Arab caliphs had governed Egypt through the …

Years: 1396 - 1539

Arab caliphs had governed Egypt through the Mamluks for several centuries.

The Mamluks had seized control of the state in the thirteenth century and created a sultanate that ruled Egypt until the early sixteenth century.

Although they repeatedly launch military expeditions that weaken Dongola, the Mamluks do not directly rule Nubia.

The Turks conquer Egypt in 1517 and incorporate the country into the Ottoman Empire as a pashalik (province).

Ottoman forces pursue fleeing Mamluks into Nubia, which is claimed as a dependency of the Egyptian pashalik.

Although they establish administrative structures in ports on the Red Sea coast, the Ottomans exert little authority over the interior.

Instead, the Ottomans rely on military kashif (leaders), who control their virtually autonomous fiefs as agents of the pasha in Cairo, to rule the interior.

The rule of the kashif, many of whom are Mamluks who have made their peace with the Ottomans, will last three hundred years.

Concerned with little more than tax collecting and slave trading, the military leaders terrorize the population and constantly fight among themselves for title to territory.

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