33 Egypt, Europe, And The Suez Canal

    [Music]
    if you or I were asked to name just two
    of Egypt’s most iic sites there’s a good
    chance that both would be works of
    engineering even if separated by about 4
    and a half thousand
    years the first likely would be the
    great pyramid at
    Giza built around 2500 BC not only is
    the Great Pyramid the oldest of the
    seven wonders of the ancient world but
    it’s also the only one that’s still
    standing and what would your second
    choice be the massive Rock Cut temples
    of Abu simbel on Lake nassa the Great
    Sphinx the Temple of carak
    perhaps for me the second great feat of
    engineering is none of these but rather
    the sewers
    Canal like the pyramids it was first
    conceived in ancient Egypt but this
    Transportation Marvel had to wait until
    the late 19th century until it was
    finally
    built in an era full of grand building
    projects the opening ceremony of the
    sewers canal in
    1869 was among the most eagerly awaited
    parties of the
    century the Egyptian ruler Ismael Pasha
    who reported to the ottoman Sultan in
    Constantinople joined royalty and other
    distinguished guests from across Europe
    and
    Beyond but such invitations were much
    harder to come by in the Middle East
    itself in the speech he gave to Mark the
    occasion Ishmael the Egyptian kadif or
    Viceroy made the following boast
    henceforth Egypt is part of Europe not
    Africa an ambitious modernizing and
    forward-looking if spendthrift ruler
    Ishmael the Magnificent remarks make
    perfectly clear how he saw his country
    or at least where he saw Egypt’s future
    the kad’s proud boast about Egypt now
    being part of Europe was far more
    prophetic than he could have imagined
    just not in the way he
    envisaged while there’s no question in
    my mind that the opening of the seers
    canal was a turning point in the history
    of the Middle East one can still ask
    why and the answer has many parts the
    story of the sewers Canal is about a
    dream that combines engineering trade
    politics power and ultimately debt and
    downfall first we’ll look at the idea of
    uniting the Mediterranean and Red Seas
    an aspiration with an ancient pedigree
    but that needed the drive of a modern
    Visionary Ferdinand delesseps to make it
    become a
    reality then we’ll turn to the
    construction of the canal itself which
    was a building project on a scale unlike
    anything Egypt had seen since perhaps
    the days of the Pharaohs and the
    pyramids it was a remarkable engineering
    achievement that had Untold benefits for
    global
    trade but ultimately the construction
    and opening of the sews Canal is a story
    of foreign debt that would cost Egypt
    its independence and all that
    entailed hadif Ismail was right the
    opening of the sews Canal did make Egypt
    part of Europe part of the British
    Empire to be precise and that altered
    the balance of power across the entire
    middle e
    as we begin we should note that canals
    were not only an idea in ancient Egypt
    they were a
    reality a number of earlier canals were
    built along parts of the route of
    today’s sewers
    Canal as attested to by Aristotle
    Herodotus and others there were a number
    of east west canals linking the River
    Nile to the Red Sea during ancient times
    as well as at least one major North
    South Canal
    after Napoleon’s invasion of Egypt in
    1798 members of the scientific team that
    accompanied him uncovered traces of one
    of these ancient canals this discovery
    coupled with Napoleon’s Limitless Drive
    started him thinking about digging a
    canal more or less where the sewers
    Canal is
    today unfortunately for Napoleon’s
    Ambitions one of the surveyors
    responsible for an initial survey made a
    serious
    miscalculation his report concluded
    erroneously that the Red Sea was 33 ft
    higher than the
    Mediterranean had this been accurate
    locks would have had to have been added
    to the canal making the project
    prohibitively expensive as a result no
    further action was taken during the
    Napoleonic
    era in truth the difference in height
    between the two C’s is much less
    it’s about 4T as another surveyor
    reported to the British government in
    1830 however in spite of concluding that
    no locks were needed the British
    government refused to discuss any Canal
    building project as an alternative it
    built a railway from Alexandria to Cairo
    and another line from Cairo to Port
    Suz the British perhaps in part
    regretting their lack of vision never
    let up in their complaints and
    objections from the moment when the
    Great French engineer Ferdinand theups
    won the concession in 1854 to create a
    company to build the sewers Canal until
    it opened 15 years
    later and why were British objections so
