Egypt is the most populous country in the Arab
world and the second-most populous on the African Continent.
Nearly 100% of the country's 68 million people live in Cairo and
Alexandria; elsewhere on the banks of the Nile; in the Nile delta, which
fans out north of Cairo, the capital of Egypt;
and along the Suez Canal. These regions are among the world's most densely
populated, containing an average of over 3,820 persons per square mile
(1,540 per sq. km.), as compared to 181 persons per sq. mi. for the
country as a whole.
Small communities spread throughout the desert regions of Egypt are
clustered around oases and historic trade and transportation routes. The
government has tried with mixed success to encourage migration to
newly
irrigated land reclaimed from the desert. However, the proportion of the
population living in rural areas has continued to decrease as people move
to the cities in search of employment and a higher standard of living. The
Egyptians are a fairly homogeneous people of
Hamitic origin. Mediterranean and Arab influences appear in the
north, and there is some mixing in the south with the Nubians of northern
Sudan. Ethnic minorities include a small number of Bedouin Arab nomads in
the eastern and western deserts and in the Sinai, as well as some
50,000-100,000 Nubians clustered along the Nile in Upper (southern) Egypt.
The literacy rate is about 55% of the adult population. Education is
free through university and compulsory from ages six through 15. Rates for
primary and secondary education have strengthened in recent years.
Ninety-three percent of children enter primary school and about
one-quarter drop out after the sixth year; in 1994-95, 87% entered primary
school and about half dropped out after the sixth year. There are 20,000
primary
and secondary schools with some 10 million students, 13 major universities
with more than 500,000 students, and 67 teacher colleges. Major
universities include Cairo University (100,000 students), Alexandria
University, and the 1,000-year-old Al-Azhar University, one of the world's
major centers of Islamic learning. Egypt's vast and rich literature
constitutes an important cultural element in the life of the country and
in the Arab world as a whole. Egyptian novelists and poets were among the
first to experiment with modern styles of Arabic literature, and the forms
they developed have been widely imitated. Egyptian novelist Naguib Mahfouz
was the first Arab to win the Nobel prize for literature. Egyptian books
and films are available throughout the Middle East.
Egypt has endured as a unified state for more
than 5,000 years, and archeological evidence indicates that a
developed Egyptian society has existed for much longer. Egyptians take
pride in their "pharaonic heritage" and in their descent from what they
consider mankind's earliest civilization. The Arabic word for Egypt is
Misr, which originally connoted "civilization" or "metropolis."
Archeological findings show that primitive tribes lived along the Nile
long before the dynastic history of the pharaohs began. By 6000 B.C.,
organized agriculture had appeared.