperor Caracalla in the 2nd century AD, ethnic Egyptians could be distinguished from Egyptian Greeks only by their speech.[19]

Egyptian Greek is the variety of Greek spoken in Egypt from antiquity until the Islamic conquest of Egypt in the 7th century. Egyptian Greek adopted many loanwords from Egyptian language; there was a great deal of intracommunity bilingualism in Egypt.[20][21]

The following is an example of Egyptian Greek language, used in the Coptic Church:

ⲇⲟⲝⲁ ⲡⲁⲧⲣⲓ ⲕⲉ ⲩⲓⲱ: ⲕⲉ ⲁ̀ⲅⲓⲱ ⲡⲛⲉⲩⲙⲁⲧⲓ: ⲕⲉ ⲛⲩⲛ ⲕⲉ ⲁ̀ⲓ̀ ⲕⲉ ⲓⲥ ⲧⲟⲩⲥ ⲉⲱⲛⲁⲥ ⲧⲱⲛ ⲉ̀ⲱ̀ⲛⲱⲛ ⲁ̀ⲙⲏⲛ

Δόξα Πατρὶ κὲ Υἱῷ κὲ Ἁγίῳ Πνεύματι, κὲ νῦν κὲ ἀῒ κὲ ἰς τοὺς ἐῶνας τῶν ἐώνων. Ἀμήν.

Glory to the Father, to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit, both now and always, and unto the ages of ages. Amen.

According to Walker, early Ptolemaic Greek colonists married local women and adopted Egyptian religious beliefs, and by Roman times, their descendants were viewed as Egyptians by the Roman rulers, despite their own self-perception of being Greek.[22] The dental morphology of the Roman-period Faiyum mummies was also compared with that of earlier Egyptian populations, and was found to be "much more closely akin" to that of ancient Egyptians than to Greeks or other European populations.[23][24] Victor J. Katz notes that "research in papyri dating from the early centuries of the common era demonstrates that a significant amount of intermarriage took place between the Greek and Egyptian communities".[25]

Medieval Islamic and Ottoman era edit

Greek culture and political influence continued and perhaps reached some of its most influential times during the Ottoman Caliphate, which witnessed many Ottoman Sultans and Pashas of Greek ancestry rule over the Ottoman Empire in general, and Egypt in particular. Other notable Greeks in Egypt during the Ottoman period included Damat Hasan Pasha from the Morea, a governor of Egypt. Raghib Pasha, born in Greece to Greek parents, served as Prime Minister of Egypt. During the Ottoman Caliphate, Pargalı Ibrahim Pasha, Grand Vizier to Suleiman the Magnificent from 1520 to 1566, is perhaps the best known.

Many Greek Muslims from Crete (often confusingly called Cretan Turks) were resettled in Egypt, Libya, Lebanon, and Syria by Sultan Abdul Hamid II after the Greco-Turkish War of 1897 that resulted in the autonomy of Crete (see the example of al-Hamidiyah, a largely Cretan Greek Muslim village in Syria).

Modern times edit

Greek community edit

In 1920, approximately 200,000 Greeks lived in Egypt. By c. 1940, the Greeks numbered about 300,000. The Greek community in Alexandria lived around the church and convent of Sabbas the Sanctified. In the same area there was a guest house for Greek travelers, a Greek hospital and later a Greek school. The Greek Orthodox bishop was based in Damietta in the church of Nikolaos of Myrna.

In Cairo, the first organised Greek community was founded in 1856, with the community based in three main neighbourhoods: Tzouonia, Haret el Roum (Street of the Greeks), and in Hamzaoui. The patriarchate was based in Saint Nicholas Greek Orthodox Cathedral, Hamzaoui. The monastery of Saint George, in Old Cairo still survives. The monastery is surrounded by a huge wall and topped by a stone tower. Within its walls there was a Greek hospital, a school and housing for the elderly and poor.

In addition to the Greek communities of Alexandria and Cairo, there were the organised Greek communities of Mansoura, founded in 1860, Port Said, founded in 1870, Tanta in 1880, and the community of Zagazig in 1850. There were fifteen smaller communities across Egypt and mainly around Cairo and Alexandria. In Upper Egypt, the oldest ancient Greek community was the one of Minia which was founded in 1812.

The first banks in Egypt were crafted by Greeks, including the Bank of Alexandria, the Anglo-Egyptian bank (Sunadinos family / Συναδινός), and the General Bank of Alexandria. Also, it was the Greek agriculturists and farmers that first systematically and with scientific planning, cultivated cotton and tobacco. They improved the quantity and quality of production and dominated cotton and tobacco exports. Notable families in tobacco commerce were the Salvagos (Σαλβάγκος), Benakis (Μπενάκης), Rodochanakis (Ροδοχανάκης) and Zervoudachis (Ζερβουδάκης).[26] The tobacco cultivars used for cigarette manufacturing, e.g., by Kyriazi Freres, were of Greek origin. A thriving commerce between Greece and Egypt was thus established. Other areas of interest for the Greeks in Egypt were foods, wine, soap, wood crafts, printing.

 
Constantine P. Cavafy

In the food industry, the macaroni industries of Melachrinos (Μελαχροινός) and Antoniadis (Αντωνιάδης) were well known. Another example was the cheese and butter production of Argyriou (Αργυρίου), Roussoglou (Ρουσσόγλου) and Paleoroutas (Παλαιορούτας). Chocolate-Biscuits and Toffee producers were: Daloghlou (Δαλόγλου), Russos (Ρούσσος), Repapis (Ρεπάπης); Oil-soaps-vegetable fats (Salt & Soda) producers like Zerbinis (Ζερμπίνης) were based in Kafr al-Zayat. There were many Greek theatres and cinemas. Major Greek newspapers were Ta grammata (Τα Γράμματα), Tachydromos (Ταχυδρόμος), and Nea Zoe (Νέα Ζωή).[27][28][29] The Greek community in Egypt has produced numerous artists, writers, diplomats and politicians, the most famous being the poet Constantine P. Cavafy (Κωνσταντίνος Καβάφης), also the painter Konstantinos Parthenis (Κωνσταντίνος Παρθένης).

