January, 2011
25: Anti-government protests erupt in the wake of a revolt that toppled the ruler of Tunisia.
February
1: Over a million people join the protests across the country, notably in central Cairo’s Tahrir Square.
11: After daily mass protests, Mr Mubarak steps down and leaves the capital. He hands power to the army, led by Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi. Some 850 people have been killed in the unrest.
12: Promising a peaceful transition, the army suspends the Constitution and dissolves Parliament.
March
19: Voters approve a proposed new constitution, with 77.2 per cent voting “yes”.
April
13: Authorities say Mr Mubarak and his two sons have been detained. The former President is reported to have suffered heart problems during questioning.
16: A court dissolves Mr Mubarak’s National Democratic Party and orders seizure of its assets.
May
7: Fifteen die and 200 injured as Muslims and Christians clash in Cairo.
June
6: A political party formed by the Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt’s biggest opposition group, is declared legal.
29: More than 1,000 hurt in clashes between protesters and anti-riot police in Cairo’s Tahrir Square.
July
8: Thousands of people start a three-week sit-in at Tahrir Square to criticise the new military rulers over the slow pace of reform.
29: Hundreds of thousands of Islamists pack Tahrir Square in the biggest gathering since Mubarak’s fall. Four killed at El-Arish in Sinai.
August
3: The trial begins of Mr Mubarak, his two sons, his former interior minister and six police commanders.
September
27: The military announces a parliamentary election for November 28, the start of a process expected to lead to civilian rule.
October
9: 25 people, mainly Coptic Christians, are killed and more than 300 injured in clashes with security forces in Cairo.
November
19: Start of a week of clashes between police and demonstrators opposed to the military regime that will leave 42 dead. As during the revolution that ousted Mr Mubarak, the unrest centres on Tahrir Square. The government resigns.
22: In response to the unrest, and after talks with the Muslim Brotherhood, Tantawi goes on television to announce concessions, pledging to bring forward the date of a presidential election to June 2012.
28-29: Egypt holds its first post-revolution election in Cairo and the port city Alexandria. Islamists take an early lead in the elections.
December
16: At least 15 people are killed in five days as protesters and security forces clash, overshadowing the vote count in the latest round of the general election.
January 2012
11: The US State Department’s number two sits down with Muslim Brotherhood party leaders.
21: Islamists win more than two thirds of the seats in the Parliament, with the Muslim Brotherhood’s main party winning almost half, according to the final results from marathon polls.
23: The military hands legislative powers to the new lower house of parliament.
24: Egypt’s military ruler says that the decades-old state of emergency will be lifted on the first anniversary of the uprising that brought down Mr Mubarak.
27: Thousands of protesters throng Tahrir Square to demand democratic change, vowing to revive their unfinished revolution.
February
1: Riots after a football match in Egypt’s Port Said leave 74 people dead and hundreds injured.
2-6: Protesters and police clash outside Cairo’s security headquarters in the wake of the deadly football violence and amid calls by activists for civil disobedience.