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Khedivate of Egypt

Khedivate of Egypt
الخديوية المصرية (Arabic)
خدیویت مصر (Ottoman Turkish)
Autonomous vassal of the Ottoman Empire
(under British occupation from 1882)
1867–1914
Red flag with three white crescents, each containing a five-pointed white star.
Flag (1867–81) Coat of arms
Anthem
Salam Affandina
Globe with modern borders highlighting the following:
  Khedivate of Egypt
  Ceded from Sudan to Italian North Africa in 1919
Capital Cairo
Languages Arabic, Ottoman Turkish,
Religion Sunni Islam, Coptic Christianity
Government Constitutional monarchy
Khedive
 •  1867–1879 Isma'il Pasha
 •  1879–1892 Tewfik Pasha
 •  1892–1914 Abbas II
British Agent and Consul-General
 •  1883–1907 Earl of Cromer
 •  1907–1911 Sir Eldon Gorst
 •  1911–1914 Earl Kitchener
Prime Minister
 •  1878–1879 Nubar Pasha (first)
 •  1914 Hussein Rushdi Pasha (last)
Historical era Scramble for Africa
 •  Established 8 June 1867
 •  Suez Canal opened 17 November 1869
 •  Urabi Revolt 1881–1882
 •  British invasion in the 1882 Anglo-Egyptian War July – September 1882
 •  Sudan Convention 18 January 1899
 •  Disestablished 19 December 1914
Population
 •  1882 est. 6,805,000 
 •  1897 est. 9,715,000 
 •  1907 est. 11,287,000 
Currency Egyptian pound
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Egypt Eyalet
Sultanate of Darfur
Sultanate of Egypt
Italian Libya
Today part of  Egypt
 Libya
 South Sudan
 Sudan
 Uganda
^ a. English became the sole official language in 1898.

^ b. Area and density include inhabited areas only. The total area of Egypt, including deserts, is 994,000 km2.


^ b. Area and density include inhabited areas only. The total area of Egypt, including deserts, is 994,000 km2.

The Khedivate of Egypt (Arabic: خديوية مصر‎‎, Egyptian Arabic pronunciation: [xedeˈwejjet ˈmɑsˤɾ]; Ottoman Turkish: خدیویت مصرHıdiviyet-i Mısır) was an autonomous tributary state of the Ottoman Empire, established and ruled by the Muhammad Ali Dynasty following the defeat and expulsion of Napoleon Bonaparte's forces which brought an end to the short-lived French occupation of Lower Egypt.

Upon the conquest of the Sultanate of Egypt by the Ottoman Empire in 1517, the country was governed as an Ottoman eyalet (province). The Porte was content to permit local rule to remain in the hands of the Mamluks, the Egyptian military caste of Circassian, and Turkic origin who had held power in Egypt since the 13th century. Save for military expeditions to crush Mamluk Egyptian uprisings seeking to re-establish the independent Egyptian sultanate, the Ottomans largely ignored Egyptian affairs until the French invasion of Egypt in 1798.


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