During the Balkan Wars, the Greek communities of Egypt sent volunteers, funded hospitals, and accommodated families of the soldiers. During World War II (1940–1945), more than 7000 Greeks fought for the Allies in the Middle East; 142 died. Their financial contribution reached 2500 million Egyptian pounds.[30] After the Suez Crisis, the British and French laborers left while the Greeks stayed.[31]

Patriarchate of Alexandria edit

Benefactors edit

 
Dionysios Kasdaglis, ethnic Greek Egyptian tennis player at the Athens Olympics in 1896

The emergence of a Greek aristocracy of rich industrialists, commercants and bankers created the legacy of Greek-Egyptian philanthropism. These benefactors donated large amounts for the building of schools, academies, hospitals and institutions in both Egypt and Greece. Michail Tositsas donated large amounts for the building of the Athens University, the Amalio Orphanage and the Athens Polytechnic. His wife Eleni Tositsa donated the land for the National Archaeological Museum of Athens. George Averoff also contributed to the building of the National Technical University of Athens, the Evelpidon Military Academy and the donation of the cruiser Averoff to the Hellenic Navy. Emmanouil Benakis contributed to the building of the National Gallery of Athens, while his son Antonis Benakis was the founder of the Benaki Museum. Other major benefactors include Nikolaos Stournaras, Theodoros Kotsikas, Nestoras Tsanaklis, Konstantinos Horemis, Stefanos Delta, Penelope Delta, Pantazis Vassanis and Vassilis Sivitanidis.[26]

Exodus from Egypt edit

The exodus of Greeks from Egypt started before the coup d'état of 1952. With the establishment of the new sovereign regime of Gamal Abdel Nasser, rise of Pan-Arab nationalism, and the subsequent nationalisation of many industries in 1961 and 1963, thousands of Greek employees decided to emigrate. Many of them emigrated to Australia, the United States, Canada, South Africa, Western Europe, and Greece. Many Greek schools, churches, small communities and institutions subsequently closed, but many continue to function to this day. The Nasser regime saw a big exodus of the Greeks from Egypt, but most of the minority left the country either before or after the period 1952–1970. The Arab-Israeli wars of 1956 and 1967 contributed to the uprooting of the sizeable Greek community in the Suez Canal cities, especially Port Said.[citation needed]

Today edit

Today the Greek community numbers officially about 5,000 people,[32] with independent estimates ranging to 60,000.[6] Many of Greek origin are now counted as Egyptian, having changed their nationality. In Alexandria, apart from the Patriarchate, there is a Patriarchal theology school that opened recently after 480 years being closed. Saint Nicholas church in Cairo and several other buildings in Alexandria have been recently renovated by the Greek Government and the Alexander S. Onassis Foundation. Saint George's church in Old Cairo is undergoing restoration to end in 2014. During the last decade, there has been a new interest from the Egyptian government for a diplomatic rapprochement with Greece and this has positively affected the Greek Diaspora. The Diaspora has received official visits of many Greek politicians. Economic relationships between Greece and Egypt have expanded. As of 2010, Egypt has received major Greek investments in banking, tourism, paper, the oil industry, & many others. In 2009, a five-year cooperation-memorandum was signed among the NCSR Demokritos Institute in Agia Paraskevi, Athens and the University of Alexandria, regarding Archeometry research and contextual sectors.[33]

Census edit

Number of Greeks according to the Census in Egypt.

Number of Greeks in Egypt 1907–1960[34]
Egypt 1907 1927 1937 1947 1960 1967
Greeks 62,973 76,264 68,559 57,427 47,673 17,000


Notable Greeks from Egypt edit

Greeks of Cyrene (the Cyrenaica is a region corresponding to modern eastern Libya) are also included, as during antiquity it held close relations to the Egyptian kingdoms, and at some points, also used to be a part of the Ptolemaic Kingdom. The presence of an asterisk (*) next to a person's name denotes that the person was born outside of Egypt, however the most part of this person's life or most important work occurred while in Egypt.

Antiquity

7th - 1st century B.C.E

Roman and Byzantine era

1st - 7th century C.E.

Arab Caliphate &

Ottoman era

7th - 19th century [35]

