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Nubia

Nubia (/ˈnjbiə/) (Nobiin: Nobīn,[2] Arabic: النُوبَة, romanizedan-Nūba) is a region along the Nile river encompassing the area between the first cataract of the Nile (just south of Aswan in southern Egypt) and the confluence of the Blue and White Niles (in Khartoum in central Sudan), or more strictly, Al Dabbah.[3][4][5] It was the seat of one of the earliest civilizations of ancient Africa, the Kerma culture, which lasted from around 2500 BC until its conquest by the New Kingdom of Egypt under Pharaoh Thutmose I around 1500 BC, whose heirs ruled most of Nubia for the next 400 years. Nubia was home to several empires, most prominently the Kingdom of Kush, which conquered Egypt in the eighth century BC during the reign of Piye and ruled the country as its 25th Dynasty (to be replaced a century later by the native Egyptian 26th Dynasty).

Nubia
Statues of several Nubian rulers of the late 25th Dynasty–early Napatan period, 7th century BC. From left to right: Tantamani, Taharqa (rear), Senkamanisken, again Tantamani (rear), Aspelta, Anlamani, again Senkamanisken. Kerma Museum.[1]
Map of Ancient Egypt, with Nubian Desert marked

From the 3rd century BC to 3rd century AD, northern Nubia would be invaded and annexed to Egypt, ruled by the Greeks and Romans. This territory would be known in the Greco-Roman world as Dodekaschoinos.

Kush's collapse in the fourth century AD was preceded by an invasion from the Ethiopian Kingdom of Aksum and the rise of three Christian kingdoms: Nobatia, Makuria and Alodia. Makuria and Alodia lasted for roughly a millennium. Their eventual decline started not only the partition of Nubia, which was split into the northern half conquered by the Ottomans and the southern half by the Sennar sultanate, in the sixteenth century, but also a rapid Islamization and partial Arabization of the Nubian people. Nubia was reunited with the Khedivate of Egypt in the nineteenth century. Today, the region of Nubia is split between Egypt and Sudan.

The primarily archaeological science dealing with ancient Nubia is called Nubiology.

Linguistics

Nubia in hieroglyphs

[6]
Ta-seti
T3-stj
Curved land[6]



[7]
Setiu
Stjw
Curved land of the Nubians[7]



Nehset / Nehsyu / Nehsi
Nḥst / Nḥsyw / Nḥsj
Nubia / Nubians
 
Nubia

Historically, the people of Nubia spoke at least two varieties of the Nubian language group, a subfamily that includes Nobiin (the descendant of Old Nubian), Kenuzi-Dongola, Midob and several related varieties in the northern part of the Nuba Mountains in South Kordofan. The Birgid language was spoken north of Nyala in Darfur, but has been extinct as late as 1970. However, the linguistic identity of the ancient Kerma culture of southern and central Nubia (also known as Upper Nubia), is uncertain; some research suggests that it belonged to the Cushitic branch of Afroasiatic languages,[8][9] while more recent studies indicate that the Kerma culture belonged to the Eastern Sudanic branch of Nilo-Saharan languages instead, and that other peoples of northern (or Lower) Nubia north of Kerma (such as the C-group culture and the Blemmyes) spoke Cushitic languages before the spread of Eastern Sudanic languages from southern (or Upper) Nubia.[10][11][12][13]

Geography

Nubia was divided into three major regions: Upper, Middle, and Lower Nubia, in reference to their locations along the Nile. "Lower" referred to regions downstream (further north) and "upper" to regions upstream (further south). Lower Nubia lay between the First and the Second Cataracts within the current borders of Egypt, Middle Nubia lay between the Second and the Third Cataracts, and Upper Nubia lay south of the Third Cataract.[14]

History

Prehistory (6000–3500 BC)

In prehistoric times, North Africa was mostly occupied by nomadic cattle herders.[15] The Khartoum Mesolithic was a highly advanced culture in southern Nubia (near modern Khartoum). They created sophisticated pottery that is "perhaps the oldest known in the world".[15]: 17 

By 5000 BC, the people who inhabited what is now called Nubia participated in the Neolithic revolution. The Sahara became drier and people began to domesticate sheep, goats, and cattle.[16] Saharan rock reliefs depict scenes that have been thought to suggest the presence of a cattle cult, typical of those seen throughout parts of Eastern Africa and the Nile Valley even to this day.[17] Nubian rock art depicts hunters using bows and arrows in the neolithic period, which is a precursor to Nubian archer culture in later times.

Megaliths discovered at Nabta Playa are early examples of what seems to be one of the world's first astronomical devices, predating Stonehenge by almost 2,000 years.[18] This complexity as expressed by different levels of authority within the society there likely formed the basis for the structure of both the Neolithic society at Nabta and the Old Kingdom of Egypt.[19]

Joseph Vogel wrote that "The period when sub-Saharan Africa was most influential in Egypt was a time when neither Egypt, as we understand it culturally, nor the Sahara, as we understand it geographically, existed. Populations and cultures now found south of the desert roamed far to the north. The culture of Upper Egypt, which became dynastic Egyptian civilization, could fairly be called a Sudanese transplant."[20]

British Africanist Basil Davidson outlined that "The ancient Egyptians belonged, that is, not to any specific Egyptian region or Near Eastern heritage but to that wide community of peoples who lived between the Red Sea and the Atlantic Ocean, shared a common "Saharan-Sudanese culture", and drew their reinforcements from the same great source, even though, as time went by, they also absorbed a number of wanderers from the Near East".[21]

Biological anthropologists Shomarka Keita and A.J. Boyce have stated that the "Studies of crania from southern predynastic Egypt, from the formative period (4000-3100 B.C.), show them usually to be more similar to the crania of ancient Nubians, Kushites, Saharans, or modern groups from the Horn of Africa than to those of dynastic northern Egyptians or ancient or modern southern Europeans."[22]

Archaeological evidence has attested that population settlements occurred in Nubia as early as the Late Pleistocene era and from the 5th millennium BC onwards, whereas there is "no or scanty evidence" of human presence in the Egyptian Nile Valley during these periods, which may be due to problems in site preservation.[23] Several scholars have argued that the African origins of the Egyptian civilisation derived from pastoral communities which emerged in both the Egyptian and Sudanese regions of the Nile Valley in the fifth millennium BCE.[24][25]

Deitrich Wildung (2018) examined Eastern Saharan pottery styles and Sudanese stone sculptures and suggested these artefacts were transmitted across the Nile Valley and influenced the pre-dynastic Egyptian culture in the Neolithic period.[26]

Pre-Kerma; A-Group (3500-3000 BC)

 
"A-Group" style, Nubian pottery, Musee du Louvre

Upper Nubia

The poorly known "pre-Kerma" culture existed in Upper (Southern) Nubia on a stretch of fertile farmland just south of the Third Cataract.

Lower Nubia

 
Qustul incense burner, 3200–3000 BC

Nubia has one of the oldest civilizations in the world. This history is often intertwined with Egypt to the north.[15]: 16  Around 3500 BC, the second "Nubian" culture, termed the Early A-Group, arose in Lower (Northern) Nubia.[27] They were sedentary agriculturalists,[16]: 6  traded with the Egyptians, and exported gold.[28] This trade is supported archaeologically by large amounts of Egyptian commodities deposited in the A-Group graves. The imports consisted of gold objects, copper tools, faience amulets and beads, seals, slate palettes, stone vessels, and a variety of pots.[29] During this time, the Nubians began creating distinctive black topped, red pottery. The A-Group population have been described as ethnically “very similar” to the pre-dynastic Egyptians in physical characteristics.[30]

Around 3100 BC the A-group transitioned from the Early to Classical phases. "Arguably royal burials are known only at Qustul and possibly Sayala."[28]: 8  During this period, the wealth of A-group kings rivaled Egyptian kings. Royal A-group graves contained gold and richly decorated pottery.[15]: 19  Some scholars believe Nubian A-Group rulers and early Egyptian pharaohs used related royal symbols; similarities in A-Group Nubia and Upper Egypt rock art support this position. Scholars from the University of Chicago Oriental Institute excavated at Qustul (near Abu Simbel – Modern Sudan), in 1960–64, and found artifacts which incorporated images associated with Egyptian pharaohs.

Archeologist Bruce Williams studied the artifacts and concluded that "Egypt and Nubia A-Group culture shared the same official culture", "participated in the most complex dynastic developments", and "Nubia and Egypt were both part of the great East African substratum".[31] Williams also wrote that Qustul "could well have been the seat of Egypt's founding dynasty".[32][33] David O'Connor wrote that the Qustul incense burner provides evidence that the A-group Nubian culture in Qustul marked the "pivotal change" from predynastic to dynastic "Egyptian monumental art".[34] However, "most scholars do not agree with this hypothesis",[35] as more recent finds in Egypt indicate that this iconography originated in Egypt instead of Nubia, and that the Qustul rulers adopted or emulated the symbols of Egyptian pharaohs.[36][37][38][39]

The archaeological cemeteries at Qustul are no longer available for excavations since the flooding of Lake Nasser.[40] The earliest representations of pharaonic iconography have been excavated from Nag el-Hamdulab in Aswan, the extreme southern region of Egypt which borders the Sudan, with an estimated dating range between 3200 and 3100 BC.[41]

Egypt in Nubia

Writing developed in Egypt around 3300 BC. In their writings, Egyptians referred to Nubia as "Ta-Seti", or "The Land of the Bow," as the Nubians were known to be expert archers.[42] More recent and broader studies have determined that the distinct pottery styles, differing burial practices, different grave goods, and site distribution all indicate that the Naqada people and the Nubian A-Group people were from different cultures.

Kathryn Bard states that "Naqada cultural burials contain very few Nubian craft goods, which suggests that while Egyptian goods were exported to Nubia and were buried in A-Group graves, A-Group goods were of little interest further north."[43] According to anthropologist,Jane Hill, there is no evidence that the pharaohs of the First Dynasty buried at Abydos were of Nubian origin.[44] However, several biological anthropological studies have shown the Badarian and Naqada people to be closely related to the Nubian and other, tropical African populations.[45][46][47][48][49] Also, the proto-dynastic kings emerged from the Naqada region.[50][51]

Early Kerma (3000–2400 BC)

A uniform culture of nomadic herders, called the Gash group, existed from 3000 to 1500 BC to the east and west of Nubia.[16]: 8 

In Lower Nubia, the A-group moved from the Classical to Terminal phase. At this time, kings at Qustul likely ruled all of Lower Nubia and demonstrated the political centralization of Nubian society.[16]: 21  The A-Group culture came to an end sometime between 3100 and 2900 BC, when it was apparently destroyed by the First Dynasty rulers of Egypt.[52] There are no records of settlement in Lower Nubia for the next 600 years. Old Kingdom Egyptian dynasties (4th to 6th) controlled uninhabited Lower Nubia and raided Upper Nubia.