    vifer one might think that with global
    Naval superiority and an Empire on which
    the Sun never set a canal would
    principally benefit the
    British well the problem wasn’t a
    British failure to grasp that the sewers
    Canal would benefit its
    interests but rather Great Britain
    recognized the canal would benefit other
    Count’s interests as
    well explicit in the original concession
    Egypt granted to doesb was that any
    Canal would be open to ships from All
    Nations thus the construction of a
    Waterway through the heart of the Arid
    Middle East connecting Egypt to all the
    world was an advance that would also
    Advantage Britain’s Rivals France and
    Russia while the sewers Canal was
    indirectly at least a challenge to
    ottoman power in the Middle East it was
    the ottoman’s conquest of Constantinople
    in
    1453 that made Europeans set off to find
    alternative trade routes to India and
    Beyond after first circumnavigating
    Africa
    the Europeans found the sewers Canal to
    be a much better option as it virtually
    halved the sailing distance between
    India and
    Britain so who was Ferdinand delps and
    how did he manage to secure the rights
    to dig a canal that would change the
    course of Egyptian Middle Eastern and
    world
    history born in versailes in 1805 delps
    was a diplomat in his first career in
    this role he spent much of the 1830s
    based in Egypt and we can point to two
    incidents during this period that would
    alter the course of his life the first
    seemingly inconsequential event took
    place even before he set foot in
    Egypt as the ship he sailed on
    approached Alexandria passengers and
    crew had to spend a period in quarantine
    during which time he read an account of
    Napoleon’s military Adventures in Egypt
    in this book the newly arrived French
    consul in Cairo first learned about the
    possibility of a canal an idea that
    struck him powerfully and remained in
    his
    mind the second detail was delessup
    subsequent friendship with the Egyptian
    leader at the time the great Muhammad
    Ali who was Keen to see his country
    modernize with help from the
    French and his friendship with Muhammad
    Ali’s fourth son
    11 years old when delesseps arrived in
    Cairo the Egyptian vizier’s fourth son
    was not a favorite of his fathers in
    part because the boy struggled with his
    weight publicly rebuked and ridiculed he
    was put on starvation diets and forced
    into harsh exercise regimens that
    brought the unfortunate boy to tears
    theups took pity giving the boy plates
    of pasta and other treats in secret
    in time a sequence of accidental and
    premature deaths in the Muhammad Ali
    line saw this son become khif of Egypt
    that’s right his name was s
    Pasha later when delps came looking for
    permission to build the canal s Pasha a
    frankophone was on the throne he hadn’t
    forgotten the kindness delps had shown
    him nor the spaghetti treats he shared
    with
    him although side paser ruled for only 9
    years dying in 1863 at the age of 40
    he’s perhaps best remembered today for
    having given his name to Port SED the
    sewers Canal’s Northern
    Terminus that and running up an enormous
    national debt which debt his nephew and
    Heir inherited before adding to it in an
    equally propagate
    fashion now let’s consider some of the
    numbers behind IND the building of the
    canal the first question in any building
    project is surely how much I don’t
    suppose anyone will be surprised to hear
    that the sewers Canal cost more to build
    than the original estimate twice as much
    as it turned
    out the next question to ask is who’s
    paying well with respect to the sewers
    Canal it was shareholders shareholders
    of the universal Suez ship canal company
    which delps formed in 1850 58 four years
    after obtaining a 99-year concession to
    build and operate a
    canal Egypt in the form of s Pasha held
    22% of the shares of the universal
    sewers ship canal company while the
    remainder were made available to
    investors in spite of the word Universal
    in the company’s name it was French
    investors at first almost exclusively
    who put their money into the project
    widely derided in the British press and
    Parliament the mega building project
    didn’t attract British and other
    non-french investment and interest until
    years
    later groundbreaking took place at Port
    s on the 25th of April
    1859 and work was completed exactly a
    decade later but at what
    cost a total of 1 and a half million
    people worked on the project project
    over the 10 years it took to build the
    canal during the first four years the
    manual toil was performed by forced
    labor mainly Egyptian peasants pressed
    into service by the
    kadif there were never fewer than 30,000