Contemporary

20th - 21st century

Battus I of Cyrene *

Ruler, 7th century B.C.E., Cyrene

  Hero of Alexandria

Engineer, 1st century B.C.E. or C.E., Alexandria

Jean Dessès

Fashion designer, 1904 - 1970, Alexandria

Theodorus of Cyrene

Mathematician, 5th century B.C.E., Cyrene

  Philo

Philosopher, 20 B.C.E - 50 C.E., Alexandria

  Aristippus

Philosopher, 435 - 356 B.C.E., Cyrene

Chaeremon of Alexandria

Philosopher, 1st century C.E., Alexandria

  Alexander Iolas

Art collector, 1907 - 1987, Alexandria

Aristaeus the Elder *

Mathematician, 370 - 300 B.C.E., Alexandria

Menelaus of Alexandria

Mathematician, 70 - 140 C.E., Alexandria

  George Averoff *

Businessman, 1815 - 1899, Alexandria

Kimon Evan Marengo

Cartoonist, 1907 - 1988, Zifta

  Ptolemy I Soter *

Ruler, 367 - 282 B.C.E., Alexandria

  Ptolemy

Geographer, 90 - 168 C.E., Alexandria

Emmanouil Benakis *

Politician, 1843 - 1929, Alexandria

  Nikos Tsiforos

Director, 1909 - 1970, Alexandria

Philitas of Cos *

Poet, 340 - 285 B.C.E., Alexandria

Sosigenes of Alexandria

Astronomer, 1st century C.E., Alexandria

  Ioannis Pesmazoglou *

Economist, 1857 - 1906, Alexandria

Theodorus the Atheist

Philosopher, 340 - 250 B.C.E., Cyrene

Thrasyllus of Mendes

Mathematician, 1st century C.E., Alexandria

  Euclid *

Mathematician, 325 - 265 B.C.E., Alexandria

  Clement of Alexandria

Theologian, 150 - 211 C.E., Alexandria

  Constantine Cavafy

Poet, 1863 - 1933, Alexandria

Mary Giatra Lemou

Author, 1915 - 1989, Alexandria

Magas of Cyrene

Ruler, 317 - 250 B.C.E., Cyrene

  Origen

Theologian, 185 - 251 C.E., Alexandria

Antonis Benakis

Businessman, 1873 - 1954, Alexandria

Dinos Iliopoulos

Actor, 1915 - 2001, Alexandria

  Ptolemy II Philadelphus *

Ruler, 309 - 246 B.C.E., Alexandria

  Plotinus

Philosopher, 203 - 270 C.E., Alexandria

Dimitrios Kasdaglis *

Athlete, 1872 - 1931, Alexandria

Callimachus

Poet, 305 - 240 B.C.E., Cyrene

  Diophantus

Mathematician, ~210 - ~290 C.E., Alexandria

  Penelope Delta

Author, 1874 - 1941, Alexandria

Voula Zouboulaki

Actor, 1924, Cairo

  Ctesibius

Engineer, 285 - 222 B.C.E., Alexandria

  Catherine of Alexandria

Theologian, 282 - 305 C.E., Alexandria

  Konstantinos Parthenis

Painter, 1878 - 1967, Alexandria

Jani Christou

Composer, 1926 - 1970, Cairo

Conon of Samos *

Astronomer, 280 - 220 B.C.E., Alexandria

Pappus of Alexandria

Mathematician, 290 - 350 C.E., Alexandria

  Konstantinos Tsaldaris

Politician, 1884 - 1970, Alexandria

  Nelly Mazloum

Dancer, 1929 - 2003, Alexandria [36]

