Rock Art in Egypt
Penny Young uncovers prehistoric rock art in Luxor.
Penny Young uncovers prehistoric rock art in Luxor.
King Farouk was 32 when he lost his throne on 26 July 1952.
Susan Walker looks at our image of the great queen, as a major exhibition on her life opens at the British Museum.
The ancient library of Alexandria, destroyed by fire in AD270 is to be replaced by a new great library in the city to open this year, which will also serve as a local city museum.
John Ray on a ruler who mixed laddishness with mysticism in the last days of independent Egypt.
We may all know about Nefertiti, but what was life like for the less-famous women of ancient Egypt? Joyce Tyldesley describes the restraints and freedoms operating on daughters of Isis.
Margaret Jervis on a new exhibition at the British Museum on the Egyptian empire.
The author of a 4000-year-old hymn to one God has been portrayed as a mad idealist who turned the civilisation of the pharaohs upside down. John Ray discusses the man and his myth.
Robert Stephens looks at how Nasser left his mark on nearly twenty years of Egyptian, Arab and world history. An anti-colonialist who extended his concern to the newly liberated countries of the Third World, he has been acclaimed as a nationalist liberator - and condemned as a warmonger.