    men employed on the
    project but the death toll stood as high
    as a 100,000 by the time the canal was
    completed Britain Keen to score
    political points and delay progress of
    the canal
    objected to the use of compulsory
    labor this prompted delps to write to
    the British government reminding them
    that they’d not been too bothered about
    using forced labor when they’
    constructed the Egyptian Railway just a
    few years
    earlier concerned about European public
    opinion Theif nevertheless brought to an
    end this ready resource which was
    another reason why the costs Rose as
    deeply as they did halfway along the
    canal the entirely new town of ismia was
    built to house sewers Canal company
    workers founded by delps the new city
    housed company officials as well as the
    foreign engineers and local laborers
    that built the
    canal ismia takes its name from s
    pasha’s nephew and successor Ishmael
    though it was built in elegant French as
    opposed to Egyptian
    Style meanwhile s’s son and air
    presumptive died in an accident drowning
    when in a railway Carriage that fell
    into the Nile as it was being fed
    across without an heir s’s death meant
    that Ismael became the fifth of the
    Muhammad Ali Dynasty to rule
    Egypt like his Uncle s Pasha Ismael was
    a great supporter of the sewers Canal
    project and like his grandfather
    Muhammad Ali the dynastic founder Ismael
    was a keen modern ER who developed
    favorable views of modern European
    culture and Engineering while a student
    in
    Paris the Canal’s Dimensions have
    increased over time including again very
    recently but in the beginning it was 102
    M long since then it has grown to a
    length of 120 Mi a depth of 79 ft and
    the width of almost 700 ft
    across yet the most important figure is
    as true today as it was on the opening
    day in
    1869 and that’s the fact that the sewers
    Canal cut almost in half the sea Voyage
    from India to Britain slicing no less
    than 4 and a half th000 miles from a
    single
    trip for the official opening on the
    17th of November
    1869 Ismael made sure to spare no
    expense royalty arist ocracy government
    officials cultural icons and the biggest
    celebrities of the day were all invited
    to Egypt for three weeks of festivities
    all of which were paid directly by the
    kadif
    Ismail the guest list included the
    Austrian Emperor the king of Hungary and
    princes from Prussia Holland and Beyond
    reflecting the kives avowed desire to
    impress and develop closer ties with
    France the guest of honor was
    undoubtedly the white of Napoleon II the
    empress
    Eugene and if there’s any doubt as to
    her status the fact that Ishmael built a
    palace on the Nile for her stay should
    clarify
    matters today that Palace is still
    receiving foreign guests to Cairo as it
    was bought and converted into a hotel by
    the marot chain and it sits on the
    island in the middle of the Nile in
    Cairo Ismael also commissioned the
    construction of an 850 seat Opera House
    in Cairo to celebrate the Canal’s
    opening it actually opened 2 weeks
    beforehand with assembled dignitaries
    treated to ver
    Rialto Rialto wasn’t the first choice
    for the evenings
    entertainment following the theme of no
    expense spared ishmail had persuaded
    verie with a fee of 150,000 Franks about
    $900,000 us today to write an Opera with
    an Egyptian theme to celebrate the new
    opera house and the sews
    Canal
    unfortunately the sets and costumes got
    stuck in Paris due to another of
    Europe’s numerous 19th century Wars and
    the performance was delayed for 2 years
    until Christmas Eve
    1871 that Opera was of course
    AA the construction of the canal was
    obviously the major cuse of Egypt’s
    growing debt though Hospitality on this
    scale certainly didn’t help the
    country’s increasingly precarious
    Financial
    footing Ismael stepped into a diplomatic
    Minefield however when he decided not to
    invite a single Muslim head of state
    rather he said he wanted to invite the
    Moroccan Sultan the Sha of Persia and
    the Tunisian ruler among other Muslim
    sovereigns but he claimed not to have
    enough space
    he later tried to excuse himself when he
    wrote with the best intentions on Earth
    and opening all my residences I could
    not have more than 80 palaces ready for
    the sovereigns and princes who would
    like to honor me with their
    presence it’s now time to consider the
    consequences of the sewers Canal which
    are really what make this a turning
    point in the history of the Middle
    East perhaps the first thing to mention
    is that within a couple of years of its
    open opening Britain had not only
    stopped grumbling but was one of the
    Canal’s biggest
    users by the early
