On November 17, 1869 C.E., a convoy of ships sailed through a 193-kilometer ribbon of water cut across the Egyptian desert, completing a journey that ancient pharaohs had dreamed of and French engineers had nearly broken themselves to build. The Suez Canal was open — and within a decade, the shipping lanes of the entire world would bend toward it.
Key facts about the Suez Canal opening
- Suez Canal opening: The canal officially opened on November 17, 1869 C.E., after a decade of construction supervised by the Compagnie de Suez under French diplomat Ferdinand de Lesseps.
- Canal construction timeline: Work began in 1859 C.E. and took ten years, involving an estimated 1.5 million Egyptian workers laboring under brutal conditions, with tens of thousands dying from disease and exhaustion.
- Trade route impact: The 193.30-kilometer waterway cut the sailing distance between the Arabian Sea and London by approximately 8,900 kilometers, eliminating the need to round the Cape of Good Hope.
A dream three thousand years in the making
The idea of linking the Mediterranean and the Red Sea was not new in 1869 C.E. Ancient Egyptian rulers had attempted it before recorded history was clear enough to name them confidently. The pharaoh Necho II began a west-to-east canal around 600 B.C.E., but abandoned it after an oracle warned that the work would benefit foreigners more than Egyptians. Darius I of Persia, who ruled Egypt after its conquest, completed a version of that canal around 500 B.C.E.
What made the 1869 C.E. opening different was scale, engineering precision, and timing. The industrial revolution had produced the tools, the capital, and the global demand for faster trade that made a sea-level canal — with no locks, no dams, just open water flowing freely — not merely desirable but economically irresistible.
Ferdinand de Lesseps, who had spent years cultivating relationships with Egyptian rulers, secured a concession from Khedive Said Pasha in 1854 C.E. The Compagnie de Suez was formed in 1858 C.E., and construction began the following year. The engineering design, largely shaped by Austrian engineer Alois Negrelli, called for a straight cut through the Isthmus of Suez — no locks required, because the Red Sea and Mediterranean sit at nearly the same level.
Who actually built it
The celebration at the opening ceremony in November 1869 C.E. was lavish. Empress Eugénie of France led a convoy of dignitaries through the new waterway. Khedive Ismail of Egypt threw a party that reportedly cost £1.3 million. Giuseppe Verdi was commissioned to write an opera — though Aida arrived two years late for the occasion.
The names celebrated that day were almost entirely European. The hands that dug the canal were not.
An estimated 1.5 million Egyptian workers — many conscripted through the corvée labor system, which compelled poor rural Egyptians to work without meaningful compensation — moved the earth that made the canal possible. Historians estimate that tens of thousands died from cholera, typhus, and brutal working conditions in the desert heat. International pressure, particularly from Britain, eventually pushed the company to phase out forced labor by the mid-1860s C.E. and replace it with paid workers and machinery — but the shift came late and was incomplete.
This is part of the full picture of what was built.
Lasting impact
The effect on global trade was immediate and enormous. Shipping times between Europe and Asia collapsed. Goods that once took months to move — cotton, tea, spices, coal, manufactured products — could now move in weeks. The canal restructured port cities, redirected colonial trade networks, and accelerated the industrialization of Asia.
Britain, which had initially opposed the canal, quickly recognized its strategic value. In 1875 C.E., the British government purchased a controlling stake in the Compagnie de Suez from a financially struggling Khedive Ismail — a deal brokered by Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli and funded overnight by the Rothschild banking house. For the next eight decades, Britain and France effectively controlled one of the world’s most critical chokepoints.
That changed in 1956 C.E., when Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser nationalized the canal, declaring that its revenues would fund the Aswan High Dam and that Egypt would control its own waterway. The nationalization triggered the Suez Crisis, in which Britain, France, and Israel launched a military response — only to be forced to withdraw under pressure from both the United States and the Soviet Union. Egypt retained the canal. The Suez Canal Authority, a state-owned Egyptian body, has operated it ever since.
Today, the canal remains one of the most important arteries in global commerce. In 2021 C.E. alone, more than 20,600 vessels passed through it — an average of 56 per day. When the container ship Ever Given ran aground in March 2021 C.E. and blocked the canal for six days, global supply chains felt it within hours.
Blindspots and limits
The canal’s opening was a triumph of engineering and an act of European imperial ambition in the same moment — and it is worth holding both. The concession agreement gave Egypt almost none of the financial benefits for the first century of the canal’s operation. The forced labor that built it left a wound in Egyptian historical memory that celebrations of the 1869 C.E. inauguration rarely addressed.
The canal has also served military as well as commercial purposes throughout its history — including being closed entirely for eight years after the 1967 C.E. Six-Day War, stranding ships in the Great Bitter Lake in one of the stranger episodes of Cold War geography. Its role as a strategic chokepoint means it has never been purely the peaceful trade artery its founders described.
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