Early Kerma; C-Group (2400–1550 BC)

Upper Nubia

 
Kerma style pottery (2500–1500 BC)

The pre-Kerma developed into the Middle phase Kerma group. Some A-group people (transitioning to C-group) settled the area and co-existed with the pre-Kerma group.[16]: 25  Like other Nubian groups, the two groups made an abundance of red pottery with black tops, though each group made different shapes.[16]: 29  Traces of the C-group in Upper Nubia vanish by 2000 BC and Kerma culture began to dominate Upper Nubia.[16]: 25  The power of an independent Upper Nubia increased around 1700 BC and Upper Nubia dominated Lower Nubia.[16]: 25  An Egyptian official, Harkhuf, mentions that Irtjet, Setjet, and Wawat all combined under a single ruler. By 1650 BC, Egyptian texts started to refer to only two kingdoms in Nubia: Kush and Shaat.[16]: 32, 38  Kush was centered at Kerma and Shaat was centered on Sai island.[16]: 38  Bonnet posits that Kush actually ruled all of Upper Nubia, since "royal" graves were much larger in Kush than Shaat and Egyptian texts other than the Execration lists only refer to Kush (and not Shaat).[16]: 38–39 

Lower Nubia

C-group Nubians resettled Lower Nubia by 2400 BC.[16]: 25  As trade between Egypt and Nubia increased, so did wealth and stability. Nubia was divided into a series of small kingdoms. There is debate over whether the C-group people,[53] who flourished from 2500 BC to 1500 BC, were another internal evolution or invaders. O'Connor states "a transition from A group into a later culture, the C-group, can be traced" and the C-group culture was typical of Lower Nubia from 2400 to 1650 BC.[16]: 25  Although they lived in close proximity to each other, Nubians did not acculturate much to Egyptian culture. Notable exceptions include C-group Nubians during the 15th Dynasty, isolated Nubian communities in Egypt, and some bowmen communities.[16]: 56  C-Group pottery is characterized by all-over incised geometric lines with white infill and impressed imitations of basketry. Lower Nubia was controlled by Egypt from 2000 to 1700 BC and Upper Nubia from 1700 to 1525 BC.

From 2200 to 1700 BC, the Pan Grave culture appeared in Lower Nubia.[15]: 20  Some of the people were likely the Medjay (mḏꜣ,[54]) arriving from the desert east of the Nile river. One feature of Pan Grave culture was shallow grave burial. The Pan Grave and C-Group definitely interacted: Pan Grave pottery is characterized by more limited incised lines than the C-Group's and generally have interspersed undecorated spaces within the geometric schemes.[55]

Egypt in Nubia

 
11th Dynasty model of Nubian archers in the Egyptian army, from a tomb in Asyut (c. 2130–1991 BC).

In 2300 BC, Nubia was first mentioned in Old Kingdom Egyptian accounts of trade missions. The Egyptians referred to Lower Nubia as Wawat, Irtjet, and Setju, while they referred to Upper Nubia as Yam. Some authors believe that Irtjet and Setju could also have been in Upper Nubia.[16]: 32  They referred to Nubians dwelling near the river as Nehasyu.[16]: 26 

From Aswan, the southern limit of Egyptian control at the time, Egyptians imported gold, incense, ebony, copper, ivory, and exotic animals from tropical Africa through Nubia. Relations between the Egyptians and Nubians showed peaceful cultural interchange, cooperation, and mixed marriages. Nubian bowmen that settled at Gebelein during the First Intermediate Period married Egyptian women, were buried in Egyptian style, and eventually could not be distinguished from Egyptians.[16]: 56 

Older scholarship noted that some Egyptian pharaohs may have had Nubian ancestry.[56][57] Richard Loban expressed the view that Mentuhotep II of the 11th Dynasty "was quite possibly of Nubian origin" and cited historical evidence which mentioned that Amenemhet I, founder of the 12th Dynasty, "had a Ta Seti or Nubian mother".[58][59][60] Deitrich Wildung has argued that Nubian features were common in Egyptian iconography since the pre-dynastic era and that several pharaohs such as Khufu and Mentuhotep II were represented with these Nubian features.[61]

Frank Yurco wrote that "Egyptian rulers of Nubian ancestry had become Egyptians culturally; as pharaohs, they exhibited typical Egyptian attitudes and adopted typical Egyptian policies". Yurco noted that some Middle Kingdom rulers, particularly some pharaohs of the Twelfth Dynasty had strong Nubian features, due to the origin of the dynasty in the Aswan region of southern Egypt. He also identified the pharaoh Sequenre Tao of the Seventeenth Dynasty, as having Nubian features.[62] Many scholars in recent years have argued that the mother of Amenemhat I, founder of the Twelfth Dynasty was of Nubian origin.[63][64][59][65][66][67][68]

After a period of withdrawal, the Middle Kingdom of Egypt conquered Lower Nubia from 2000 to 1700 BC.[16]: 8, 25  By 1900 BC, King Sesostris I began building a series of towns below the Second Cataract with heavy fortresses that had enclosures and drawbridges.[15]: 19  Sesotris III relentlessly expanded his kingdom into Nubia (from 1866 to 1863 BC) and erected massive river forts including Buhen, Semna, Shalfak and Toshka at Uronarti to gain more control over the trade routes in Lower Nubia. They also provided direct access to trade with Upper Nubia, which was independent and increasingly powerful during this time. These Egyptian garrisons seemed to peacefully coexist with the local Nubian people, though they did not interact much with them.[69]

Medjay was the name given by ancient Egypt to nomadic desert dwellers from east of the Nile river. The term was used variously to describe a location, the Medjay people, or their role/job in the kingdom. They became part of the Egyptian military as scouts and minor workers before being incorporated into the Egyptian army.[citation needed] In the army, the Medjay served as garrison troops in Egyptian fortifications in Nubia and patrolled the deserts as a kind of gendarmerie,[70] or elite paramilitary police force,[71] to prevent their fellow Medjay tribespeople from further attacking Egyptian assets in the region.[71]

The Medjay were often used to protect valuable areas, especially royal and religious complexes. Although they are most notable for their protection of the royal palaces and tombs in Thebes and the surrounding areas, the Medjay were deployed throughout Upper and Lower Egypt; they were even used during Kamose's campaign against the Hyksos and became instrumental in turning the Egyptian state into a military power.[72][73] After the First Intermediate Period of Egypt, the Medjay district was no longer mentioned in written records.[74]

Kerma; Egyptian Empire (1550–750 BC)

Upper Nubia

 
Western Deffufa
 
Daggers of bone and copper, 1750–1450 BCE, Kerma, British Museum EA55442

From the Middle Kerma phase, the first Nubian kingdom to unify much of the region arose. The Classic Kerma culture, named for its royal capital at Kerma, was one of the earliest urban centers in the Nile region and oldest city in Africa outside of Egypt.[75][16]: 50–51  The Kerma group spoke either languages of the Cushitic branch[8][9] or, according to more recent research, Nilo-Saharan languages of the Eastern Sudanic branch.[10][11][12][13]

By 1650 BC (Classic Kerma phase), the kings of Kerma were powerful enough to organize the labor for monumental town walls and large mud brick structures, such as the Eastern and Western Deffufas (50 by 25 by 18 meters). They also had rich tombs with possessions for the afterlife and large human sacrifices. George Andrew Reisner excavated sites at the royal city of Kerma and found distinctive Nubian architecture, such as large pebble covered tombs (90 meters in diameter), a large circular dwelling, and a palace-like structure.[16]: 41  Classic Kerma rulers employed "a good many Egyptians", according to the Egyptian Execration texts.[16]: 57 

 
Mirror. Kerma Period, 1700–1550 BC.

Kerma culture was militaristic, as attested by many archers' burials and bronze daggers/swords found in their graves.[16]: 31  Other signs of Nubia's military prowess are the frequent use of Nubians in Egypt's military and Egypt's need to construct numerous fortresses to defend their southern border from the Nubians.[16]: 31  Despite assimilation, the Nubian elite remained rebellious during Egyptian occupation. There were numerous rebellions and "military conflict occurred almost under every reign until the 20th dynasty".[76]: 102–103  At one point, Kerma came very close to conquering Egypt: Egypt suffered a serious defeat at the hands of the Kingdom of Kush.[77][78] According to Davies, head of the joint British Museum and Egyptian archaeological team, the attack was so devastating that, if the Kerma forces had chosen to stay and occupy Egypt, they might have permanently eliminated the Egyptians and brought the nation to extinction. During Egypt's Second Intermediate period, the Kushites reached the height of their Bronze Age power and completely controlled southern trade with Egypt.[16]: 41  They maintained diplomatic ties with the Thebans and Hyksos until the New Kingdom pharaohs brought all of Nubia under Egyptian rule from 1500 to 1070 BC.[16]: 41  After 1070 BC, there were continued hostilities with Egypt, which led Nubians to concentrate in Upper Nubia.[16]: 58  Within 200 years, a fully formed Kushite state, based at Napata, began to exert its influence on Upper (Southern) Egypt.[16]: 58–59 

Lower Nubia

When the Middle Kingdom Egyptians pulled out of the Napata region around 1700 BC, they left a lasting legacy that was merged with indigenous C-group customs. Egyptians remaining at the garrison towns started to merge with the C-group Nubians in Lower Nubia. The C-group quickly adopted Egyptian customs and culture, as attested by their graves, and lived together with the remaining Egyptians in garrison towns.[16]: 41  After Upper Nubia annexed Lower Nubia around 1700 BC, the Kingdom of Kush began to control the area. At this point, C-group Nubians and Egyptians began to proclaim their allegiance to the Kushite King in their inscriptions.[16]: 41  Egypt conquered Lower and Upper Nubia from 1500 to 1070 BC. However, the Kingdom of Kush survived longer than Egypt.