    1870s 35,000 British troops passed back
    and forth through the canal every
    year not only did this man-made passage
    greatly reduce the journey to and from
    India the jewel in the crown of the
    British Empire but as we’ve arrived at
    the age of the steamship Journey times
    were reduced even further the following
    numbers are useful in illustrating the
    scale of the Canal’s
    impact in
    1854 the Year dups got the concession to
    build the sewers Canal the Lloyd’s
    Register of shipping recorded 10,000
    ships of which just
    187 were
    Steamers by the
    1890s some 5,000 ships were passing
    through the canal every year 70% of
    these were British and every one of them
    was a
    steamship I’m going to allow here for a
    quick geographical digression to the
    United States but one that’s very much
    in keeping with the spirit of the
    1860s in May
    1869 6 months before the opening of the
    sewers Canal the first transcontinental
    Railway opened for business connecting
    San Francisco and the West Coast to the
    country’s existing East Coast Railway
    Network these were headyy days indeed
    not only for Empires engineering and
    trade but also for new vistas of
    adventurous
    travel then in 1873 inspired by the
    opening of both the sewers canal and the
    Transcontinental Railway Jules Vern
    wrote the delightfully entertaining
    Adventure novel Around the World in 80
    Days it hasn’t gone unnoticed by critics
    musing on the respective strength of the
    British and French Empires at the time
    that this great French author gave the
    world an English hero philus fog with a
    French
    manservant another Egyptian tinged theme
    emerges a few years later in October
    1886 with the dedication of the Statue
    of Liberty by President Grover Cleveland
    in New York Harbor
    designed by the French sculptor
    Frederick August bartoldi to represent
    progress in the form of Egyptian
    Womanhood that most American of American
    icons was meant to stand at the entrance
    to the sewers
    Canal alas for bold’s vision funding
    couldn’t be found so Egypt’s loss was
    America’s gain and a wonderful sight to
    generations of immigrants and tourists
    in the United States
    back to the world of politics and more
    importantly
    debt by
    1875 Egypt’s financial crisis had come
    to a head facing bankruptcy hadif
    Ishmael sold what he could to raise
    money in a
    hurry one asset that could readily be
    converted to cash was Egypt’s shares in
    the sewers
    Canal British prime minister Benjamin
    Disraeli quickly saw the importance of
    Britain increasing its stake in the
    canal and so he agreed to pay4 million
    Sterling for the shares about 90 million
    today or $140 million
    us French investors including the
    government and individuals remained the
    largest block at that time but overnight
    Britain had gotten its hands on 44% of
    the Canal’s
    ownership israeli’s main political
    opponent the four time Prime Minister
    William Gladstone accused Disraeli of
    having undermined Parliament by failing
    to consult it about buying the shares he
    also groused that the British government
    had secured financing from French
    Bankers the
    Rothchilds if this caused ripples in
    Britain the sale of Egypt’s shares in
    the sewers Canal produced a tidal wave
    in
    Egypt Egypt sale of its Universal Suez
    ship canal company shares wasn’t enough
    to clear State debts and so after
    investigations by a series of
    commissions in Britain and France the
    hapless Ismael was forced to accept
    joint anglo-french control over Egypt’s
    finances and
    government one of the questions the angl
    French Commissioners were trying to
    settle was who should be considered
    responsible for Egypt’s massive
    debt as is
    like his Uncle s Pasha before him ran
    the country as his personal Thom they
    didn’t have to look too
    far Ismael had a dream to see his empire
    spread Beyond Egypt and the Sudan to
    cover the entire Nile
    region and so he engaged in a costly war
    against
    Ethiopia apart from failing to take
    Ethiopia this overseas Adventure further
    wrecked the Egyptian
    economy
    after another inquiry in
    1878 this one by Lord bearing later the
    Earl of
    chroma isma was forced to hand over his
    personal Estates to the nation I.E angl
    French control and to accept a reduced
    and humiliating status of a
    constitutional
    Monarch alas when khif Ismail said at
    the opening ceremony of the sewers Canal
    that his country was now part of Europe
    the boast had become true in so far as
    the Egyptian economy was in the hands of
    France and Britain and matters got even
    worse many Egyptians were upset by
    ismael’s incompetent handling of the
    economy and the W status of their
    country in the hands of France and
