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Octavian
Caesar became the first Roman ruler of Egypt, reigning as the Emperor Augustus.
Egypt became the granary of the Roman Empire and remained stable for about 30
years. The Romans, like their Greek predecessors, synthesized many Egyptian
beliefs with their own, building temples at Dendara and Esna and Tranjan's kiosk
at Philae. Hellenism remained a dominant cultural force and Alexandria continued
to be a centre of Greek learning.
The
Christian era began in Egypt with the spectacular biblical Flight of the Holy
Family from Palestine. To this day shrines and churches mark the stages of the
journey of Mary, Joseph and their infant Jesus. According to Coptic tradition,
it was not until the arrival of Saint Mark that Christianity was established in
Egypt during the reign of Nero. Saint Mark began preaching the gospel in about
AD40 and established the Patriarchate of Alexandria in AD61.
The
Egyptian Coptic Church expanded over three centuries in spite of Roman
persecution of Christian converts throughout the Empire. In AD202 the Roman
authorities, continuing for nearly a century, initiated persecutions against
Copts. In AD284, during the reign of the Emperor Diocletian, a bloody massacre
of Coptic Christians
took place from which the church has dated its calendar. Christianity was
legalized and adopted as the official religion of the Roman Empire by the
Emperor Constantine.
By
the 3rd century AD the Roman Empire was in decline as a result of internal
strife, famine and war, finally splitting into eastern and western empires. The
Eastern Empire based in Constantinople became known as the Byzantine Empire. The
Western Empire remained centered in Rome. The legalization of Christianity did
not stop Roman persecution of the Coptic Christians because the Byzantine church
was based upon fundamentally different beliefs than those of the Coptic
Christian church which had adopted a Monophysite belief in the total divinity of
Christ, as opposed to the Byzantine belief that Christ was both human and
divine. The schism between the Byzantine and Coptic churches was never closed.
The
Copts were formally excommunicated from the Orthodox Church at the Council of
Chalcedon in AD451 and established their own Patriarchate at Alexandria. The
fifth century was also a time when monasticism emerged and the Coptic
monasteries of Saint Catherine, Saint Paul and Saint Anthony were established as
well as those at Wadi Natrun and Sohaag.
Apart from this doctrinal upheaval, the
Byzantine rule over Egypt remained relatively stable until the coming of Islam.
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