This is a test of the new dictionary software. Click a word, any word. Every word in the definitions below links back to its own definition, for greater overall comprehension and learning.

 
6 definitions found

From WordNet (r) 2.0 [wn]:

  Egypt
       n 1: a republic in northeastern Africa known as the United Arab
            Republic until 1971; site of an ancient civilization
            that flourished from 2600 to 30 BC [syn: {Arab Republic
            of Egypt}, {United Arab Republic}]
       2: an ancient empire west of Israel; centered on the Nile River
          and ruled by a Pharaoh; figured in many events described
          in the Old Testament [syn: {Egyptian Empire}]

From U.S. Gazetteer (1990) [gazetteer]:

  Egypt, AR (town, FIPS 20920)
    Location: 35.86665 N, 90.95288 W
    Population (1990): 123 (57 housing units)
    Area: 1.0 sq km (land), 0.0 sq km (water)
  Egypt, MS
    Zip code(s): 38860

From Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary [easton]:

  Egypt
     the land of the Nile and the pyramids, the oldest kingdom of
     which we have any record, holds a place of great significance in
     Scripture.
     
       The Egyptians belonged to the white race, and their original
     home is still a matter of dispute. Many scholars believe that it
     was in Southern Arabia, and recent excavations have shown that
     the valley of the Nile was originally inhabited by a low-class
     population, perhaps belonging to the Nigritian stock, before the
     Egyptians of history entered it. The ancient Egyptian language,
     of which the latest form is Coptic, is distantly connected with
     the Semitic family of speech.
     
       Egypt consists geographically of two halves, the northern
     being the Delta, and the southern Upper Egypt, between Cairo and
     the First Cataract. In the Old Testament, Northern or Lower
     Egypt is called Mazor, "the fortified land" (Isa. 19:6; 37: 25,
     where the A.V. mistranslates "defence" and "besieged places");
     while Southern or Upper Egypt is Pathros, the Egyptian
     Pa-to-Res, or "the land of the south" (Isa. 11:11). But the
     whole country is generally mentioned under the dual name of
     Mizraim, "the two Mazors."
     
       The civilization of Egypt goes back to a very remote
     antiquity. The two kingdoms of the north and south were united
     by Menes, the founder of the first historical dynasty of kings.
     The first six dynasties constitute what is known as the Old
     Empire, which had its capital at Memphis, south of Cairo, called
     in the Old Testament Moph (Hos. 9:6) and Noph. The native name
     was Mennofer, "the good place."
     
       The Pyramids were tombs of the monarchs of the Old Empire,
     those of Gizeh being erected in the time of the Fourth Dynasty.
     After the fall of the Old Empire came a period of decline and
     obscurity. This was followed by the Middle Empire, the most
     powerful dynasty of which was the Twelfth. The Fayyum was
     rescued for agriculture by the kings of the Twelfth Dynasty; and
     two obelisks were erected in front of the temple of the sun-god
     at On or Heliopolis (near Cairo), one of which is still
     standing. The capital of the Middle Empire was Thebes, in Upper
     Egypt.
     
       The Middle Empire was overthrown by the invasion of the
     Hyksos, or shepherd princes from Asia, who ruled over Egypt,
     more especially in the north, for several centuries, and of whom
     there were three dynasties of kings. They had their capital at
     Zoan or Tanis (now San), in the north-eastern part of the Delta.
     It was in the time of the Hyksos that Abraham, Jacob, and Joseph
     entered Egypt. The Hyksos were finally expelled about B.C. 1600,
     by the hereditary princes of Thebes, who founded the Eighteenth
     Dynasty, and carried the war into Asia. Canaan and Syria were
     subdued, as well as Cyprus, and the boundaries of the Egyptian
     Empire were fixed at the Euphrates. The Soudan, which had been
     conquered by the kings of the Twelfth Dynasty, was again annexed
     to Egypt, and the eldest son of the Pharaoh took the title of
     "Prince of Cush."
     
       One of the later kings of the dynasty, Amenophis IV., or
     Khu-n-Aten, endeavoured to supplant the ancient state religion
     of Egypt by a new faith derived from Asia, which was a sort of
     pantheistic monotheism, the one supreme god being adored under
     the image of the solar disk. The attempt led to religious and
     civil war, and the Pharaoh retreated from Thebes to Central
     Egypt, where he built a new capital, on the site of the present
     Tell-el-Amarna. The cuneiform tablets that have been found there
     represent his foreign correspondence (about B.C. 1400). He
     surrounded himself with officials and courtiers of Asiatic, and
     more especially Canaanitish, extraction; but the native party
     succeeded eventually in overthrowing the government, the capital
     of Khu-n-Aten was destroyed, and the foreigners were driven out
     of the country, those that remained being reduced to serfdom.
     