  Eratosthenes

Mathematician, 276 - 194 B.C.E., Alexandria

Theon of Alexandria

Mathematician, 335 - 405 C.E., Alexandria

  Constantin Xenakis

Artist, 1931, Cairo

Apollonius of Rhodes

Poet, 3rd century B.C.E., Alexandria

  Hypatia

Mathematician, 370 - 416 C.E., Alexandria

Sostratus of Cnidus *

Engineer, 3rd century B.C.E., Alexandria

Palladas

Poet, 4th century C.E., Alexandria

Antigone Costanda

Model, 1934, Alexandria

Hypsicles

Mathematician, 190 - 120 B.C.E., Alexandria

Isidore of Alexandria

Philosopher, 450 - 520 C.E., Alexandria

  Georges Moustaki

Singer, 1934 - 2013, Alexandria

Dionysius of Cyrene

Mathematician, 2nd century B.C.E., Cyrene

Hierocles of Alexandria

Philosopher, 5th century C.E., Alexandria

Eudorus of Alexandria

Philosopher, 1st century B.C.E., Alexandria

Hesychius of Alexandria

Author, 5th century C.E., Alexandria

Manos Loïzos

Composer, 1937 - 1982, Alexandria

Aretaphila of Cyrene

Revolutionary, 1st century B.C.E., Cyrene

George Leonardos

Author, 1937, Alexandria

  Cleopatra VII

Ruler, 69 - 30 B.C.E., Alexandria

Clea Badaro

Painter, 1913 - 1968, Alexandria

Nikos Perakis

Director, 1944, Alexandria

  Demetrio Stratos

Singer, 1945 - 1979, Alexandria

  Demis Roussos

Singer, 1946 - 2015, Alexandria

Andreas Gerasimos Michalitsianos

Astronomer, 1947 - 1997, Alexandria

Nora Valsami

Actress, 1948, Cairo

  Alkistis Protopsalti

Singer, 1954, Alexandria

Alex Proyas

Director, 1963, Cairo

Dimos Starenios

theater-cinema actor born 15 Sept 1909 Cairo died 23 Oct 1983 Athens

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Pelt, Mogens (1998). Tobacco, Arms, and Politics: Greece and Germany from World Crisis to World War, 1929-41. Museum Tusculanum Press. p. 480. ISBN 978-87-7289-450-8. [...] the total Greek population in Egypt numbered about 200,000 in 1920.
  2. ^ Sadat, Jehan (2002). A Woman of Egypt. Simon and Schuster. p. 46. ISBN 978-0-7432-3708-6. The rest of Egypt was divided by King Farouk into two classes [...] Egypt had long been an international crossroads, with more than 300,000 Greeks, 100,000 Italians, 50,000 stateless Jews and thousands more who carried French and British passports settling in Cairo and Alexandria after World War I. Many Cypriots, Maltese and North African Arabs had also made their homes in Egypt.
  3. ^ English version of Greek Ministry of Foreign Affairs reports a few thousand http://www.mfa.gr/missionsabroad/en/egypt-en/bilateral-relations/cultural-relations-and-greek-community.html and Greek version 3.800 http://www.mfa.gr/dimereis-sheseis-tis-ellados/aigyptos/morphotikes-politistikes-sxeseis-kai-apodimos-ellinismos.html 2020-08-07 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ Number higher when counting those who have taken Egyptian citizenship
  5. ^ Rippin, Andrew (2008). World Islam: Critical Concepts in Islamic Studies. Routledge. p. 77. ISBN 978-0415456531.
  6. ^ a b Project, Joshua. "Greeks in Egypt". joshuaproject.net. Retrieved 2021-11-13.
  7. ^ Α΄ Η διαχρονική πορεία του ελληνισμού στην Αφρική 2012-05-24 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ The Historical Library of Diodorus Siculus, Book V,57.
  9. ^ a b "HISTORY OF EGYPT". www.historyworld.net. Retrieved 2018-03-17.
  10. ^ "human mummy; cartonnage; mummy-case | British Museum". The British Museum. Retrieved 2023-05-20.
  11. ^ "Portrait of the Boy Eutyches | Roman Period". The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved 2023-05-20.
  12. ^ Adams, Winthrope L in Bugh, Glenn Richard. ed. "The Hellenistic Kingdoms". The Cambridge Companion to the Hellenistic World. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 2006, p. 39
  13. ^ Stanwick, Paul Edmund. Portraits of the Ptolemies: Greek Kings as Egyptian Pharaohs. Austin: University of Texas Press. 2003, p. 23
  14. ^ Adams, op cit.
  15. ^ Bagnall, R.S. in Susan Walker, ed. Ancient Faces : Mummy Portraits in Roman Egypt (Metropolitan Museum of Art Publications). New York: Routledge, 2000, p. 27
  16. ^ Amin, Osama Shukir Muhammed. "Female Mummy Portrait, Hawara". World History Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2023-05-20.
  17. ^ a b Bagnall, op cit.
  18. ^ Bagnall, pp. 28–29
  19. ^ qtd. in Alan K. Bowman, Egypt after the Pharaohs, 332 BC – AD 642, Berkeley: University of California Press, 1996, p. 126: "genuine Egyptians can easily be recognized among the linen-weavers by their speech."
  20. ^ Lennart Sundelin; Petra Sijpesteijn (2004). Papyrology and the History of Early Islamic Egypt. Brill. p. 165.
  21. ^ Lennart Sundelin; Petra Sijpesteijn (2020). Varieties of Post-classical and Byzantine Greek. De Gruyter. p. 447.
  22. ^ Walker, Susan, op cit., p. 24
  23. ^ Dentition helps archaeologists to assess biological and ethnic population traits and relationships
  24. ^ Irish JD (2006). "Who were the ancient Egyptians? Dental affinities among Neolithic through postdynastic peoples.". Am J Phys Anthropol 129 (4): 529-43
  25. ^ Victor J. Katz (1998). A History of Mathematics: An Introduction, p. 184. Addison Wesley, ISBN 0-321-01618-1: "But what we really want to know is to what extent the Alexandrian mathematicians of the period from the first to the fifth centuries C.E. were Greek. Certainly, all of them wrote in Greek and were part of the Greek intellectual community of Alexandria. And most modern studies conclude that the Greek community coexisted [...] So should we assume that Ptolemy and Diophantus, Pappus and Hypatia were ethnically Greek, that their ancestors had come from Greece at some point in the past but had remained effectively isolated from the Egyptians? It is, of course, impossible to answer this question definitively. But research in papyri dating from the early centuries of the common era demonstrates that a significant amount of intermarriage took place between the Greek and Egyptian communities [...] And it is known that Greek marriage contracts increasingly came to resemble Egyptian ones. In addition, even from the founding of Alexandria, small numbers of Egyptians were admitted to the privileged classes in the city to fulfill numerous civic roles. Of course, it was essential in such cases for the Egyptians to become "Hellenized," to adopt Greek habits and the Greek language. Given that the Alexandrian mathematicians mentioned here were active several hundred years after the founding of the city, it would seem at least equally possible that they were ethnically Egyptian as that they remained ethnically Greek. In any case, it is unreasonable to portray them with purely European features when no physical descriptions exist."
  26. ^ a b "kathimerini.gr | Αιγυπτιώτης Eλληνισμός· κοιτίδα ευεργετισμού". Archived from the original on January 7, 2013.
  27. ^ "Blogger". accounts.google.com.
  28. ^ Sarah Abrevaya Stein (2003). Making Jews Modern The Yiddish and Ladino Press in the Russian and Ottoman Empires. Indiana University Press. p. 63.
  29. ^ Edmund Keeley (1996). Cavafy's Alexandria Expanded Edition. Princeton University Press. pp. 10, 22.
  30. ^ Η προσφορά του Ελληνισμού της Αιγύπτου στο Β΄Παγκόσμιο Πόλεμο 2007-09-27 at the Wayback Machine
  31. ^ "Αρχαία Αίγυπτος". www.neo.gr. Retrieved 2018-03-17.
  32. ^ "The Lighthouse Dims". Foreign Policy. Retrieved 2018-03-17.
  33. ^ Cooperation memorandum signed among NCSR D and Alexandria University, Egypt 2009-07-05 at the Wayback Machine 29/1/2009, retrieved on 31/1/2009
  34. ^ Dalachanis, Angelos (2017). The Greek Exodus from Egypt: Diaspora Politics and Emigration, 1937-1962. Berghahn Books. p. 3, 230. ISBN 9781785334481.
  35. ^ While creating the table entries, it was very hard to find any details for Greeks in Egypt during the Arab and later Ottoman period. This may be due to the Islamic practice where the subjects of a kingdom adopt Islamic names, thus making it hard to distinguish nationality by name. With the French and English interventions in Egypt during the 18th and 19th century, the first Greek organised communities arise, giving a lot of information about Greek Egyptians of this era.
  36. ^ . Archived from the original on 2015-01-31. Retrieved 2014-12-13.

Sources edit

  • Dalachanis, Angelos (2017). The Greek Exodus from Egypt: Diaspora Politics and Emigration 1937-1962. London: Berghann. ISBN 978-1-78533-447-4.

External links edit

  • The Greek community of Alexandria official website
  • Greeks in Egypt-Greek communities Blog
  • Pyramis - online newspaper of the Greek community in Egypt
  • Collection of Books and Documents concerning Greeks in Egypt - ANEMI The Digital Library of University of Crete

