ABSTRACT

From the earliest times, the Egyptians came into conflict with the Beduin (whom they called ’Shoshu’), who were the desert tribes that wandered along and lived on the borderlands of Egypt. They formed part of that desert environment which, with its teeming wild animals and as the location of most of the cemeteries, represented a place of death and hostility to the Egyptians. The Beduin lived in tents and pursued a largely nomadic existence but, to feed their families, they traded goods such as galena (used as eye-paint) with the Egyptians. Nevertheless, the Egyptians always regarded them as savages. Attracted by the pleasant and easy life of the Nile valley, the Beduin constantly harrassed Egypt from earliest times. When the system of centralised government collapsed, the Beduin incursions were successful; as part of the government’s continuous policy to protect Egypt’s boundaries, every attempt was made to keep this menace at bay and, in times of internal stability, strings of military fortresses were built and corps of police patrolled the desert with dogs.