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The Ptolemies were a Greek dynasty that ruled ancient Egypt in the final centuries before the Common Era. They made a lasting impact on Nilotic culture and its landscape. The conqueror, whose reputation quite literally preceded him, deposed the occupying Persian regime with ease. He then went on to meet the Oracle at Siwah, who proclaimed him to be the son of Amon. Alexander was depicted as a god and pharaoh thereafter. His stay in Egypt was brief.
But the country enchanted an ambitious general within his ranks, a certain Ptolemy I Soter. After establishing his eponymous capital city on the Mediterannean, Alexander and company stole off to chase glory in the East. His generals divided the provinces amongst themselves, and Ptolemy set his sights on Egypt. A long line of them would go on to rule after him, ending with the suicide of his last of kin, Cleopatra.
Ancient Egypt had long been in its death spiral by the time Alexander and Ptolemy first entered the scene. But for almost years it was restored, albeit with a Greek twist, by the Ptolemies. Nectanebo II, the last ethnically Egyptian pharaoh, exercised his power to the hilt. But he was unable to stop the inevitable doom of Pharaonic Egypt. Ptolemy I Soter, on the other side of the Persian occupation, broadly represents its recovery. He ushered in the start of a renewed prosperity that continued into the Roman Period after the Ptolemies.
It all began with a reorganization of the state. For starters, the administration of the country would now be centered around Alexandria. While still important, the former religious and political centers of Thebes and Memphis took a back seat to the new capital and other Greek cities like Naukratis and Ptolemais. According to the renowned British classicist Alan K. The Ptolemies ushered in a new bureaucracy to govern the country that was, aptly, pyramid-shaped.