egyptian, greeks, also, known, egyptiotes, greek, Αιγυπτιώτες, simply, greeks, egypt, greek, Έλληνες, της, Αιγύπτου, ethnic, greek, community, from, egypt, that, existed, from, hellenistic, period, until, aftermath, egyptian, coup, état, 1952, when, most, were. The Egyptian Greeks also known as Egyptiotes Greek Aigyptiwtes or simply Greeks in Egypt Greek Ellhnes ths Aigyptoy are the ethnic Greek community from Egypt that has existed from the Hellenistic period until the aftermath of the Egyptian coup d etat of 1952 when most were forced to leave Egyptian GreeksEllhnes ths AigyptoyTotal population200 000 1920 1 300 000 c 1940 2 estimates vary between 5 000 60 000 3 4 5 6 today Regions with significant populationsAlexandria CairoLanguagesGreek Egyptian Arabic French EnglishReligionCoptic Orthodox Church Greek Orthodox Church Greek Catholic Church Sunni Islam Shia IslamRelated ethnic groupsAfrican Greeks Ethiopian Greeks Sudanese Greeks Roman Africans Contents 1 Antiquity 1 1 First historical colonies 1 2 Hellenistic times 1 2 1 Rule of Alexander the Great 332 323 BC 1 2 2 The Ptolemaic Empire 323 30 BC 1 3 Roman and Byzantine Egypt 1 3 1 Coptic Greeks 2 Medieval Islamic and Ottoman era 3 Modern times 3 1 Greek community 3 2 Patriarchate of Alexandria 3 3 Benefactors 3 4 Exodus from Egypt 3 5 Today 4 Census 5 Notable Greeks from Egypt 6 See also 7 References 8 Sources 9 External linksAntiquity editGreeks have been present in Egypt since at least the 7th century BC Herodotus visited ancient Egypt in the 5th century BC and claimed that the Greeks were one of the first groups of foreigners that ever lived there 7 Diodorus Siculus claimed that Rhodian Actis one of the Heliadae built the city of Heliopolis before the cataclysm likewise the Athenians built Sais Siculus reports that all the Greek cities were destroyed during the cataclysm but the Egyptian cities including Heliopolis and Sais survived 8 First historical colonies edit According to Herodotus ii 154 King Psammetichus I 664 610 BC established a garrison of foreign mercenaries at Daphnae mostly Carians and Ionian Greeks In 7th century BC after the Greek Dark Ages from 1100 to 750 BC the city of Naucratis was founded in Ancient Egypt It was located on the Canopic branch of the Nile river 45 mi 72 km from the open sea It was the first and for much of its early history the only permanent Greek colony in Egypt acting as a symbiotic nexus for the interchange of Greek and Egyptian art and culture At about the same time the city of Heracleion the closest to the sea became an important port for Greek trade It had a famous temple of Heracles The city later sank into the sea only to be rediscovered recently From the time of Psammetichus I onwards Greek mercenary armies played an important role in some of the Egyptian wars One such army was led by Mentor of Rhodes Another such personage was Phanes of Halicarnassus Hellenistic times edit Main article Hellenistic period Rule of Alexander the Great 332 323 BC edit Alexander the Great conquered Egypt at an early stage of his conquests He respected the pharaonic religions and customs and he was proclaimed Pharaoh of Egypt He established the city of Alexandria After his death in 323 BC his empire was divided among his generals Egypt was given to Ptolemy I Soter whose descendants would establish Egypt s last royal dynasty This dynasty was composed solely of ethnic Greeks and produced dynasts such as Cleopatra Its capital was Alexandria Ptolemy added legitimacy to his rule in Egypt by acquiring Alexander s body He intercepted the embalmed corpse on its way to burial brought it to Egypt and placed it in a golden coffin in Alexandria It would remain one of the famous sights of the town for many years until probably destroyed in riots in the 3rd century AD 9 The Ptolemaic Empire 323 30 BC edit Main articles History of Ptolemaic Egypt and Ptolemaic dynasty nbsp Ptolemaic soldiers in tunic 100 BC detail of the Nile mosaic of Palestrina The initial objective of Ptolemy s reign was to establish firm and broad boundaries to his newly acquired kingdom That led to almost continuous warfare against other leading members of Alexander s circle At times he held Cyprus and even parts of mainland Greece When these conflicts were over he was firmly in control of Egypt and had strong claims disputed by the Seleucid dynasty to Palestine He called himself king of Egypt from 306 BC By the time he abdicated in 285 BC in favour of one of his sons the Ptolemaic dynasty was secure Ptolemy and his descendants showed respect to Egypt s most cherished traditions those of religion and turned them to their own advantage Alexandria became the centre of the Greek and Hellenistic world and the centre of international commerce art and science The Lighthouse of Alexandria was one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World while during the reign of Ptolemy II Philadelphus the Library of Alexandria was the biggest library in the world until it was destroyed The last Pharaoh was a Greek princess Cleopatra VII who took her own life in 30 BC a year after the battle of Actium 9 Roman and Byzantine Egypt edit Further information Egypt Roman province nbsp Mummy portrait of a youth with the Greek inscription Artemidorus Farewell 2nd c AD 10 nbsp Mummy portrait of a boy named Eutyches Eὐtyxhs 2nd c AD 11 Under Greco Roman rule Egypt hosted several Greek settlements mostly concentrated in Alexandria but also in a few other cities where Greek settlers lived alongside some seven to ten million native Egyptians 12 Faiyum s earliest Greek inhabitants were soldier veterans and cleruchs elite military officials who were settled by the Ptolemaic kings on reclaimed lands 13 14 Native Egyptians also came to settle in Faiyum from all over the country notably the Nile Delta Upper Egypt Oxyrhynchus and Memphis to undertake the labor involved in the land reclamation process as attested by personal names local cults and recovered papyri 15 Coptic Greeks edit Further information Copts nbsp Mummy portrait of a woman named Isarous Ἰsaroῦs late 1st c AD 16 It is estimated that as much as 30 percent of the population of Faiyum was Greek during the Ptolemaic period with the rest being native Egyptians 17 the Faiyum mummy portraits reflect the complex synthesis of the predominant Egyptian culture and that of the elite Egyptian Greek minority in Faiyum 17 By the Roman period much of the Greek population of Faiyum was made up of either Hellenized Egyptians or people of mixed Egyptian Greek origins 18 and by the time of Roman emperor Caracalla in the 2nd century AD ethnic Egyptians could be distinguished from Egyptian Greeks only by their speech 19 Egyptian