The Suez Canal located in Egypt, is a 101 mile (163 km) long canal that connects the Mediterranean Sea with the Gulf of Suez, a northern branch of the Red Sea. It officially opened in November 1869.
Suez Canal Construction History
Although the Suez Canal wasn't officially completed until
1869, there is a long history of interest in connecting both the Nile River in
Egypt and the Mediterranean Sea to the Red Sea. It is believed that the first
canal in the area was constructed between the Nile River delta and the Red Sea
in the 13th Century B.C.E. During the 1,000 years following its construction,
the original canal was neglected and its use finally stopped in the 8th
Century.
The first modern attempts to build a canal came in the
late 1700s when Napoleon Bonaparte conducted an expedition to Egypt. He
believed that building a French controlled canal on the Isthmus of Suez would
cause trade problems for the British as they would either have to pay dues to
France or continue sending goods over land or around the southern part of
Africa.
Studies for Napoleon's canal plan began in 1799 but a
miscalculation in measurement showed the sea levels between the Mediterranean
and the Red Seas as being too different for a canal to be feasible and
construction immediately stopped.
The next attempt to build a canal in the area occurred in
the mid-1800s when a French diplomat and engineer, Ferdinand de Lesseps,
convinced the Egyptian viceroy Said Pasha to support the building of a canal.
In 1858, the Universal Suez Ship Canal Company was formed and given the right
to begin construction of the canal and operate it for 99 years, after which
time, the Egyptian government would take over control of the canal.
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