Egypt in Nubia

 
Nubian Prince Heqanefer bringing tribute for King Tutankhamun, 18th dynasty, Tomb of Huy. Circa 1342 – c. 1325 BC
 
The Turin Papyrus Map, dating to about 1160 BC

After the Theban 17th Dynasty New Kingdom of Egypt (c. 1532–1070 BC) expelled the Canaanite Hyksos from Egypt, they turned their imperial ambitions to Nubia. By the end of Thutmose I's reign (1520 BC), all of Lower Nubia had been annexed. After a long campaign, Egypt also conquered the Kingdom of Kerma in Upper Nubia and held both areas until 1070 BC.[76]: 101–102 [16]: 25  The Egyptian empire expanded into the Fourth Cataract, and a new administrative center was built at Napata, which became a gold and incense production area.[79][80] Egypt became a prime source of gold in the Middle East. The primitive working conditions for the slaves are recorded by Diodorus Siculus.[81] One of the oldest maps known is of a gold mine in Nubia: the Turin Papyrus Map dating to about 1160 BC; it is also one of the earliest characterized road maps in existence.[82]

Nubians were an integral part of New Kingdom Egyptian society. Some scholars state that Nubians were included in the 18th Dynasty of Egypt's royal family.[83] Ahmose-Nefertari, "arguably the most venerated woman in Egyptian history",[84] was thought by some scholars such as Flinders Petrie to be of Nubian origin because she is most often depicted with black skin.[56][85]: 17 [86] The mummy of Ahmose-Nefertari's father, Seqenenre Tao, has been described as presenting "tightly curled, woolly hair", with "a slight build and strongly Nubian features".[87] Some modern scholars also believe that in some depictions, her skin color is indicative of her role as a goddess of resurrection, since black is both the color of the fertile land of Egypt and that of the underworld.[88][89]: 90 [90][84][91]: 125  However, there is no known depiction of her painted during her lifetime (she is represented with the same light skin as other represented individuals in tomb TT15, before her deification); the earliest black skin depiction appears in tomb TT161, c. 150 years after her death.: 11–12, 23, 74–5 [92]: 125  Egyptologist Barbara Lesko wrote in 1996 that Ahmose-Nefertari was "sometimes portrayed by later generations as having been black, although her coffin portrait gives her the typical light yellow skin of women."[93] In 2009, Egyptologist Elena Vassilika, noting that in a wooden statuette of the queen (now at the Museo Egizio) the face is painted black but the arms and feet are light in color, argued that the reason for the black coloring in that case was religious and not genetic.[94]: 78–9 

In 1098–1088 BC, Thebes was "the scene of a civil war-like conflict between the High Priest of Amun of Thebes Amenhotep and the Viceroy of Kush Panehesy (= the Nubian)". It was chaotic and many tombs were plundered. Instead of sending soldiers to restore order, Ramesses XI put Panehesy in control of that area's military and appointed him Director of Granaries. Panehesy stationed his troops in Thebes to protect the city from thieves, but it resembled a military occupation of Thebes to the High Priest, which later led to the Civil war in Thebes.[76]: 104–105  By 1082 BC, Ramesses XI finally sent help to the High Priest. Panehesy continued his revolt and the city of Thebes suffered from "war, famine, and plunderings".[76]: 106  Panehesy initially succeeded and the High Priest fled Thebes. Panehesy pursued the High Priest as far as Middle Egypt before Egyptian forces pushed Panehesy and his troops out of Egypt and into Lower Nubia.[76]: 106  Ramesses sent new leadership to Thebes: Herihor was named the new High Priest of Thebes (and effectively King of Southern Egypt) and Paiankh was named the new Viceroy of Kush. Paiankh recaptured former Egyptian holdings in Lower Nubia as far as the second Nile cataract, but could not defeat Panehesy in Lower Nubia, who ruled the area until his death.[76]: 106  Herihor's descendants became rulers of Egypt's 21st and 22nd Dynasties.

Napatan Empire (750–542 BC)

 
Pyramids of Kushite rulers at Nuri
 
Pharaoh Taharqa of Ancient Egypt's 25th Dynasty. Ashmolean Museum, Oxford UK

There are competing theories on the origins of the Kushite kings of the 25th Dynasty:[95] some scholars believe they were Nubian officials that learned "state level organization" by administering Egyptian-held Nubia from 1500 to 1070 BC,[16]: 59  such as the rebel Viceroy of Kush, Panehesy, who ruled Upper Nubia and some of Lower Nubia after Egyptian forces withdrew.[76]: 110  Other scholars believe they are descended from families of the Egyptianized Nubian elite supported by Egyptian priests or settlers.[96][97][98][99] Children of elite Nubian families were sent to be educated in Egypt then returned to Kush to be appointed in bureaucratic positions to ensure their loyalty. During the Egyptian occupation of Nubia, there were temple towns with Egyptian cults, but "production and redistribution" was based mostly on indigenous social structures.[76]: 111 

The El Kurru chiefdom likely played a major role in the development of the Kingdom of Kush due to its access to gold producing areas, control of caravan routes,[76]: 112  more arable land, and participation in international trade.[76]: 121  "There can be no doubt that el-Kurru was the burial place of the ancestors of the Twenty-Fifth Dynasty."[76]: 112  The early el-Kurru burials resemble Nubian Kerma/C-group traditions (contracted body, circular stone structures, burial on a bed).[76]: 121  However, by 880–815 BC, Nubian burials at el-Kurru became more Egyptian in style with "mastabas, or pyramid on mastabas, chapels, and rectangular enclosures".[76]: 117, 121–122  Alara, the first el-Kurru prince, and his successor, Kashta, were buried at el-Kurru.[76]: 123  Later documents mention Alara as the 25th Dynasty's founder and "central to a myth of the origins of the kingdom".[76]: 124–126  Alara's sister was the priestess of Amun, which created a system of royal secession and an "ideology of royal power in which Kushite concepts and practice were united with contemporary Egyptian concepts of kingship".[76]: 144  Later, Kashta's daughter, the Kushite princess Amenirdis, was installed as God's Wife of Amun Elect and later Divine Adoratrice (effectively governor of Upper Egypt), which signaled the Kushite conquest of Egyptian territories.[76]: 148 

The Napatan Empire ushered in the age of Egyptian archaism, or a return to a historical past, which was embodied by a concentrated effort at religious renewal and restoration of Egypt's holy places.[76]: 169  Piye expanded the Temple of Amun at Jebel Barkal[28] by adding "an immense colonnaded forecourt".[76]: 163–164  Shabaka restored the great Egyptian monuments and temples, "unlike his Libyan predecessors".[76]: 167–169  Taharqa enriched Thebes on a monumental scale."[76] At Karnak, the Sacred Lake structures, the kiosk in the first court, and the colonnades at the temple entrance are all built by Taharqa and Mentuemhet. In addition to architecture, the Kingdom of Kush was deeply influenced by Egyptian culture.[100][101][102] By 780 BC, Amun was the main god of Kush and "intense contacts with Thebes" were maintained.[76]: 144  Kush used the methods of Egyptian art and writing.[103] The Nubian elite adopted many Egyptian customs and gave their children Egyptian names. Although some Nubian customs and beliefs (e.g. burial practices) continued to be practiced,[76]: 111  Egyptianization dominated in ideas, practices, and iconography.[104] The cultural Egyptianization of Nubia was at its highest levels at the times of both Kashta and Piye.[105]

Nubia in Egypt

 
Kushite heartland, and Kushite Empire of the Twenty-fifth Dynasty of Egypt, circa 700 BC.[106]
 
Taharqa's kiosk and column, Karnak temple

Kashta peacefully became King of Upper and Lower Egypt with his daughter Amendiris as Divine Adoratrice of Amun in Thebes.[76]: 144–146  Rulers of the 23rd Dynasty withdrew from Thebes to Heracleopolis, which avoided conflict with the new Kushite rulers of Thebes. Under Kashta's reign, the Kushite elite and professional classes became significantly Egyptianized.

The city-state of Napata was the spiritual capital of Kush and it was from there that Piye (spelled Piankhi or Piankhy in older works) invaded and took control of Egypt.[107] Piye personally led the attack on Egypt and recorded his victory in a lengthy hieroglyphic filled stele called the "Stele of Victory".[76]: 166  Piye's success in achieving the double kingship after generations of Kushite planning resulted from "Kushite ambition, political skill, and the Theban decision to reunify Egypt in this particular way", and not Egypt's utter exhaustion, "as frequently suggested in Egyptological studies."[28] Due to archaism, Piye mostly used the royal titulary of Tuthmosis III, but changed the Horus name from "Strong bull appearing (crowned) in Thebes" to "Strong bull appearing in Napata" to announce that the Kushites had reversed history and conquered their former Thebaid Egyptian conquerors.[76]: 154  He also revived one of the greatest features of the Old and Middle Kingdoms: pyramid construction. As an energetic builder, he constructed the oldest known pyramid at the royal burial site of El-Kurru.

According to the revised chronology, Shebitku "brought the entire Nile Valley as far as the Delta under the empire of Kush and is 'reputed' to have had Bocchoris, dynast of Sais, burnt to death".[108][76]: 166–167  Shabaka "transferred the capital to Memphis".[76]: 166  Shebitku's successor, Taharqa, was crowned in Memphis in 690 BC[76][15] and ruled Upper and Lower Egypt as Pharaoh from Tanis in the Delta.[109][108] Excavations at el-Kurru and studies of horse skeletons indicate the finest horses used in Kushite and Assyrian warfare were bred in and exported from Nubia. Horses and chariots were key to the Kushite war machine.[76]: 157–158 

Taharqa's reign was a prosperous time in the empire with a particularly large Nile river flood and abundant crops and wine.[110][76] Taharqa's inscriptions indicate that he gave large amounts of gold to the temple of Amun at Kawa.[111] His army undertook successful military campaigns, as attested by the "list of conquered Asiatic principalities" from the Mut temple at Karnak and "conquered peoples and countries (Libyans, Shasu nomads, Phoenicians?, Khor in Palestine)" from Sanam temple inscriptions.[76] László Török mentions the military success was due to Taharqa's efforts to strengthen the army through daily training in long-distance running and Assyria's preoccupation with Babylon and Elam.[76] Taharqa also built military settlements at the Semna and Buhen forts and the fortified site of Qasr Ibrim.[76]

Imperial ambitions of the Mesopotamian-based Assyrian Empire made war with the 25th Dynasty inevitable. Taharqa conspired with Levantine kingdoms against Assyria:[112] in 701 BC, Taharqa and his army aided Judah and King Hezekiah in withstanding a siege by King Sennacherib of the Assyrians (2 Kings 19:9; Isaiah 37:9).[113] There are various theories (Taharqa's army,[114] disease, divine intervention, Hezekiah's surrender, Herodotus' mice theory) as to why the Assyrians failed to take Jerusalem and withdrew to Assyria.[115] Sennacherib's annals record Judah was forced into tribute after the siege and Sennacherib became the ruler of the region[116] However, this is contradicted by Khor's frequent utilization of an Egyptian system of weights for trade and the twenty-year cessation in Assyria's pattern of repeatedly invading Khor (as Assyrians had before 701 and after Sennacherib's death).[117][118] In 681 BC, Sennacherib was murdered by his own sons in Babylon.