       The national triumph was marked by the rise of the Nineteenth
     Dynasty, in the founder of which, Rameses I., we must see the
     "new king, who knew not Joseph." His grandson, Rameses II.,
     reigned sixty-seven years (B.C. 1348-1281), and was an
     indefatigable builder. As Pithom, excavated by Dr. Naville in
     1883, was one of the cities he built, he must have been the
     Pharaoh of the Oppression. The Pharaoh of the Exodus may have
     been one of his immediate successors, whose reigns were short.
     Under them Egypt lost its empire in Asia, and was itself
     attacked by barbarians from Libya and the north.
     
       The Nineteenth Dynasty soon afterwards came to an end; Egypt
     was distracted by civil war; and for a short time a Canaanite,
     Arisu, ruled over it.
     
       Then came the Twentieth Dynasty, the second Pharaoh of which,
     Rameses III., restored the power of his country. In one of his
     campaigns he overran the southern part of Palestine, where the
     Israelites had not yet settled. They must at the time have been
     still in the wilderness. But it was during the reign of Rameses
     III. that Egypt finally lost Gaza and the adjoining cities,
     which were seized by the Pulista, or Philistines.
     
       After Rameses III., Egypt fell into decay. Solomon married the
     daughter of one of the last kings of the Twenty-first Dynasty,
     which was overthrown by Shishak I., the general of the Libyan
     mercenaries, who founded the Twenty-second Dynasty (1 Kings
     11:40; 14:25, 26). A list of the places he captured in Palestine
     is engraved on the outside of the south wall of the temple of
     Karnak.
     
       In the time of Hezekiah, Egypt was conquered by Ethiopians
     from the Soudan, who constituted the Twenty-fifth Dynasty. The
     third of them was Tirhakah (2 Kings 19:9). In B.C. 674 it was
     conquered by the Assyrians, who divided it into twenty
     satrapies, and Tirhakah was driven back to his ancestral
     dominions. Fourteen years later it successfully revolted under
     Psammetichus I. of Sais, the founder of the Twenty-sixth
     Dynasty. Among his successors were Necho (2 Kings 23:29) and
     Hophra, or Apries (Jer. 37:5, 7, 11). The dynasty came to an end
     in B.C. 525, when the country was subjugated by Cambyses. Soon
     afterwards it was organized into a Persian satrapy.
     
       The title of Pharaoh, given to the Egyptian kings, is the
     Egyptian Per-aa, or "Great House," which may be compared to that
     of "Sublime Porte." It is found in very early Egyptian texts.
     
       The Egyptian religion was a strange mixture of pantheism and
     animal worship, the gods being adored in the form of animals.
     While the educated classes resolved their manifold deities into
     manifestations of one omnipresent and omnipotent divine power,
     the lower classes regarded the animals as incarnations of the
     gods.
     
       Under the Old Empire, Ptah, the Creator, the god of Memphis,
     was at the head of the Pantheon; afterwards Amon, the god of
     Thebes, took his place. Amon, like most of the other gods, was
     identified with Ra, the sun-god of Heliopolis.
     
       The Egyptians believed in a resurrection and future life, as
     well as in a state of rewards and punishments dependent on our
     conduct in this world. The judge of the dead was Osiris, who had
     been slain by Set, the representative of evil, and afterwards
     restored to life. His death was avenged by his son Horus, whom
     the Egyptians invoked as their "Redeemer." Osiris and Horus,
     along with Isis, formed a trinity, who were regarded as
     representing the sun-god under different forms.
     
       Even in the time of Abraham, Egypt was a flourishing and
     settled monarchy. Its oldest capital, within the historic
     period, was Memphis, the ruins of which may still be seen near
     the Pyramids and the Sphinx. When the Old Empire of Menes came
     to an end, the seat of empire was shifted to Thebes, some 300
     miles farther up the Nile. A short time after that, the Delta
     was conquered by the Hyksos, or shepherd kings, who fixed their
     capital at Zoan, the Greek Tanis, now San, on the Tanic arm of
     the Nile. All this occurred before the time of the new king
     "which knew not Joseph" (Ex. 1:8). In later times Egypt was
     conquered by the Persians (B.C. 525), and by the Greeks under
     Alexander the Great (B.C. 332), after whom the Ptolemies ruled
     the country for three centuries. Subsequently it was for a time
     a province of the Roman Empire; and at last, in A.D. 1517, it
     fell into the hands of the Turks, of whose empire it still forms
     nominally a part. Abraham and Sarah went to Egypt in the time of
     the shepherd kings. The exile of Joseph and the migration of
     Jacob to "the land of Goshen" occurred about 200 years later. On
     the death of Solomon, Shishak, king of Egypt, invaded Palestine
     (1 Kings 14:25). He left a list of the cities he conquered.
     
