Category
page 1Religion in Egypt
Nag Hammadi library
collection of early Christian and Gnostic texts discovered near the Upper Egyptian town of Nag Hammadi in 1945

Kemetism
thumb|250x250px|A Kemetic shrine, with statues of Bastet, [[Sekhmet, Anubis, Nephthys, Thoth, and Serket]]
Kemetism (also Kemeticism or Kemetic paganism; sometimes referred to as Neterism from netjer "god") is a neopagan religion and revival of the ancient Egyptian religion, emerging during the 1970s. A Kemetic is one who follows Kemetism.
religion in Egypt
religion in the country
Islam in Egypt
religion in Egypt

Zār
thumb|Zār ceremony on Hormuz Island
Ministry of Awqaf
Egyptian ministry of religious affairs
Hypsiphrone
Hypsiphrone is Codex XI, Tractate 4 of the Nag Hammadi writings, named from the translation of a Greek feminine name word 'Hypsiphrone' or 'Hupsiph[rone]' rendered as she of high mind. The text is highly fragmentary, and only parts of several paragraphs have survived.
Niqāb in Egypt
face-covering veil in Egyptian society
Egyptian identification card controversy
Egyptian ID card dispute concerning members of minority faiths