In 679 BC, Sennacherib's successor, King Esarhaddon, campaigned in Khor, destroyed Sidon, and forced Tyre into tribute in 677–676 BC. Esarhaddon invaded Egypt proper in 674 BC, but according to Babylonian records, Taharqa and his army outright defeated the Assyrians.[119] In 672 BC, Taharqa brought reserve troops from Kush, as mentioned in rock inscriptions.[76] Taharqa's Egypt still had influence in Khor during this period as Tyre's King Ba'lu "put his trust upon his friend Taharqa". Further evidence was Ashkelon's alliance with Egypt and Esarhaddon's inscription asking "if the Kushite-Egyptian forces 'plan and strive to wage war in any way' and if the Egyptian forces will defeat Esarhaddon at Ashkelon".[120] However, Taharqa was defeated in Egypt in 671 BC when Esarhaddon conquered Northern Egypt, captured Memphis, and imposed tribute before withdrawing.[109] Pharaoh Taharqa escaped to the south, but Esarhaddon captured the Pharaoh's family, including "Prince Nes-Anhuret and the royal wives",[76] and sent them to Assyria. In 669 BC, Taharqa reoccupied Memphis and the Delta, and recommenced intrigues with the king of Tyre.[109] Esarhaddon led his army to Egypt again and, after his death in 668 BC, command passed to Ashurbanipal. Ashurbanipal and the Assyrians defeated Taharqa again and advanced as far south as Thebes, but direct Assyrian control was not established.[109] The rebellion was stopped and Ashurbanipal appointed Necho I, who had been king of the city Sais, as his vassal ruler in Egypt. Necho's son, Psamtik I, was educated at the Assyrian capital of Nineveh during Esarhaddon's reign.[citation needed] As late as 665 BC, the vassal rulers of Sais, Mendes, and Pelusium were still making overtures[a] to Taharqa in Kush.[76] The vassals' plot was uncovered by Ashurbanipal and all rebels but Necho of Sais were executed.[76]

Taharqa's successor, Tantamani, sailed north from Napata with a large army to Thebes, where he was "ritually installed as the king of Egypt".[76]: 185  From Thebes, Tantamani began his reconquest and regained control of Egypt as far north as Memphis.[76]: 185 [109] Tantamani's dream stele states that he restored order from the chaos, where royal temples and cults were not being maintained.[76]: 185  After conquering Sais and killing Assyria's vassal, Necho I, in Memphis, "some local dynasts formally surrendered, while others withdrew to their fortresses".[76]: 185 

The Kushites had influence over their northern neighbors for nearly 100 years until they were repelled by the invading Assyrians. The Assyrians installed the native 26th Dynasty of Egypt under Psamtik I and they permanently forced the Kushites out of Egypt around 590 BC.[121]: 121–122  The heirs of the Kushite empire established their new capital at Napata, which was also sacked by the Egyptians in 592 BC. The Kushite kingdom survived for another 900 years after being pushed south to Meroë. The Egyptianized culture of Nubia grew increasingly Africanized after the fall of the 25th Dynasty until Queen Amanishakhete acceded in 45 BC.[citation needed] She temporarily arrested the loss of Egyptian culture, but then it continued unchecked.[105]

Meroitic (542 BC–400 AD)

 
Aerial view at Nubian pyramids, Meroe
 
Apedemak Temple at Naqa

Due to pressure from Assyrians and Egyptians, Meroë (800 BC – c. 350 AD) became the southern capital of the Kingdom of Kush.[76] According to partially deciphered Meroitic texts, the name of the city was Medewi or Bedewi. Meroë was in southern Nubia by the east bank of the Nile, about 6 km north-east of the Kabushiya station near Shendi, Sudan, and about 200 km northeast of Khartoum. Meroë is mentioned in first-century AD Periplus of the Erythraean Sea: "farther inland, in the country towards the west, there lies a city called Meroe". In fifth-century BC, Greek historian Herodotus described it as "a great city...said to be the mother city of the other Ethiopians."[122][123] Together, Musawwarat es-Sufra, Naqa, and Meroë formed the Island of Meroe. The town's importance gradually increased from the beginning of the Meroitic Period, especially from the reign of Arakamani (c. 280 BC) when the royal burial ground was transferred to Meroë from Napata (Jebel Barkal). Excavations revealed evidence of important, high ranking Kushite burials, from the Napatan Period (c. 800 – c. 280 BC) in the vicinity of the settlement called the Western cemetery. They buried their kings in small pyramids with steeply sloped sides that were based on New Kingdom Viceroy designs.[96] At its peak, the rulers of Meroë controlled the Nile Valley over a north–south straight-line distance of more than 1,000 km (620 mi).[124]

People of the Meroitic period preserved many ancient Egyptian customs but were unique in many respects. The Meroitic language was spoken in Meroë and Sudan during the Meroitic period (attested from 300 BC) before becoming extinct around 400 AD. They developed their own form of writing by using Egyptian hieroglyphs before switching to a cursive alphabetic script with 23 signs.[125] It was split into two types: Meroitic Cursive, which was written with a stylus and used for general record-keeping; and Meroitic Hieroglyphic, which was carved in stone or used for royal or religious documents. It is not well understood due to the scarcity of bilingual texts.[clarification needed] The earliest inscription in Meroitic writing dates from between 180 and 170 BC. These hieroglyphics were found engraved on the temple of Queen Shanakdakhete. Meroitic Cursive is written horizontally, and is read from right to left like all Semitic orthographies.[126] The Meroitic people worshiped the Egyptian gods as well as their own, such as Apedemak and the lion-son of Sekhmet (or Bast).

Meroë was the base of a flourishing kingdom whose wealth was centered around a strong iron industry and international trade with India and China.[127] Metalworking is believed to have happened in Meroë, possibly through bloomeries and blast furnaces.[128] The centralized control of production within the Meroitic empire and distribution of certain crafts and manufactures may have been politically important. Other important sites were Musawwarat es-Sufra and Naqa. Musawwarat es-Sufra, which is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site, was constructed in sandstone. Its main features were the Great Enclosure, the Lion Temple of Apedemak (14×9×5 meters), and the Great Reservoir. The Great Enclosure is the main structure of the site. Much of the large labyrinth-like building complex, which covers approximately 45,000 m2, was erected in third-century BC.[129] The scheme of the site is, so far, without parallel in Nubia and ancient Egypt. According to Hintze, "the complicated ground plan of this extensive complex of buildings is without parallel in the entire Nile valley".[130] The maze of courtyards includes three (possible) temples, passages, low walls that prevent any contact with the outside world, about 20 columns, ramps and two reservoirs.[131][132] There is some debate about the purpose of the buildings, with earlier suggestions including a college, a hospital, and an elephant-training camp.[133] The Lion Temple was constructed by Arnekhamani and bears inscriptions in Egyptian hieroglyphs, representations of elephants and lions on the rear inside wall, and reliefs of Apedemak depicted as a three-headed god on the outside walls.[134] The Great Reservoir is a hafir to retain as much as possible of the rainfall of the short, wet season. It is 250 m in diameter and 6.3 m deep.[135]

Kandake, often Latinised as Candace, was the Meroitic term for the sister of the king of Kush who, due to matrilineal succession, would bear the next heir, making her a queen mother. According to scholar Basil Davidson, at least four Kushite queens — Amanirenas, Amanishakheto, Nawidemak and Amanitore — probably spent part of their lives in Musawwarat es-Sufra.[136] Pliny writes that the "Queen of the Ethiopians" bore the title Candace, and indicates that the Ethiopians had conquered ancient Syria and the Mediterranean.[137] In 25 BC the Kush kandake Amanirenas, as reported by Strabo, attacked the city of Syene (known as Aswan today) within the territory of the Roman Empire; Emperor Augustus destroyed the city of Napata in retaliation.[138][139] In the New Testament biblical account, a treasury official of "Candace, queen of the Ethiopians", returning from a trip to Jerusalem, met with Philip the Evangelist and was baptized.[140][141]

Achaemenid period

 
Kušiya soldier of the Achaemenid army, circa 480 BC. Xerxes I tomb relief.
 
Marble portrait of a Nubian ca. 120–100 BC

The Achaemenids occupied the Kushan kingdom, possibly from the time of Cambyses (c. 530 BC), and more probably from the time of Darius I (550–486 BC), who mentions the conquest of Kush (Kušiya) in his inscriptions.[142][143]

Herodotus mentioned an invasion of Kush by the Achaemenid ruler Cambyses II, however, he mentions that "his expedition failed miserably in the desert".[109]: 65–66  Derek Welsby states "scholars have doubted that this Persian expedition ever took place, but... archaeological evidence suggests that the fortress of Dorginarti near the second cataract served as Persia's southern boundary."[109]: 65–66 

Ptolemaic period

The Greek Ptolemaic Kingdom under Ptolemy II Philadelphus invaded Nubia in 275 BC and annexed the northern twelve miles of this territory, subsequently known as the Dodekaschoinos ('twelve-mile land').[144] Throughout the 160s and 150s BC, Ptolemy VI has also reasserted Ptolemaic control over the northern part of Nubia.[145][146]

There is no record of conflict between the Kushites and Ptolemies. However, there was a serious revolt at the end of Ptolemy IV's reign and the Kushites likely tried to interfere in Ptolemaic affairs.[109]: 67  It is suggested that this led to Ptolemy V defacing the name of Arqamani on inscriptions at Philae.[109]: 67  "Arqamani constructed a small entrance hall to the temple built by Ptolemy IV at Pselchis and constructed a temple at Philae to which Ptolemy contributed an entrance hall."[109]: 66  There is evidence of Ptolemaic occupation as far south as the Second Cataract, but recent finds at Qasr Ibrim, such as "the total absence of Ptolemaic pottery", have cast doubts on the effectiveness of the occupation.[109]: 67  Dynastic struggles led to the Ptolemies abandoning the area, so "the Kushites reasserted their control...with Qasr Ibrim occupied" (by the Kushites) and other locations perhaps garrisoned.[109]: 67 

Roman period

According to Welsby, after the Romans assumed control of Egypt, they negotiated with the Kushites at Philae and drew the southern border of Roman Egypt at Aswan.[109]: 67  Theodore Mommsen and Welsby state the Kingdom of Kush became a client Kingdom, which was similar to the situation under Ptolemaic rule of Egypt. Kushite ambition and excessive Roman taxation are two theories for a revolt supported by Kushite armies.[109]: 67–68  The ancient historians, Strabo and Pliny, give accounts of the conflict with Roman Egypt.

