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People murdered in Egypt

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Anwar Sadat
President of Egypt from 1970 to 1981
Hypatia
Hypatia (born 350–370 – March 415 AD) was a Neoplatonist philosopher, astronomer, and mathematician who lived in Alexandria, at that time in the province of Egypt and a major city of the Roman Empire. In Alexandria, Hypatia was a prominent thinker who taught subjects including philosophy and astronomy, and in her lifetime was renowned as a great teacher and a wise counselor. Not the only fourth century Alexandrian female mathematician, Hypatia was preceded by Pandrosion. However, Hypatia is the first female mathematician whose life is reasonably well recorded. She wrote a commentary on Di
Pompey
Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus (; 29 September 106 BC – 28 September 48 BC), known in English as Pompey ( ) or Pompey the Great, was a Roman general and statesman who was prominent in the last decades of the Roman Republic. As a young man, he was a partisan and protégé of the dictator Sulla, after whose death he achieved much military and political success himself.
Caesarion
Ptolemy XV Caesar (; , ; 47 BC – late August 30 BC), nicknamed Caesarion (, , "Little Caesar"), was the last pharaoh of the Ptolemaic Kingdom of Egypt, reigning with his mother Cleopatra VII from 44 BC to 30 BC. He nominally reigned as sole pharaoh for a few days after his mother's death, although Alexandria had already fallen and Caesarion remained in hiding until his execution by Octavian, who would become the first Roman emperor as "Augustus".
Hassan al-Banna
Egyptian Islamist leader and politician (1906—1949)
Abbas I of Egypt
Wāli of Egypt from 1848 to 1854
Jean Baptiste Kléber
French general, and architect (1753-1800)
Boutros Ghali
Egyptian politician and prime minister (1846-1910)
The Younger Lady
mummy identified as the mother of the Pharaoh Tutankhamun
Wasfi Tal
Prime Minister of Jordan (1919-1971)
Walter Guinness, 1st Baron Moyne
British politician, businessman and army officer (1880-1944)
Mahmud Fahmi al-Nuqrashi
Egyptian politician (1888-1948)
Edward Henry Palmer
British orientalist (1840-1882)
Ahmad Maher Pasha
Egyptian Prime Minister (1888-1945)
Tala'i ibn Ruzzik
Vizier of the Fatimid Caliphate
Hisham Barakat
Egyptian prosecutor general (1950-2015)
Lee Stack
British Army officer and administrator (1868–1924)
Thekra
Thekra bint Mohammed Al Dali (; September 16, 1966 – November 28, 2003), better known as Thekra (), was a Tunisian singer.
Al-Àfdal Kutayfat
Kutayfāt, also known as Abu Ali Ahmad ibn al-Afdal or al-Afdal Kutayfāt, (d. 1131) was vizier and amīr al-juyūsh (commander of the armies) to al-Hafiz, Caliph of Egypt, from 1130 to 1131. He seized power by imprisoning al-Hafiz, proclaimed the dynasty deposed and abandoned Isma'ilism as the state religion in favour of a vaguely Twelver form of Shi'ism with himself as vicegerent of a hidden imam. but was murdered by Fatimid forces loyal to the caliph. Kutayfāt was the son of al-Afdal Shahanshah and grandson of Badr al-Jamali, and so the third generation of Armenians serving as Fatimid vizier.