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    ‘Midaq Alley’ is a novel written by the well-known Egyptian author‚ Naguib Mahfouz. It is a microcosmic display of Egypt during the British mandate at that time. The novel mainly focuses on an alley located in one of the crowded streets of Cairo. Omnisciently narrated‚ it gives us a detailed analysis of the Egyptian people during that time of oppression. Mahfouz conveys his message by the creation of external factors such as the British and WWII and making them play an eminent role throughout the

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    Marketing in Egypt after the revolution Introduction: Egyptian society has recently faced an overwhelming change since 25th of Jan‚ 2011 revolution. This change has severely affected major life aspects whether economically‚ socially‚ politically‚ or in the attitudes or behaviors. Definitely marketing has always been a way to express society changes and in many cases may be the reason or direct effect for changes in the society itself Since the revolution‚ marketing has been far more important

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    How is the Nile different from the Tigris and Euphrates? Egyptians depended on waters of a great river system. They had the Nile‚ Tigris and Euphrates rivers. The Nile is 4‚000 miles long and it starts far in the south‚ in lakes of central Africa and it empties into the Mediterranean Sea at Alexandria (Pouwels‚ Adler‚ 2015‚ pg. 37). All three rivers would flood‚ but with the Tigris and Euphrates you could not predict when they were going to flood. The Nile on the other hand was a benevolent river

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    Egypt : the People

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    of the land available for farming. Most of the fellahin were tenants or owned very tiny farms. A man who owned 3 to 5 acres was considered well-off. Now no one is permitted to own more than 50 acres‚ and the average Egyptian farm is generally much smaller than that. An Egyptian farmer’s main tools are the hoe‚ a simple plow‚ and the sakia‚ or waterwheel. The fellah‚ his wife‚ and their children all work together in the fields. The dreary routine of their lives is relieved only on a few occasions-the

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    Menes Accomplishments

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    His religious impact is also pretty great‚ he is thought of more so as a great king who came along a calmed the chaos‚ which to some extent means that his is a god. Because of his accomplishments‚ he probably is a praised and seen as a god by the egyptians‚reinforced by the fact that they believed that the pharaohs were living the Horus. Nevertheless‚ menes established the divine rules of worship as well as formalizing religious practice. Menes‚ as said before is definitely one of the greatest‚ and

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    Ancient Egyptian medicine and health‚ another Egyptian advancement by Aparimeya Ancient Egypt was a colossus civilization located in modern day north East Africa. The Egyptian became advanced in many fields in ancient times. A field in which they gained a lot of knowledge was in the medical field.They gained a lot of knowledge in the medical field‚ leading them to have the best medical care. They had a variety of ways to cure people. Some civilizations that were rich with knowledge and health‚such

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    from 206 to 186 BC and came under the rule of two native pharaohs‚ Hyrgonaphor and Chaonnophris. Reasons for this stemmed from the anti-colonial resentment of the Egyptian people toward their Greek rulers and from how the Ptolemaic kings misconducted themselves according to the role of the Pharaoh. The traditional objective of the Egyptian leader was to ensure that “they were victorious in battle‚ brought rich booty and the stolen images of the gods‚ and last but not least‚ fought in a ‘distant valley’

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    the issues of gender roles and still leave their mark in history‚ though their expectations of these roles were often quite different. Both the Greeks (specifically Athenians and Spartans) and the Egyptians accepted obvious gender roles as that of male and female‚ with the exception of the Egyptian consideration of a third gender‚ which were eunuchs. The role of the eunuch in Egypt was assumed to be one of royal or religious service but may be much more according to art found in the and tomb

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    Midaq Alley

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    readers’ attention concerning how westernization takes place. The novel often talks about the setting‚ time and theme in Egyptian culture through stories of various characters. The culture describes in the novel restricts the readers’ views on each character on the account of the limitations of their knowledge about Arab belief and culture. Religion is a huge component of Egyptian life and Radwan Hussainy is a good example. The alley’s community often turns to him for counseling and everyone respects

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    It is widely believed that the Egyptian law and culture was based on the common sense of right and wrong. Following the codes based on the concept of the Ma’at. The Ma’at was pictured as a woman with an ostrich feather and represented truth‚ order‚ balance and justice of the universe. She was godness and the symbol of the ever important equilibrium of the universe. This concept applied to all people regardless of class or gender although since the slaves were not considered people or the pharaoh

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