 
Meroitic prince smiting his enemies (early first century AD)

Strabo describes a war with the Romans in first-century BC. He stated that the Kushites "sacked Aswan with an army of 30,000 men and destroyed imperial statues...at Philae."[109]: 68  A "fine over-life-size bronze head of the emperor Augustus" was found buried in Meroe in front of a temple.[109]: 68  After the initial victories of Kandake (or "Candace") Amanirenas against Roman Egypt, the Kushites were defeated and Napata was sacked.[147] Napata's fall was not a crippling blow to the Kushites and did not frighten Candace enough to prevent her from again engaging in combat with the Roman military. In 22 BC, a large Kushite force moved northward with the intention of attacking Qasr Ibrim.[148]

Alerted to the advance, Petronius again marched south and managed to reach Qasr Ibrim and bolster its defences before the invading Kushites arrived. Welsby states after a Kushite attack on Primis (Qasr Ibrim),[109]: 69–70  the Kushites sent ambassadors to negotiate a peace settlement with Petronius, which succeeded on favourable terms.[147] Trade between the two nations increased and the Roman Egyptian border being extended to "Hiera Sykaminos (Maharraqa)."[148]: 149 [109]: 70  This arrangement "guaranteed peace for most of the next 300 years" and there is "no definite evidence of further clashes."[109]: 70 

During this time, different parts of the region divided into smaller groups with individual leaders (or generals), each commanding small armies of mercenaries. They fought for control of what is now Nubia and its surrounding territories, leaving the entire region weak and vulnerable to attack. Meroë would eventually be defeated by the new rising Kingdom of Aksum to their south ruled by King Ezana. A stele of Ge'ez of an unnamed ruler of Aksum thought to be Ezana was found at the site of Meroë. From his description, in Greek, he was "King of the Aksumites and the Omerites" (i.e. of Aksum and Himyar). It is likely this king ruled sometime around 330 AD. While some authorities interpret these inscriptions as proof that the Axumites destroyed the kingdom of Meroe, others note that archeological evidence points to an economic and political decline in Meroe around 300.[149] Moreover, some view the stele as military aid from Aksum to Meroe to quell the revolt and rebellion by the Nuba peoples. However, conclusive evidence and proof to which view is correct does not currently exist. At some point during fourth-century AD, the region was conquered by the Noba, from which the name Nubia may derive; another possibility is that it comes from the Egyptian word for gold.[150] From then on, the Romans referred to the area as Nobatia.

Christian Nubia

 
Wall painting from Faras, first half of 11th c CE, National Museum in Warsaw

Around 350 AD, the area was invaded by the Kingdom of Aksum and the Meroitic kingdom collapsed. Three smaller Christian kingdoms replaced it: the northernmost was Nobatia (capital Pachoras; now modern-day Faras, Egypt) between the first and second cataract of the Nile River; in the middle was Makuria (capital Old Dongola), and southernmost was Alodia (capital Soba). King Silky of Nobatia defeated the Blemmyes and recorded his victory in a Greek language inscription carved in the wall of the temple of Talmis (modern Kalabsha) around 500 AD.

Christianity had been introduced to the region by the fourth century: Bishop Athanasius of Alexandria consecrated Marcus as bishop of Philae before his death in 373 AD. John of Ephesus records that a Miaphysite priest named Julian converted the king and his nobles of Nobatia around 545 AD. He also writes that the kingdom of Alodia was converted around 569. However, John of Biclarum wrote that the kingdom of Makuria converted to Catholicism the same year, suggesting that John of Ephesus might be mistaken. Further doubt is cast on John's[clarification needed] testimony by an entry in the chronicle of the Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Alexandria Eutychius of Alexandria, which states that in 719 AD the church of Nubia transferred its allegiance from the Greek to the Coptic Orthodox Church. After the official Christianization of Nubia, the Isis cult of Philae remained for the sake of the Nubians. The edict of Theodosius I (390 AD) was not enforced at Philae. Later attempts to suppress the cult of Isis led to armed clashes between the Nubians and Romans. Finally, in 453 AD, a treaty recognizing the traditional religious rights of Nubians at Philae was signed.

By the seventh century, Makuria expanded and became the dominant power in the region. It was strong enough to halt the southern expansion of Islam after the Arabs had taken Egypt. After several failed invasions the new Muslim rulers agreed to a treaty with Dongola, called Baqt, to allow peaceful coexistence and trade, contingent on the Nubians making an annual payment consisting of slaves and other tributes to the Islamic Governor at Aswan; it guaranteed that any runaway slaves were returned to Nubia.[151] The treaty was kept for six hundred years.[151] Throughout this period, Nubia's main exports were dates and slaves, though ivory and gold were also exchanged for Egyptian ceramics, textiles, and glass.[152] Over time the influx of Arab traders introduced Islam to Nubia and it gradually supplanted Christianity. After an interruption in the annual tribute of slaves, the Egyptian Mamluk ruler invaded in 1272 and declared himself sovereign over half of Nubia.[151] While there are records of a bishop Timothy at Qasr Ibrim in 1372, his see included Faras. It is also clear that the cathedral of Dongola had been converted to a mosque in 1317.[153]

The influx of Arabs and Nubians to Egypt and Sudan had contributed to the suppression of the Nubian identity following the collapse of the last Nubian kingdom around 1504. A vast majority of the Nubian population is currently Muslim, and the Arabic language is their main medium of communication in addition to their indigenous Nubian language. The unique characteristic of Nubian is shown in their culture (dress, dances, traditions, and music).

Islamic Nubia

In the fourteenth century, the Dongolan government collapsed and the region was divided and dominated by Arabs. Several Arab invasions into the region and the establishment of smaller kingdoms occurred over the next few centuries. Northern Nubia was brought under Egyptian control, while the south was controlled by the Kingdom of Sennar in the sixteenth century. The entire region came under Egyptian control during Muhammad Ali's rule in the early nineteenth century, and later became a joint Anglo-Egyptian condominium.

21st-century archaeology

In 2003, archaeologist Charles Bonnet led a team of Swiss archaeologists to excavate near Kerma and discovered a cache of monumental black granite statues of the Pharaohs of the 25th Dynasty of Egypt, now displayed at the Kerma Museum. Among the sculptures are ones belonging to the dynasty's last two pharaohs, Taharqa and Tanoutamon, whose statues are described as "masterpieces that rank among the greatest in art history".[154] Craniometric analysis of Kerma fossils that compared them to various other early populations inhabiting the Nile Valley and Maghreb found that they were morphologically close to Predynastic Egyptians from Naqada (4000–3200 BC).[155] Dental trait analysis of Kerma fossils found affinities with various populations inhabiting the Nile Valley, Horn of Africa, and Northeast Africa, especially to other ancient populations from the central and northern Sudan. Among the sampled populations, the Kerma people were overall nearest to the Kush populations in Upper Nubia, the A-Group culture bearers of Lower Nubia, and Ethiopians.[156]

Contemporary issues

Nubia was divided between Egypt and Sudan after colonialism ended and the Republic of Egypt was established in 1953, and the Republic of Sudan seceded from Egypt in 1956.

In the early-1970s, many Egyptian and Sudanese Nubians were forcibly relocated to make room for Lake Nasser after dams were constructed at Aswan.[157] Nubian villages can be found north of Aswan on the west bank of the Nile and on Elephantine Island. Many Nubians now live in large cities like Cairo.[157]

Ancient DNA

Sirak et al. 2021 obtained and analyzed the whole genomes of 66 individuals from the site of Kulubnarti situated in northern Nubia between the 2nd and 3rd cataract, near the modern Egyptian border, and dated to the Christian period between 650 and 1000 CE. The samples were obtained from two cemeteries. The samples' genetic profile was found to be a mixture between West Eurasian and Sub Saharan Dinka-related ancestries, with ~60% West Eurasian related ancestry that likely came from ancient Egyptians but ultimately resembles that found in Bronze or Iron age Levantines, and ~40% Dinka-related ancestry.

The two cemeteries showed minimal differences in their West Eurasian/Dinka ancestry proportions. These findings in addition to multiple cross cemetery relatives that the analyses have revealed indicate that people of both the R and S cemeteries were part of the same population despite the archaeological and anthropological differences between the two burials showing social stratification.

Modern Nubians, despite their superficial resemblance to the Kulubnarti Nubians on the PCA, were not found to be descended from Kulubnarti Nubians without additional later admixtures. Modern Nubians were found to have an increase in Sub-Saharan ancestry along with a change in their west Eurasian ancestry from that was found in the ancient samples.[158]

Nubian Images

See also

Notes

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Further reading

  • Adams, William Y. (1977): Nubia: Corridor to Africa, London.
  • Adams, William Y. (February–March 1980). "Nubia's corridor of time: From the kingdom of Kush to the triumph of Islam" (PDF). UNESCO Courrier. Victory in Nubia: The greatest archaeological rescue operation of all time: 25–29.
  • Bell, Herman (2009): Paradise Lost: Nubia before the 1964 Hijra, DAL Group.
  • "Black Pharaohs", National Geographic, Feb 2008
  • Bulliet et al. (2001): Nubia, The Earth and Its Peoples, pp. 70–71, Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston.
  • Drower M. (1970): Nubia A Drowning Land, London: Longmans.
  • Emberling, Geoff (2011): Nubia: Ancient Kingdoms of Africa. New York: Institute for the Study of the Ancient World.
  • Fisher, Marjorie, et al. (2012): Ancient Nubia: African Kingdoms on the Nile. The American University in Cairo Press.
  • Hassan, Yusuf Fadl (1973): The Arabs and the Sudan, Khartoum.
  • Jennings, Anne (1995) The Nubians of West Aswan: Village Women in the Midst of Change, Lynne Reinner Publishers.
  • O'Connor, David (1993): Ancient Nubia: Egypt's Rival in Africa, Philadelphia, The University Museum, University of Pennsylvania.
  • Thelwall, Robin (1978): "Lexicostatistical relations between Nubian, Daju and Dinka", Études nubiennes: colloque de Chantilly, 2–6 juillet 1975, 265–286.
  • Thelwall, Robin (1982) 'Linguistic Aspects of Greater Nubian History', in Ehret, C. & Posnansky, M. (eds.) . Berkeley/Los Angeles, 39–56.
  • Török, László (1997): The Kingdom of Kush: Handbook of the Napatan-Meroitic Civilization. Brill Academic Publishers.
  • Valbelle, Dominique, and Bonnet, Charles (2006): The Nubian Pharaohs. New York: The American University in Cairo Press.