Greek is the variety of Greek spoken in Egypt from antiquity until the Islamic conquest of Egypt in the 7th century Egyptian Greek adopted many loanwords from Egyptian language there was a great deal of intracommunity bilingualism in Egypt 20 21 The following is an example of Egyptian Greek language used in the Coptic Church ⲇⲟⲝⲁ ⲡⲁⲧⲣⲓ ⲕⲉ ⲩⲓⲱ ⲕⲉ ⲁ ⲅⲓⲱ ⲡⲛⲉⲩⲙⲁⲧⲓ ⲕⲉ ⲛⲩⲛ ⲕⲉ ⲁ ⲓ ⲕⲉ ⲓⲥ ⲧⲟⲩⲥ ⲉⲱⲛⲁⲥ ⲧⲱⲛ ⲉ ⲱ ⲛⲱⲛ ⲁ ⲙⲏⲛ Do3a Patrὶ kὲ Yἱῷ kὲ Ἁgiῳ Pneymati kὲ nῦn kὲ ἀῒ kὲ ἰs toὺs ἐῶnas tῶn ἐwnwn Ἀmhn Glory to the Father to the Son and to the Holy Spirit both now and always and unto the ages of ages Amen According to Walker early Ptolemaic Greek colonists married local women and adopted Egyptian religious beliefs and by Roman times their descendants were viewed as Egyptians by the Roman rulers despite their own self perception of being Greek 22 The dental morphology of the Roman period Faiyum mummies was also compared with that of earlier Egyptian populations and was found to be much more closely akin to that of ancient Egyptians than to Greeks or other European populations 23 24 Victor J Katz notes that research in papyri dating from the early centuries of the common era demonstrates that a significant amount of intermarriage took place between the Greek and Egyptian communities 25 Medieval Islamic and Ottoman era editGreek culture and political influence continued and perhaps reached some of its most influential times during the Ottoman Caliphate which witnessed many Ottoman Sultans and Pashas of Greek ancestry rule over the Ottoman Empire in general and Egypt in particular Other notable Greeks in Egypt during the Ottoman period included Damat Hasan Pasha from the Morea a governor of Egypt Raghib Pasha born in Greece to Greek parents served as Prime Minister of Egypt During the Ottoman Caliphate Pargali Ibrahim Pasha Grand Vizier to Suleiman the Magnificent from 1520 to 1566 is perhaps the best known Many Greek Muslims from Crete often confusingly called Cretan Turks were resettled in Egypt Libya Lebanon and Syria by Sultan Abdul Hamid II after the Greco Turkish War of 1897 that resulted in the autonomy of Crete see the example of al Hamidiyah a largely Cretan Greek Muslim village in Syria Modern times editGreek community edit In 1920 approximately 200 000 Greeks lived in Egypt By c 1940 the Greeks numbered about 300 000 The Greek community in Alexandria lived around the church and convent of Sabbas the Sanctified In the same area there was a guest house for Greek travelers a Greek hospital and later a Greek school The Greek Orthodox bishop was based in Damietta in the church of Nikolaos of Myrna In Cairo the first organised Greek community was founded in 1856 with the community based in three main neighbourhoods Tzouonia Haret el Roum Street of the Greeks and in Hamzaoui The patriarchate was based in Saint Nicholas Greek Orthodox Cathedral Hamzaoui The monastery of Saint George in Old Cairo still survives The monastery is surrounded by a huge wall and topped by a stone tower Within its walls there was a Greek hospital a school and housing for the elderly and poor In addition to the Greek communities of Alexandria and Cairo there were the organised Greek communities of Mansoura founded in 1860 Port Said founded in 1870 Tanta in 1880 and the community of Zagazig in 1850 There were fifteen smaller communities across Egypt and mainly around Cairo and Alexandria In Upper Egypt the oldest ancient Greek community was the one of Minia which was founded in 1812 The first banks in Egypt were crafted by Greeks including the Bank of Alexandria the Anglo Egyptian bank Sunadinos family Synadinos and the General Bank of Alexandria Also it was the Greek agriculturists and farmers that first systematically and with scientific planning cultivated cotton and tobacco They improved the quantity and quality of production and dominated cotton and tobacco exports Notable families in tobacco commerce were the Salvagos Salbagkos Benakis Mpenakhs Rodochanakis Rodoxanakhs and Zervoudachis Zerboydakhs 26 The tobacco cultivars used for cigarette manufacturing e g by Kyriazi Freres were of Greek origin A thriving commerce between Greece and Egypt was thus established Other areas of interest for the Greeks in Egypt were foods wine soap wood crafts printing nbsp Constantine P CavafyIn the food industry the macaroni industries of Melachrinos Melaxroinos and Antoniadis Antwniadhs were well known Another example was the cheese and butter production of Argyriou Argyrioy Roussoglou Royssogloy and Paleoroutas Palaioroytas Chocolate Biscuits and Toffee producers were Daloghlou Dalogloy Russos Royssos Repapis Repaphs Oil soaps vegetable fats Salt amp Soda producers like Zerbinis Zermpinhs were based in Kafr al Zayat There were many Greek theatres and cinemas Major Greek newspapers were Ta grammata Ta Grammata Tachydromos Taxydromos and Nea Zoe Nea Zwh 27 28 29 The Greek community in Egypt has produced numerous artists writers diplomats and politicians the most famous being the poet Constantine P Cavafy Kwnstantinos Kabafhs also the painter Konstantinos Parthenis Kwnstantinos Par8enhs During the Balkan Wars the Greek communities of Egypt sent volunteers funded hospitals and accommodated families of the soldiers During World War II 1940 1945 more than 7000 Greeks fought for the Allies in the Middle East 142 died Their financial contribution reached 2500 million Egyptian pounds 30 After the Suez Crisis the British and French laborers left while the Greeks stayed 31 Patriarchate of Alexandria edit Main article Greek Orthodox Church of Alexandria Benefactors edit nbsp Dionysios Kasdaglis ethnic Greek Egyptian tennis player at the Athens Olympics in 1896The emergence of a Greek aristocracy of rich industrialists commercants and bankers created the legacy of Greek Egyptian philanthropism These benefactors donated large amounts for the building of schools academies hospitals and institutions in both Egypt and Greece Michail Tositsas donated large amounts for the building of the Athens University the Amalio Orphanage and the Athens Polytechnic His wife Eleni Tositsa donated the land for the National Archaeological Museum of Athens George Averoff also contributed to the building of the National Technical University of Athens the Evelpidon Military Academy and the donation of the cruiser Averoff to the Hellenic Navy Emmanouil Benakis contributed to the building of the National Gallery of Athens while his son Antonis Benakis was the founder of the Benaki Museum Other major benefactors include Nikolaos Stournaras Theodoros Kotsikas Nestoras Tsanaklis Konstantinos Horemis Stefanos Delta Penelope Delta Pantazis Vassanis and Vassilis Sivitanidis 26 