    Britain the result was a serious Revolt
    starting in
    1879 led by the disaffected Egyptian
    army colonel orabi Pasha and what was
    the result of arabi’s Revolt to save his
    country military intervention by Britain
    and the removal from power of Ismael who
    was replaced by his more plant
    son Egypt would go on to be fully
    occupied and ruled by Britain until the
    1950s I’d like to stand back for a
    minute now and think again about the
    major themes surrounding the opening of
    the sewers
    canal it’s undeniably a feat of great
    engineering it’s also a political story
    involving the shared and sometimes
    conflicting interests of both Britain
    and France the great European powers of
    the day as well as of Egypt the Ottoman
    Empire and the shifting balance of power
    in the Middle
    East but the heart of this story is
    economics and more precisely a tale of
    debt it would be many many years before
    the Egyptian economy realized the
    financial promise that theps had
    envisioned for the
    canal until then if anyone were a winner
    it was the British
    Empire the 20th century history of the
    sewers Canal represents yet another
    fascinating story which perhaps we will
    share more fully another
    day however it was the announcement by
    the postor War II Egyptian president
    Kamal Abdul Nasser in
    1956 that he was going to nationalize
    the sewers Canal that led to yet another
    British Invasion this time accompanied
    by French and Israeli
    forces the politics of Arab nationalism
    aside what really prompted NASA to act
    so forcefully was Egypt’s need for
    money by the middle of the 20th century
    SE Canal revenues were really adding up
    and exactly as had been the case in
    1858 when deip persuaded his old friend
    khif Pasha to Grant him the concession
    to build a canal so too in
    1956 did Egypt’s First Independent
    postcolonial ruler see the canal as an
    economic Lifeline that could bolster his
    Reign the ultimate withdrawal of Britain
    and France from Egypt in 1956 at the
    behest of the United States and the
    Soviet Union was a colossally
    embarrassing moment
    reinforcing their dwindling power in the
    Middle East but it was the making of
    President NASA who became a hero
    throughout much if not most of the Arab
    world in
    1962 the Egyptian government finally
    paid off its debt for the Canal’s
    construction to the universal Suez ship
    canal
    company that company still exists today
    although after a series of mergers it’s
    now called GD F
    Suz while the sez Canal Authority a
    wholly state-owned Egyptian entity now
    operates the
    canal in 2014 however the Egyptian
    government embarked on a grand building
    project to widen parts of the sewers
    canal and add a new 45m Lane to run
    parallel with a stretch of the existing
    Canal this $4 billion investment was
    intended to double the Canal’s shipping
    capacity and provide a big boost to the
    economy one unintended consequence of
    the sewers Canal however was the inward
    migration of non-indigenous marine life
    into the
    Mediterranean scientists reckon that
    about 350 non-indigenous species have
    established themselves in the
    Mediterranean since
    1869 because the Red Sea has higher high
    levels of salinity and thus fewer
    nutrients it’s home to Stronger more
    aggressive marine life as a result
    creatures moving North have a distinct
    advantage over their Mediterranean
    Rivals it’s a question of the survival
    of or dominance by the fittest far fewer
    Mediterranean species have been
    established in the Red Sea had the new
    arrivals simply added to Mediterranean
    fish dos there’d probably be less to
    worry about alas more than a few of the
    invasive Red Sea species are poisonous
    venomous and otherwise detrimental to
    human activity and to The Wider
    Mediterranean
    ecosystem the toxic silver cheeked
    puffer fish and The Nomad jellyfish are
    just two species of concern the former
    for the toxic chemicals they produce and
    the latter for their sheer
    number once limited to tropical waters
    Nomad jellyfish are now a regular site
    in the Eastern
    Mediterranean swarms of them mass in
    tendril clumps tens of miles wide so
    large that they can interrupt commercial
    fishing for days on end as well as
    forcing beaches to
    close in a part of the world that relies
    heavily on fishing and tourism this has
    been very
    Troublesome it’s unlikely that
    environmental impacts were uppermost on
    the mind of the man by behind the canal
    nevertheless scientists today remember
    his name as well as if not better than
    the rest of
    us they’ve dubbed movement of
    non-indigenous species through the
    sewers Canal as the lespian
    migration

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