Notes

  1. ^ Definition 3

External links

  Media related to Nubia at Wikimedia Commons

  • [Usurped!]
  • Racism and the Rediscovery of Ancient Nubia
  • Medieval Sai Project
  • "Journey to Ethiopia, Eastern Sudan, and Nigritia" was written by Pierre Trémaux in 1862–63. It features extensive descriptions and drawings of Nubia.
  • 1960s Nubia Scrapbook
  • Nubian Foundation for Preserving a Cultural Heritage

nubia, this, article, about, region, africa, airport, mongolia, ulaanbaatar, international, airport, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, numidia, nobiin, nobīn, arabic, الن, وب, romanized, nūba, region, along, nile, river, encompassing, area, between,. This article is about the region in Africa For the airport in Mongolia see New Ulaanbaatar International Airport For other uses see Nubia disambiguation Not to be confused with Numidia Nubia ˈ nj uː b i e Nobiin Nobin 2 Arabic الن وب ة romanized an Nuba is a region along the Nile river encompassing the area between the first cataract of the Nile just south of Aswan in southern Egypt and the confluence of the Blue and White Niles in Khartoum in central Sudan or more strictly Al Dabbah 3 4 5 It was the seat of one of the earliest civilizations of ancient Africa the Kerma culture which lasted from around 2500 BC until its conquest by the New Kingdom of Egypt under Pharaoh Thutmose I around 1500 BC whose heirs ruled most of Nubia for the next 400 years Nubia was home to several empires most prominently the Kingdom of Kush which conquered Egypt in the eighth century BC during the reign of Piye and ruled the country as its 25th Dynasty to be replaced a century later by the native Egyptian 26th Dynasty NubiaStatues of several Nubian rulers of the late 25th Dynasty early Napatan period 7th century BC From left to right Tantamani Taharqa rear Senkamanisken again Tantamani rear Aspelta Anlamani again Senkamanisken Kerma Museum 1 Map of Ancient Egypt with Nubian Desert marked From the 3rd century BC to 3rd century AD northern Nubia would be invaded and annexed to Egypt ruled by the Greeks and Romans This territory would be known in the Greco Roman world as Dodekaschoinos Kush s collapse in the fourth century AD was preceded by an invasion from the Ethiopian Kingdom of Aksum and the rise of three Christian kingdoms Nobatia Makuria and Alodia Makuria and Alodia lasted for roughly a millennium Their eventual decline started not only the partition of Nubia which was split into the northern half conquered by the Ottomans and the southern half by the Sennar sultanate in the sixteenth century but also a rapid Islamization and partial Arabization of the Nubian people Nubia was reunited with the Khedivate of Egypt in the nineteenth century Today the region of Nubia is split between Egypt and Sudan The primarily archaeological science dealing with ancient Nubia is called Nubiology Contents 1 Linguistics 2 Geography 3 History 3 1 Prehistory 6000 3500 BC 3 2 Pre Kerma A Group 3500 3000 BC 3 2 1 Upper Nubia 3 2 2 Lower Nubia 3 2 3 Egypt in Nubia 3 3 Early Kerma 3000 2400 BC 3 4 Early Kerma C Group 2400 1550 BC 3 4 1 Upper Nubia 3 4 2 Lower Nubia 3 4 3 Egypt in Nubia 3 5 Kerma Egyptian Empire 1550 750 BC 3 5 1 Upper Nubia 3 5 2 Lower Nubia 3 5 3 Egypt in Nubia 3 6 Napatan Empire 750 542 BC 3 6 1 Nubia in Egypt 3 7 Meroitic 542 BC 400 AD 3 7 1 Achaemenid period 3 7 2 Ptolemaic period 3 7 3 Roman period 3 8 Christian Nubia 3 9 Islamic Nubia 4 21st century archaeology 5 Contemporary issues 6 Ancient DNA 7 Nubian Images 8 See also 9 Notes 10 Further reading 11 Notes 12 External linksLinguistics EditMain article Nubian languages Nubia in hieroglyphs 6 Ta setiT3 stjCurved land 6 7 SetiuStjwCurved land of the Nubians 7 Nehset Nehsyu Nehsi Nḥst Nḥsyw Nḥsj Nubia Nubians NubiaHistorically the people of Nubia spoke at least two varieties of the Nubian language group a subfamily that includes Nobiin the descendant of Old Nubian Kenuzi Dongola Midob and several related varieties in the northern part of the Nuba Mountains in South Kordofan The Birgid language was spoken north of Nyala in Darfur but has been extinct as late as 1970 However the linguistic identity of the ancient Kerma culture of southern and central Nubia also known as Upper Nubia is uncertain some research suggests that it belonged to the Cushitic branch of Afroasiatic languages 8 9 while more recent studies indicate that the Kerma culture belonged to the Eastern Sudanic branch of Nilo Saharan languages instead and that other peoples of northern or Lower Nubia north of Kerma such as the C group culture and the Blemmyes spoke Cushitic languages before the spread of Eastern Sudanic languages from southern or Upper Nubia 10 11 12 13 Geography EditSee also Aethiopia Archaeological expeditions to Nubia and Nile boat Nubia was divided into three major regions Upper Middle and Lower Nubia in reference to their locations along the Nile Lower referred to regions downstream further north and upper to regions upstream further south Lower Nubia lay between the First and the Second Cataracts within the current borders of Egypt Middle Nubia lay between the Second and the Third Cataracts and Upper Nubia lay south of the Third Cataract 14 History EditPrehistory 6000 3500 BC Edit In prehistoric times North Africa was mostly occupied by nomadic cattle herders 15 The Khartoum Mesolithic was a highly advanced culture in southern Nubia near modern Khartoum They created sophisticated pottery that is perhaps the oldest known in the world 15 17 By 5000 BC the people who inhabited what is now called Nubia participated in the Neolithic revolution The Sahara became drier and people began to domesticate sheep goats and cattle 16 Saharan rock reliefs depict scenes that have been thought to suggest the presence of a cattle cult typical of those seen throughout parts of Eastern Africa and the Nile Valley even to this day 17 Nubian rock art depicts hunters using bows and arrows in the neolithic period which is a precursor to Nubian archer culture in later times Megaliths discovered at Nabta Playa are early examples of what seems to be one of the world s first astronomical devices predating Stonehenge by almost 2 000 years 18 This complexity as expressed by different levels of authority within the society there likely formed the basis for the structure of both the Neolithic society at Nabta and the Old Kingdom of Egypt 19 Joseph Vogel wrote that The period when sub Saharan Africa was most influential in Egypt was a time when neither Egypt as we understand it culturally nor the Sahara as we understand it geographically existed Populations and cultures now found south of the desert roamed far to the north The culture of Upper Egypt which became dynastic Egyptian civilization could fairly be called a Sudanese transplant 20 British Africanist Basil Davidson outlined that The ancient Egyptians belonged that is not to any specific Egyptian region or Near Eastern heritage but to that wide community of peoples who lived between the Red Sea and the Atlantic Ocean shared a common Saharan Sudanese culture and drew their reinforcements from the same great source even though as time went by they also absorbed a number of wanderers from the Near East 21 Biological anthropologists Shomarka Keita and A J Boyce have stated that the Studies of crania from southern predynastic Egypt from the formative period 4000 3100 B C show them usually to be more similar to the crania of ancient Nubians Kushites Saharans or modern groups from the Horn of Africa than to those of dynastic northern Egyptians or ancient or modern southern Europeans 22 Archaeological evidence has attested that population settlements occurred in Nubia as early as the Late Pleistocene era and from the 5th millennium BC onwards whereas there is no or scanty evidence of human presence in the Egyptian Nile Valley during these periods which may be due to problems in site preservation 23 Several scholars have argued that the African origins of the Egyptian civilisation derived from pastoral communities which emerged in both the Egyptian and Sudanese regions of the Nile Valley in the fifth millennium BCE 24 25 Deitrich Wildung 2018 examined Eastern Saharan pottery styles and Sudanese stone sculptures and suggested these artefacts were transmitted across the Nile Valley and influenced the pre dynastic Egyptian culture in the Neolithic period 26 Pre Kerma A Group 3500 3000 BC Edit A Group style Nubian pottery Musee du Louvre Upper Nubia Edit The poorly known pre Kerma culture existed in Upper Southern Nubia on a stretch of fertile farmland just south of the Third Cataract Lower Nubia Edit Qustul incense burner 3200 3000 BC Nubia has one of the oldest civilizations in the world This history is often intertwined with Egypt to the north 15 16 Around 3500 BC the second Nubian culture termed the Early A Group arose in Lower Northern Nubia 27 They were sedentary agriculturalists 16 6 traded with the Egyptians and exported gold 28 This trade is supported archaeologically by large amounts of Egyptian commodities deposited in the A Group graves The imports consisted of gold objects copper tools faience amulets and beads seals slate palettes stone vessels and a variety of pots 29 During this time the Nubians began creating distinctive black topped red pottery The A Group population have been described as ethnically very similar to the pre dynastic Egyptians in physical characteristics 30 Around 3100 BC the A group transitioned from the Early to Classical phases Arguably royal burials are known only at Qustul and possibly Sayala 28 8 During this period the wealth of A group kings rivaled Egyptian kings Royal A group graves contained gold and richly decorated pottery 15 19 Some scholars believe Nubian A Group rulers and early Egyptian pharaohs used related royal symbols similarities in A Group Nubia and Upper Egypt rock art support this position Scholars from the University of Chicago Oriental Institute excavated at Qustul near Abu Simbel Modern Sudan in 1960 64 and found artifacts which incorporated images associated with Egyptian pharaohs Archeologist Bruce Williams studied the artifacts and concluded that Egypt and Nubia A Group culture shared the same official culture participated in the most complex dynastic developments and Nubia and Egypt were both part of the great East African substratum 31 Williams also wrote that Qustul could well have been the seat of Egypt s founding dynasty 32 33 David O Connor wrote that the Qustul incense burner provides evidence that the A group Nubian culture in Qustul marked the pivotal change from predynastic to dynastic Egyptian monumental art 34 However most scholars do not agree with this hypothesis 35 as more recent finds in Egypt indicate that this iconography originated in Egypt instead of Nubia and that the Qustul rulers adopted or emulated the symbols of Egyptian pharaohs 36 37 38 39 The archaeological cemeteries at Qustul are no longer available for excavations since the flooding of Lake Nasser 40 The earliest representations of pharaonic iconography have been excavated from Nag el Hamdulab in Aswan the extreme southern region of