       A number of remarkable clay tablets, discovered at
     Tell-el-Amarna in Upper Egypt, are the most important historical
     records ever found in connection with the Bible. They most fully
     confirm the historical statements of the Book of Joshua, and
     prove the antiquity of civilization in Syria and Palestine. As
     the clay in different parts of Palestine differs, it has been
     found possible by the clay alone to decide where the tablets
     come from when the name of the writer is lost. The inscriptions
     are cuneiform, and in the Aramaic language, resembling Assyrian.
     The writers are Phoenicians, Amorites, and Philistines, but in
     no instance Hittites, though Hittites are mentioned. The tablets
     consist of official dispatches and letters, dating from B.C.
     1480, addressed to the two Pharaohs, Amenophis III. and IV., the
     last of this dynasty, from the kings and governors of Phoenicia
     and Palestine. There occur the names of three kings killed by
     Joshua, Adoni-zedec, king of Jerusalem, Japhia, king of Lachish
     (Josh. 10:3), and Jabin, king of Hazor (11:1); also the Hebrews
     (Abiri) are said to have come from the desert.
     
       The principal prophecies of Scripture regarding Egypt are
     these, Isa. 19; Jer. 43: 8-13; 44:30; 46; Ezek. 29-32; and it
     might be easily shown that they have all been remarkably
     fulfilled. For example, the singular disappearance of Noph
     (i.e., Memphis) is a fulfilment of Jer. 46:19, Ezek. 30:13.
     

From Hitchcock's Bible Names Dictionary (late 1800's) [hitchcock]:

  Egypt, that troubles or oppresses; anguish
  

From The CIA World Factbook (1995) [world95]:

  Egypt
  
  Egypt:Geography
  
   Location: Northern Africa, bordering the Mediterranean Sea, between
   Libya and the Gaza Strip
  
   Map references: Africa
  
   Area:
   total area: 1,001,450 sq km
   land area: 995,450 sq km
   comparative area: slightly more than three times the size of New
   Mexico
  
   Land boundaries: total 2,689 km, Gaza Strip 11 km, Israel 255 km,
   Libya 1,150 km, Sudan 1,273 km
  
   Coastline: 2,450 km
  
   Maritime claims:
   contiguous zone: 24 nm
   continental shelf: 200-m depth or to the depth of exploitation
   exclusive economic zone: 200 nm
   territorial sea: 12 nm
  
   International disputes: administrative boundary with Sudan does not
   coincide with international boundary creating the "Hala'ib Triangle,"
   a barren area of 20,580 sq km, tensions over this disputed area began
   to escalate in 1992 and remain high
  
   Climate: desert; hot, dry summers with moderate winters
  
   Terrain: vast desert plateau interrupted by Nile valley and delta
  
   Natural resources: petroleum, natural gas, iron ore, phosphates,
   manganese, limestone, gypsum, talc, asbestos, lead, zinc
  
   Land use:
   arable land: 3%
   permanent crops: 2%
   meadows and pastures: 0%
   forest and woodland: 0%
   other: 95%
  
   Irrigated land: 25,850 sq km (1989 est.)
  
   Environment:
   current issues: agricultural land being lost to urbanization and
   windblown sands; increasing soil salinization below Aswan High Dam;
   desertification; oil pollution threatening coral reefs, beaches, and
   marine habitats; other water pollution from agricultural pesticides,
   raw sewage, and industrial effluents; very limited natural fresh water
   resources away from the Nile which is the only perennial water source;
   rapid growth in population overstraining natural resources
   natural hazards: periodic droughts; frequent earthquakes, flash
   floods, landslides, volcanic activity; hot, driving windstorm called
   khamsin occurs in spring; duststorms, sandstorms
   international agreements: party to - Biodiversity, Climate Change,
   Endangered Species, Environmental Modification, Hazardous Wastes, Law
   of the Sea, Marine Dumping, Nuclear Test Ban, Ozone Layer Protection,
   Ship Pollution, Tropical Timber 83, Wetlands; signed, but not ratified
   - Desertification, Tropical Timber 94
  
   Note: controls Sinai Peninsula, only land bridge between Africa and
   remainder of Eastern Hemisphere; controls Suez Canal, shortest sea
   link between Indian Ocean and Mediterranean Sea; size, and
   juxtaposition to Israel, establish its major role in Middle Eastern
   geopolitics
  
  Egypt:People
  
   Population: 62,359,623 (July 1995 est.)
  
   Age structure:
   0-14 years: 37% (female 11,380,668; male 11,872,728)
   15-64 years: 59% (female 18,250,706; male 18,641,830)
   65 years and over: 4% (female 1,204,477; male 1,009,214) (July 1995
   est.)
  
   Population growth rate: 1.95% (1995 est.)
  
   Birth rate: 28.69 births/1,000 population (1995 est.)
  
   Death rate: 8.86 deaths/1,000 population (1995 est.)
  
   Net migration rate: -0.35 migrant(s)/1,000 population (1995