Exodus from Egypt edit See also 1956 57 exodus and expulsions from Egypt The exodus of Greeks from Egypt started before the coup d etat of 1952 With the establishment of the new sovereign regime of Gamal Abdel Nasser rise of Pan Arab nationalism and the subsequent nationalisation of many industries in 1961 and 1963 thousands of Greek employees decided to emigrate Many of them emigrated to Australia the United States Canada South Africa Western Europe and Greece Many Greek schools churches small communities and institutions subsequently closed but many continue to function to this day The Nasser regime saw a big exodus of the Greeks from Egypt but most of the minority left the country either before or after the period 1952 1970 The Arab Israeli wars of 1956 and 1967 contributed to the uprooting of the sizeable Greek community in the Suez Canal cities especially Port Said citation needed Today edit Today the Greek community numbers officially about 5 000 people 32 with independent estimates ranging to 60 000 6 Many of Greek origin are now counted as Egyptian having changed their nationality In Alexandria apart from the Patriarchate there is a Patriarchal theology school that opened recently after 480 years being closed Saint Nicholas church in Cairo and several other buildings in Alexandria have been recently renovated by the Greek Government and the Alexander S Onassis Foundation Saint George s church in Old Cairo is undergoing restoration to end in 2014 During the last decade there has been a new interest from the Egyptian government for a diplomatic rapprochement with Greece and this has positively affected the Greek Diaspora The Diaspora has received official visits of many Greek politicians Economic relationships between Greece and Egypt have expanded As of 2010 Egypt has received major Greek investments in banking tourism paper the oil industry amp many others In 2009 a five year cooperation memorandum was signed among the NCSR Demokritos Institute in Agia Paraskevi Athens and the University of Alexandria regarding Archeometry research and contextual sectors 33 Census editNumber of Greeks according to the Census in Egypt Number of Greeks in Egypt 1907 1960 34 Egypt 1907 1927 1937 1947 1960 1967Greeks 62 973 76 264 68 559 57 427 47 673 17 000Notable Greeks from Egypt editGreeks of Cyrene the Cyrenaica is a region corresponding to modern eastern Libya are also included as during antiquity it held close relations to the Egyptian kingdoms and at some points also used to be a part of the Ptolemaic Kingdom The presence of an asterisk next to a person s name denotes that the person was born outside of Egypt however the most part of this person s life or most important work occurred while in Egypt Antiquity 7th 1st century B C E Roman and Byzantine era 1st 7th century C E Arab Caliphate amp Ottoman era7th 19th century 35 Contemporary 20th 21st centuryBattus I of Cyrene Ruler 7th century B C E Cyrene nbsp Hero of Alexandria Engineer 1st century B C E or C E Alexandria Jean Desses Fashion designer 1904 1970 AlexandriaTheodorus of Cyrene Mathematician 5th century B C E Cyrene nbsp Philo Philosopher 20 B C E 50 C E Alexandria nbsp Aristippus Philosopher 435 356 B C E Cyrene Chaeremon of Alexandria Philosopher 1st century C E Alexandria nbsp Alexander Iolas Art collector 1907 1987 AlexandriaAristaeus the Elder Mathematician 370 300 B C E Alexandria Menelaus of Alexandria Mathematician 70 140 C E Alexandria nbsp George Averoff Businessman 1815 1899 Alexandria Kimon Evan Marengo Cartoonist 1907 1988 Zifta nbsp Ptolemy I Soter Ruler 367 282 B C E Alexandria nbsp Ptolemy Geographer 90 168 C E Alexandria Emmanouil Benakis Politician 1843 1929 Alexandria nbsp Nikos Tsiforos Director 1909 1970 AlexandriaPhilitas of Cos Poet 340 285 B C E Alexandria Sosigenes of Alexandria Astronomer 1st century C E Alexandria nbsp Ioannis Pesmazoglou Economist 1857 1906 AlexandriaTheodorus the Atheist Philosopher 340 250 B C E Cyrene Thrasyllus of Mendes Mathematician 1st century C E Alexandria nbsp Euclid Mathematician 325 265 B C E Alexandria nbsp Clement of Alexandria Theologian 150 211 C E Alexandria nbsp Constantine Cavafy Poet 1863 1933 Alexandria Mary Giatra Lemou Author 1915 1989 AlexandriaMagas of Cyrene Ruler 317 250 B C E Cyrene nbsp Origen Theologian 185 251 C E Alexandria Antonis Benakis Businessman 1873 1954 Alexandria Dinos Iliopoulos Actor 1915 2001 Alexandria nbsp Ptolemy II Philadelphus Ruler 309 246 B C E Alexandria nbsp Plotinus Philosopher 203 270 C E Alexandria Dimitrios Kasdaglis Athlete 1872 1931 AlexandriaCallimachus Poet 305 240 B C E Cyrene nbsp Diophantus Mathematician 210 290 C E Alexandria nbsp Penelope Delta Author 1874 1941 Alexandria Voula Zouboulaki Actor 1924 Cairo nbsp Ctesibius Engineer 285 222 B C E Alexandria nbsp Catherine of Alexandria Theologian 282 305 C E Alexandria nbsp Konstantinos Parthenis Painter 1878 1967 Alexandria Jani Christou Composer 1926 1970 CairoConon of Samos Astronomer 280 220 B C E Alexandria Pappus of Alexandria Mathematician 290 350 C E Alexandria nbsp Konstantinos Tsaldaris Politician 1884 1970 Alexandria nbsp Nelly Mazloum Dancer 1929 2003 Alexandria 36 nbsp Eratosthenes Mathematician 276 194 B C E Alexandria Theon of Alexandria Mathematician 335 405 C E Alexandria nbsp Constantin Xenakis Artist 1931 CairoApollonius of Rhodes Poet 3rd century B C E Alexandria nbsp Hypatia Mathematician 370 416 C E AlexandriaSostratus of Cnidus Engineer 3rd century B C E Alexandria Palladas Poet 4th century C E Alexandria Antigone Costanda Model 1934 AlexandriaHypsicles Mathematician 190 120 B C E Alexandria Isidore of Alexandria Philosopher 450 520 C E Alexandria nbsp Georges Moustaki Singer 1934 2013 AlexandriaDionysius of Cyrene Mathematician 2nd century B C E Cyrene Hierocles of Alexandria Philosopher 5th century C E AlexandriaEudorus of Alexandria Philosopher 1st century B C E Alexandria Hesychius of Alexandria Author 5th century C E Alexandria Manos Loizos Composer 1937 1982 AlexandriaAretaphila of Cyrene Revolutionary 1st century B C E Cyrene George Leonardos Author 1937 Alexandria nbsp Cleopatra VII Ruler 69 30 B C E Alexandria Clea Badaro Painter 1913 1968 AlexandriaNikos Perakis Director 1944 Alexandria nbsp Demetrio Stratos Singer 1945 1979 Alexandria nbsp Demis Roussos Singer 1946 2015 AlexandriaAndreas Gerasimos Michalitsianos Astronomer 1947 1997 AlexandriaNora Valsami Actress 1948 Cairo nbsp Alkistis Protopsalti Singer 1954 AlexandriaAlex Proyas Director 1963 CairoDimos Stareniostheater cinema actor born 15 Sept 1909 Cairo died 23 Oct 1983 AthensSee also edit nbsp Greece portal nbsp Egypt portal nbsp Ancient Egypt portalDemographics of Egypt Egyptian Greek