Egypt which borders the Sudan with an estimated dating range between 3200 and 3100 BC 41 Egypt in Nubia Edit Writing developed in Egypt around 3300 BC In their writings Egyptians referred to Nubia as Ta Seti or The Land of the Bow as the Nubians were known to be expert archers 42 More recent and broader studies have determined that the distinct pottery styles differing burial practices different grave goods and site distribution all indicate that the Naqada people and the Nubian A Group people were from different cultures Kathryn Bard states that Naqada cultural burials contain very few Nubian craft goods which suggests that while Egyptian goods were exported to Nubia and were buried in A Group graves A Group goods were of little interest further north 43 According to anthropologist Jane Hill there is no evidence that the pharaohs of the First Dynasty buried at Abydos were of Nubian origin 44 However several biological anthropological studies have shown the Badarian and Naqada people to be closely related to the Nubian and other tropical African populations 45 46 47 48 49 Also the proto dynastic kings emerged from the Naqada region 50 51 Early Kerma 3000 2400 BC Edit A uniform culture of nomadic herders called the Gash group existed from 3000 to 1500 BC to the east and west of Nubia 16 8 In Lower Nubia the A group moved from the Classical to Terminal phase At this time kings at Qustul likely ruled all of Lower Nubia and demonstrated the political centralization of Nubian society 16 21 The A Group culture came to an end sometime between 3100 and 2900 BC when it was apparently destroyed by the First Dynasty rulers of Egypt 52 There are no records of settlement in Lower Nubia for the next 600 years Old Kingdom Egyptian dynasties 4th to 6th controlled uninhabited Lower Nubia and raided Upper Nubia Early Kerma C Group 2400 1550 BC Edit Upper Nubia Edit Kerma style pottery 2500 1500 BC The pre Kerma developed into the Middle phase Kerma group Some A group people transitioning to C group settled the area and co existed with the pre Kerma group 16 25 Like other Nubian groups the two groups made an abundance of red pottery with black tops though each group made different shapes 16 29 Traces of the C group in Upper Nubia vanish by 2000 BC and Kerma culture began to dominate Upper Nubia 16 25 The power of an independent Upper Nubia increased around 1700 BC and Upper Nubia dominated Lower Nubia 16 25 An Egyptian official Harkhuf mentions that Irtjet Setjet and Wawat all combined under a single ruler By 1650 BC Egyptian texts started to refer to only two kingdoms in Nubia Kush and Shaat 16 32 38 Kush was centered at Kerma and Shaat was centered on Sai island 16 38 Bonnet posits that Kush actually ruled all of Upper Nubia since royal graves were much larger in Kush than Shaat and Egyptian texts other than the Execration lists only refer to Kush and not Shaat 16 38 39 Lower Nubia Edit C group Nubians resettled Lower Nubia by 2400 BC 16 25 As trade between Egypt and Nubia increased so did wealth and stability Nubia was divided into a series of small kingdoms There is debate over whether the C group people 53 who flourished from 2500 BC to 1500 BC were another internal evolution or invaders O Connor states a transition from A group into a later culture the C group can be traced and the C group culture was typical of Lower Nubia from 2400 to 1650 BC 16 25 Although they lived in close proximity to each other Nubians did not acculturate much to Egyptian culture Notable exceptions include C group Nubians during the 15th Dynasty isolated Nubian communities in Egypt and some bowmen communities 16 56 C Group pottery is characterized by all over incised geometric lines with white infill and impressed imitations of basketry Lower Nubia was controlled by Egypt from 2000 to 1700 BC and Upper Nubia from 1700 to 1525 BC From 2200 to 1700 BC the Pan Grave culture appeared in Lower Nubia 15 20 Some of the people were likely the Medjay mḏꜣ 54 arriving from the desert east of the Nile river One feature of Pan Grave culture was shallow grave burial The Pan Grave and C Group definitely interacted Pan Grave pottery is characterized by more limited incised lines than the C Group s and generally have interspersed undecorated spaces within the geometric schemes 55 Egypt in Nubia Edit 11th Dynasty model of Nubian archers in the Egyptian army from a tomb in Asyut c 2130 1991 BC In 2300 BC Nubia was first mentioned in Old Kingdom Egyptian accounts of trade missions The Egyptians referred to Lower Nubia as Wawat Irtjet and Setju while they referred to Upper Nubia as Yam Some authors believe that Irtjet and Setju could also have been in Upper Nubia 16 32 They referred to Nubians dwelling near the river as Nehasyu 16 26 From Aswan the southern limit of Egyptian control at the time Egyptians imported gold incense ebony copper ivory and exotic animals from tropical Africa through Nubia Relations between the Egyptians and Nubians showed peaceful cultural interchange cooperation and mixed marriages Nubian bowmen that settled at Gebelein during the First Intermediate Period married Egyptian women were buried in Egyptian style and eventually could not be distinguished from Egyptians 16 56 Older scholarship noted that some Egyptian pharaohs may have had Nubian ancestry 56 57 Richard Loban expressed the view that Mentuhotep II of the 11th Dynasty was quite possibly of Nubian origin and cited historical evidence which mentioned that Amenemhet I founder of the 12th Dynasty had a Ta Seti or Nubian mother 58 59 60 Deitrich Wildung has argued that Nubian features were common in Egyptian iconography since the pre dynastic era and that several pharaohs such as Khufu and Mentuhotep II were represented with these Nubian features 61 Frank Yurco wrote that Egyptian rulers of Nubian ancestry had become Egyptians culturally as pharaohs they exhibited typical Egyptian attitudes and adopted typical Egyptian policies Yurco noted that some Middle Kingdom rulers particularly some pharaohs of the Twelfth Dynasty had strong Nubian features due to the origin of the dynasty in the Aswan region of southern Egypt He also identified the pharaoh Sequenre Tao of the Seventeenth Dynasty as having Nubian features 62 Many scholars in recent years have argued that the mother of Amenemhat I founder of the Twelfth Dynasty was of Nubian origin 63 64 59 65 66 67 68 After a period of withdrawal the Middle Kingdom of Egypt conquered Lower Nubia from 2000 to 1700 BC 16 8 25 By 1900 BC King Sesostris I began building a series of towns below the Second Cataract with heavy fortresses that had enclosures and drawbridges 15 19 Sesotris III relentlessly expanded his kingdom into Nubia from 1866 to 1863 BC and erected massive river forts including Buhen Semna Shalfak and Toshka at Uronarti to gain more control over the trade routes in Lower Nubia They also provided direct access to trade with Upper Nubia which was independent and increasingly powerful during this time These Egyptian garrisons seemed to peacefully coexist with the local Nubian people though they did not interact much with them 69 Medjay was the name given by ancient Egypt to nomadic desert dwellers from east of the Nile river The term was used variously to describe a location the Medjay people or their role job in the kingdom They became part of the Egyptian military as scouts and minor workers before being incorporated into the Egyptian army citation needed In the army the Medjay served as garrison troops in Egyptian fortifications in Nubia and patrolled the deserts as a kind of gendarmerie 70 or elite paramilitary police force 71 to prevent their fellow Medjay tribespeople from further attacking Egyptian assets in the region 71 The Medjay were often used to protect valuable areas especially royal and religious complexes Although they are most notable for their protection of the royal palaces and tombs in Thebes and the surrounding areas the Medjay were deployed throughout Upper and Lower Egypt they were even used during Kamose s campaign against the Hyksos and became instrumental in turning the Egyptian state into a military power 72 73 After the First Intermediate Period of Egypt the Medjay district was no longer mentioned in written records 74 Kerma Egyptian Empire 1550 750 BC Edit Upper Nubia Edit Main article Kerma culture Western Deffufa Daggers of bone and copper 1750 1450 BCE Kerma British Museum EA55442 From the Middle Kerma phase the first Nubian kingdom to unify much of the region arose The Classic Kerma culture named for its royal capital at Kerma was one of the earliest urban centers in the Nile region and oldest city in Africa outside of Egypt 75 16 50 51 The Kerma group spoke either languages of the Cushitic branch 8 9 or according to more recent research Nilo Saharan languages of the Eastern Sudanic branch 10 11 12 13 By 1650 BC Classic Kerma phase the kings of Kerma were powerful enough to organize the labor for monumental town walls and large mud brick structures such as the Eastern and Western Deffufas 50 by 25 by 18 meters They also had rich tombs with possessions for the afterlife and large human sacrifices George Andrew Reisner excavated sites at the royal city of Kerma and found distinctive Nubian architecture such as large pebble covered tombs 90 meters in diameter a large circular dwelling and a palace like structure 16 41 Classic Kerma rulers employed a good many Egyptians according to the Egyptian Execration texts 16 57 Mirror Kerma Period 1700 1550 BC Kerma culture was militaristic as attested by many archers burials and bronze daggers swords found in their graves 16 31 Other signs of Nubia s military prowess are the frequent use of Nubians in Egypt s military and Egypt s need to construct numerous fortresses to defend their southern border from the Nubians 16 31 Despite assimilation the Nubian elite remained rebellious during Egyptian occupation There were numerous rebellions and military conflict occurred almost under every reign until the 20th dynasty 76 102 103 At one point Kerma came very close to conquering Egypt Egypt suffered a serious defeat at the hands of the Kingdom of Kush 77 78 According to Davies head of the joint British Museum and Egyptian archaeological team the attack was so devastating that if the Kerma forces had chosen to stay and occupy Egypt they might have permanently eliminated the Egyptians and brought the nation to extinction During Egypt s Second Intermediate period the Kushites reached the height of their Bronze Age power and completely controlled southern trade with Egypt 16 41 They maintained diplomatic ties with the Thebans and Hyksos until the New Kingdom pharaohs brought all of Nubia under Egyptian rule from 1500 to 1070 BC 16 41 After 1070 BC there were continued hostilities with Egypt which led Nubians to concentrate in Upper Nubia 16 58 Within 200 years a fully formed Kushite state based at Napata began to exert its influence on Upper Southern Egypt 16 58 59 Lower Nubia Edit When the Middle Kingdom Egyptians pulled out of the Napata region around 1700 BC they left a lasting legacy that was merged with indigenous C group customs Egyptians