Khedivate of Egypt
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Khedivate of Egypt
Summary
Khedivate of Egypt is a historical country[1]. It has Wikipedia articles in 25 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- Khedivate of Egypt is in the country of Egypt[3].
- Khedivate of Egypt is on the continent of Africa[4].
- Khedivate of Egypt is on the continent of Asia[5].
- Khedivate of Egypt's instance of is recorded as historical country[6].
- Khedivate of Egypt's instance of is recorded as tributary state[7].
- Khedivate of Egypt's instance of is recorded as transcontinental country[8].
- Khedivate of Egypt's capital is recorded as Cairo[9].
- Khedivate of Egypt's official language is recorded as Egyptian Arabic[10].
- Khedivate of Egypt's official language is recorded as Ottoman Turkish[11].
- Khedivate of Egypt's official language is recorded as English[12].
- Khedivate of Egypt's currency is recorded as Egyptian pound[13].
- Khedivate of Egypt's basic form of government is recorded as constitutional monarchy[14].
- Khedivate of Egypt was followed by Sultanate of Egypt[15].
- Khedivate of Egypt was followed by Mahdist Sudan[16].
- Khedivate of Egypt was followed by Italian Libya[17].
- Khedivate of Egypt's Commons category is recorded as Khedivate of Egypt[18].
- June 8, 1867 marks the founding of Khedivate of Egypt[19].
- Khedivate of Egypt was dissolved in December 19, 1914[20].
- Khedivate of Egypt's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 30.05, 'lon': 31.216666666667}[21].
- Khedivate of Egypt's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Khedivate of Egypt[22].
- Khedivate of Egypt's replaces is recorded as Egypt eyalet[23].
- Khedivate of Egypt's replaced by is recorded as Sultanate of Egypt[24].
- Khedivate of Egypt covers an area of {'unit': 'Q712226', 'amount': '+1001449'}[25].
- Khedivate of Egypt's position held by head of the organization is recorded as khedive[26].
Body
Founding
June 8, 1867 marks the founding of Khedivate of Egypt[19].
Identity
Successors include Sultanate of Egypt[15], Mahdist Sudan[16], and Italian Libya[17].
Dissolution
Khedivate of Egypt was dissolved in December 19, 1914[20].
Why It Matters
Khedivate of Egypt has Wikipedia articles in 25 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2] It is known by 19 alternative names across languages and contexts.[27]