Egypt's location as the keystone region at the center of the Afro-Asian geographical nexus
is apparent from ancient times.
During periods of conquest in ancient Egypt, both by foreign invaders and by Egyptians
attacking Near Eastern states, the ancient Egyptians and the peoples of Syro-Palestine were
introduced to each other's culture. The ancient Egyptians also came into contact with the
Nubians to the south and the Libyans to the west through their continued struggle to protect
their borders and expand their sources of raw materials. The Ptolemaic and Roman
periods brought additional contact with Mediterranean countries.
Obviously flowing from the rich history of contacts among the peoples of Asia, Africa,
and Europe has been an equally rich blending of cultural and physical types. In New
Kingdom times of Pharonic Egypt, the only culture the ancient Egyptians recognized was
Egyptian; therefore, any person who was a member of another cultural group, that is, Nubians,
Libyans, or Syro-Palestines, could become Egyptian by practicing Egyptian culture and
speaking the Egyptian language. That slow integration formed the basis of today's physical
and cultural blend. Over the millennia, from Ptolemaic-Roman times on, contact and
mingling with these peoples increased, creating a truly multiracial and, to a lesser
extent, multicultural situation in Egypt.