relations Kyriazi freresReferences edit Pelt Mogens 1998 Tobacco Arms and Politics Greece and Germany from World Crisis to World War 1929 41 Museum Tusculanum Press p 480 ISBN 978 87 7289 450 8 the total Greek population in Egypt numbered about 200 000 in 1920 Sadat Jehan 2002 A Woman of Egypt Simon and Schuster p 46 ISBN 978 0 7432 3708 6 The rest of Egypt was divided by King Farouk into two classes Egypt had long been an international crossroads with more than 300 000 Greeks 100 000 Italians 50 000 stateless Jews and thousands more who carried French and British passports settling in Cairo and Alexandria after World War I Many Cypriots Maltese and North African Arabs had also made their homes in Egypt English version of Greek Ministry of Foreign Affairs reports a few thousand http www mfa gr missionsabroad en egypt en bilateral relations cultural relations and greek community html and Greek version 3 800 http www mfa gr dimereis sheseis tis ellados aigyptos morphotikes politistikes sxeseis kai apodimos ellinismos html Archived 2020 08 07 at the Wayback Machine Number higher when counting those who have taken Egyptian citizenship Rippin Andrew 2008 World Islam Critical Concepts in Islamic Studies Routledge p 77 ISBN 978 0415456531 a b Project Joshua Greeks in Egypt joshuaproject net Retrieved 2021 11 13 A H diaxronikh poreia toy ellhnismoy sthn Afrikh Archived 2012 05 24 at the Wayback Machine The Historical Library of Diodorus Siculus Book V 57 a b HISTORY OF EGYPT www historyworld net Retrieved 2018 03 17 human mummy cartonnage mummy case British Museum The British Museum Retrieved 2023 05 20 Portrait of the Boy Eutyches Roman Period The Metropolitan Museum of Art Retrieved 2023 05 20 Adams Winthrope L in Bugh Glenn Richard ed The Hellenistic Kingdoms The Cambridge Companion to the Hellenistic World Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2006 p 39 Stanwick Paul Edmund Portraits of the Ptolemies Greek Kings as Egyptian Pharaohs Austin University of Texas Press 2003 p 23 Adams op cit Bagnall R S in Susan Walker ed Ancient Faces Mummy Portraits in Roman Egypt Metropolitan Museum of Art Publications New York Routledge 2000 p 27 Amin Osama Shukir Muhammed Female Mummy Portrait Hawara World History Encyclopedia Retrieved 2023 05 20 a b Bagnall op cit Bagnall pp 28 29 qtd in Alan K Bowman Egypt after the Pharaohs 332 BC AD 642 Berkeley University of California Press 1996 p 126 genuine Egyptians can easily be recognized among the linen weavers by their speech Lennart Sundelin Petra Sijpesteijn 2004 Papyrology and the History of Early Islamic Egypt Brill p 165 Lennart Sundelin Petra Sijpesteijn 2020 Varieties of Post classical and Byzantine Greek De Gruyter p 447 Walker Susan op cit p 24 Dentition helps archaeologists to assess biological and ethnic population traits and relationships Irish JD 2006 Who were the ancient Egyptians Dental affinities among Neolithic through postdynastic peoples Am J Phys Anthropol 129 4 529 43 Victor J Katz 1998 A History of Mathematics An Introduction p 184 Addison Wesley ISBN 0 321 01618 1 But what we really want to know is to what extent the Alexandrian mathematicians of the period from the first to the fifth centuries C E were Greek Certainly all of them wrote in Greek and were part of the Greek intellectual community of Alexandria And most modern studies conclude that the Greek community coexisted So should we assume that Ptolemy and Diophantus Pappus and Hypatia were ethnically Greek that their ancestors had come from Greece at some point in the past but had remained effectively isolated from the Egyptians It is of course impossible to answer this question definitively But research in papyri dating from the early centuries of the common era demonstrates that a significant amount of intermarriage took place between the Greek and Egyptian communities And it is known that Greek marriage contracts increasingly came to resemble Egyptian ones In addition even from the founding of Alexandria small numbers of Egyptians were admitted to the privileged classes in the city to fulfill numerous civic roles Of course it was essential in such cases for the Egyptians to become Hellenized to adopt Greek habits and the Greek language Given that the Alexandrian mathematicians mentioned here were active several hundred years after the founding of the city it would seem at least equally possible that they were ethnically Egyptian as that they remained ethnically Greek In any case it is unreasonable to portray them with purely European features when no physical descriptions exist a b kathimerini gr Aigyptiwths Ellhnismos koitida eyergetismoy Archived from the original on January 7 2013 Blogger accounts google com Sarah Abrevaya Stein 2003 Making Jews Modern The Yiddish and Ladino Press in the Russian and Ottoman Empires Indiana University Press p 63 Edmund Keeley 1996 Cavafy s Alexandria Expanded Edition Princeton University Press pp 10 22 H prosfora toy Ellhnismoy ths Aigyptoy sto B Pagkosmio Polemo Archived 2007 09 27 at the Wayback Machine Arxaia Aigyptos www neo gr Retrieved 2018 03 17 The Lighthouse Dims Foreign Policy Retrieved 2018 03 17 Cooperation memorandum signed among NCSR D and Alexandria University Egypt Archived 2009 07 05 at the Wayback Machine 29 1 2009 retrieved on 31 1 2009 Dalachanis Angelos 2017 The Greek Exodus from Egypt Diaspora Politics and Emigration 1937 1962 Berghahn Books p 3 230 ISBN 9781785334481 While creating the table entries it was very hard to find any details for Greeks in Egypt during the Arab and later Ottoman period This may be due to the Islamic practice where the subjects of a kingdom adopt Islamic names thus making it hard to distinguish nationality by name With the French and English interventions in Egypt during the 18th and 19th century the first Greek organised communities arise giving a lot of information about Greek Egyptians of this era Nelly Mazloum official website Biography Archived from the original on 2015 01 31 Retrieved 2014 12 13 Sources editDalachanis Angelos 2017 The Greek Exodus from Egypt Diaspora Politics and Emigration 1937 1962 London Berghann ISBN 978 1 78533 447 4 External links editThe Greek community of Alexandria official website Egyptian Hellenism Department Hellenic Literary and Historical Archive Greeks in Egypt Greek communities Blog Pyramis online newspaper of the Greek community in Egypt Collection of Books and Documents concerning Greeks in Egypt ANEMI The Digital Library of University of Crete Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Egyptian Greeks amp oldid 1187504038, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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