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ABOUT EGYPT |
Together with his army, he also brought scholars, artists and men of letters. They set up printing presses and institutes; these men were the first to study ancient Egypt, resulting in their enormous book 'Description of Egypt'. When this 20-volume tome arrived in Europe, it aroused a storm of interest.
For the next one hundred years many young adventurers followed Bonaparte's footsteps to this 'newly' discovered land, unearthing relics all but submerged by sand, dreaming of buried treasures, and indulging in wholesale brigandage, shipping back many artefacts for display in private collections.
They discovered a complex civilisation that extended some 7,000 years before the present time, and a whole pantheon of myths and Gods that had risen, fallen, then risen again before petering out around 400 years before Christ. It was a time that continues to inspire awe and wonder.
Despite this treasury of wonders Bonaparte's expedition was not to last. The British quickly discovered and destroyed Bonaparte's fleet in Alexandria harbour. A year later he slipped out from Egypt secretly. On his departure he forwarded his famous message 'don't wash, I'm coming,' to his wife.
Other interesting links:

MAGAZINE
About Egypt
EGYPT
- history
Red Sea history
Did Moses cross the Red
Sea?
Who was St Catherine?
The monks of Mount Sinai
Was Jesus
resurrected?
Nasser - Egypt's failed strongman
Bonaparte: 'don't wash I'm coming'
Mohammed Ali
A history of St Catherine's monastery
A Short history of the harem
Lawrence of Arabia
Ancient Egypt's most prolific king: Ramses
II
Egypt's Christian minority
EGYPT
- Red Sea
Red Sea bans shark fishing
Wrecks and ecology
The Red Sea and its coral reefs
Red Sea wrecks 1
Red Sea wrecks 2
Jacques Cousteau, Red Sea pioneer
Djibouti: the least-heard-of place in the world?
The Bedouins of the Red Sea
DIVING
Dahab dive sites
Diving overview
Freediving
Diving in Dahab (a testimonial)