remaining at the garrison towns started to merge with the C group Nubians in Lower Nubia The C group quickly adopted Egyptian customs and culture as attested by their graves and lived together with the remaining Egyptians in garrison towns 16 41 After Upper Nubia annexed Lower Nubia around 1700 BC the Kingdom of Kush began to control the area At this point C group Nubians and Egyptians began to proclaim their allegiance to the Kushite King in their inscriptions 16 41 Egypt conquered Lower and Upper Nubia from 1500 to 1070 BC However the Kingdom of Kush survived longer than Egypt Egypt in Nubia Edit Nubian Prince Heqanefer bringing tribute for King Tutankhamun 18th dynasty Tomb of Huy Circa 1342 c 1325 BC The Turin Papyrus Map dating to about 1160 BC After the Theban 17th Dynasty New Kingdom of Egypt c 1532 1070 BC expelled the Canaanite Hyksos from Egypt they turned their imperial ambitions to Nubia By the end of Thutmose I s reign 1520 BC all of Lower Nubia had been annexed After a long campaign Egypt also conquered the Kingdom of Kerma in Upper Nubia and held both areas until 1070 BC 76 101 102 16 25 The Egyptian empire expanded into the Fourth Cataract and a new administrative center was built at Napata which became a gold and incense production area 79 80 Egypt became a prime source of gold in the Middle East The primitive working conditions for the slaves are recorded by Diodorus Siculus 81 One of the oldest maps known is of a gold mine in Nubia the Turin Papyrus Map dating to about 1160 BC it is also one of the earliest characterized road maps in existence 82 Nubians were an integral part of New Kingdom Egyptian society Some scholars state that Nubians were included in the 18th Dynasty of Egypt s royal family 83 Ahmose Nefertari arguably the most venerated woman in Egyptian history 84 was thought by some scholars such as Flinders Petrie to be of Nubian origin because she is most often depicted with black skin 56 85 17 86 The mummy of Ahmose Nefertari s father Seqenenre Tao has been described as presenting tightly curled woolly hair with a slight build and strongly Nubian features 87 Some modern scholars also believe that in some depictions her skin color is indicative of her role as a goddess of resurrection since black is both the color of the fertile land of Egypt and that of the underworld 88 89 90 90 84 91 125 However there is no known depiction of her painted during her lifetime she is represented with the same light skin as other represented individuals in tomb TT15 before her deification the earliest black skin depiction appears in tomb TT161 c 150 years after her death 11 12 23 74 5 92 125 Egyptologist Barbara Lesko wrote in 1996 that Ahmose Nefertari was sometimes portrayed by later generations as having been black although her coffin portrait gives her the typical light yellow skin of women 93 In 2009 Egyptologist Elena Vassilika noting that in a wooden statuette of the queen now at the Museo Egizio the face is painted black but the arms and feet are light in color argued that the reason for the black coloring in that case was religious and not genetic 94 78 9 In 1098 1088 BC Thebes was the scene of a civil war like conflict between the High Priest of Amun of Thebes Amenhotep and the Viceroy of Kush Panehesy the Nubian It was chaotic and many tombs were plundered Instead of sending soldiers to restore order Ramesses XI put Panehesy in control of that area s military and appointed him Director of Granaries Panehesy stationed his troops in Thebes to protect the city from thieves but it resembled a military occupation of Thebes to the High Priest which later led to the Civil war in Thebes 76 104 105 By 1082 BC Ramesses XI finally sent help to the High Priest Panehesy continued his revolt and the city of Thebes suffered from war famine and plunderings 76 106 Panehesy initially succeeded and the High Priest fled Thebes Panehesy pursued the High Priest as far as Middle Egypt before Egyptian forces pushed Panehesy and his troops out of Egypt and into Lower Nubia 76 106 Ramesses sent new leadership to Thebes Herihor was named the new High Priest of Thebes and effectively King of Southern Egypt and Paiankh was named the new Viceroy of Kush Paiankh recaptured former Egyptian holdings in Lower Nubia as far as the second Nile cataract but could not defeat Panehesy in Lower Nubia who ruled the area until his death 76 106 Herihor s descendants became rulers of Egypt s 21st and 22nd Dynasties Napatan Empire 750 542 BC Edit Main article Kingdom of Kush Pyramids of Kushite rulers at Nuri Pharaoh Taharqa of Ancient Egypt s 25th Dynasty Ashmolean Museum Oxford UK There are competing theories on the origins of the Kushite kings of the 25th Dynasty 95 some scholars believe they were Nubian officials that learned state level organization by administering Egyptian held Nubia from 1500 to 1070 BC 16 59 such as the rebel Viceroy of Kush Panehesy who ruled Upper Nubia and some of Lower Nubia after Egyptian forces withdrew 76 110 Other scholars believe they are descended from families of the Egyptianized Nubian elite supported by Egyptian priests or settlers 96 97 98 99 Children of elite Nubian families were sent to be educated in Egypt then returned to Kush to be appointed in bureaucratic positions to ensure their loyalty During the Egyptian occupation of Nubia there were temple towns with Egyptian cults but production and redistribution was based mostly on indigenous social structures 76 111 The El Kurru chiefdom likely played a major role in the development of the Kingdom of Kush due to its access to gold producing areas control of caravan routes 76 112 more arable land and participation in international trade 76 121 There can be no doubt that el Kurru was the burial place of the ancestors of the Twenty Fifth Dynasty 76 112 The early el Kurru burials resemble Nubian Kerma C group traditions contracted body circular stone structures burial on a bed 76 121 However by 880 815 BC Nubian burials at el Kurru became more Egyptian in style with mastabas or pyramid on mastabas chapels and rectangular enclosures 76 117 121 122 Alara the first el Kurru prince and his successor Kashta were buried at el Kurru 76 123 Later documents mention Alara as the 25th Dynasty s founder and central to a myth of the origins of the kingdom 76 124 126 Alara s sister was the priestess of Amun which created a system of royal secession and an ideology of royal power in which Kushite concepts and practice were united with contemporary Egyptian concepts of kingship 76 144 Later Kashta s daughter the Kushite princess Amenirdis was installed as God s Wife of Amun Elect and later Divine Adoratrice effectively governor of Upper Egypt which signaled the Kushite conquest of Egyptian territories 76 148 The Napatan Empire ushered in the age of Egyptian archaism or a return to a historical past which was embodied by a concentrated effort at religious renewal and restoration of Egypt s holy places 76 169 Piye expanded the Temple of Amun at Jebel Barkal 28 by adding an immense colonnaded forecourt 76 163 164 Shabaka restored the great Egyptian monuments and temples unlike his Libyan predecessors 76 167 169 Taharqa enriched Thebes on a monumental scale 76 At Karnak the Sacred Lake structures the kiosk in the first court and the colonnades at the temple entrance are all built by Taharqa and Mentuemhet In addition to architecture the Kingdom of Kush was deeply influenced by Egyptian culture 100 101 102 By 780 BC Amun was the main god of Kush and intense contacts with Thebes were maintained 76 144 Kush used the methods of Egyptian art and writing 103 The Nubian elite adopted many Egyptian customs and gave their children Egyptian names Although some Nubian customs and beliefs e g burial practices continued to be practiced 76 111 Egyptianization dominated in ideas practices and iconography 104 The cultural Egyptianization of Nubia was at its highest levels at the times of both Kashta and Piye 105 Nubia in Egypt Edit Main article Twenty fifth Dynasty of Egypt Kushite heartland and Kushite Empire of the Twenty fifth Dynasty of Egypt circa 700 BC 106 Taharqa s kiosk and column Karnak temple Kashta peacefully became King of Upper and Lower Egypt with his daughter Amendiris as Divine Adoratrice of Amun in Thebes 76 144 146 Rulers of the 23rd Dynasty withdrew from Thebes to Heracleopolis which avoided conflict with the new Kushite rulers of Thebes Under Kashta s reign the Kushite elite and professional classes became significantly Egyptianized The city state of Napata was the spiritual capital of Kush and it was from there that Piye spelled Piankhi or Piankhy in older works invaded and took control of Egypt 107 Piye personally led the attack on Egypt and recorded his victory in a lengthy hieroglyphic filled stele called the Stele of Victory 76 166 Piye s success in achieving the double kingship after generations of Kushite planning resulted from Kushite ambition political skill and the Theban decision to reunify Egypt in this particular way and not Egypt s utter exhaustion as frequently suggested in Egyptological studies 28 Due to archaism Piye mostly used the royal titulary of Tuthmosis III but changed the Horus name from Strong bull appearing crowned in Thebes to Strong bull appearing in Napata to announce that the Kushites had reversed history and conquered their former Thebaid Egyptian conquerors 76 154 He also revived one of the greatest features of the Old and Middle Kingdoms pyramid construction As an energetic builder he constructed the oldest known pyramid at the royal burial site of El Kurru According to the revised chronology Shebitku brought the entire Nile Valley as far as the Delta under the empire of Kush and is reputed to have had Bocchoris dynast of Sais burnt to death 108 76 166 167 Shabaka transferred the capital to Memphis 76 166 Shebitku s successor Taharqa was crowned in Memphis in 690 BC 76 15 and ruled Upper and Lower Egypt as Pharaoh from Tanis in the Delta 109 108 Excavations at el Kurru and studies of horse skeletons indicate the finest horses used in Kushite and Assyrian warfare were bred in and exported from Nubia Horses and chariots were key to the Kushite war machine 76 157 158 Taharqa s reign was a prosperous time in the empire with a particularly large Nile river flood and abundant crops and wine 110 76 Taharqa s inscriptions indicate that he gave large amounts of gold to the temple of Amun at Kawa 111 His army undertook successful military campaigns as attested by the list of conquered Asiatic principalities from the Mut temple at Karnak and conquered peoples and countries Libyans Shasu nomads Phoenicians Khor in Palestine from Sanam temple inscriptions 76 Laszlo Torok mentions the military success was due to Taharqa s efforts to strengthen the army through daily training in long distance running and Assyria s preoccupation with Babylon and Elam 76 Taharqa also built military settlements at the Semna and Buhen forts and the fortified site of Qasr Ibrim 76 Imperial ambitions of the Mesopotamian based Assyrian Empire made war with the 25th Dynasty inevitable Taharqa conspired with Levantine kingdoms against Assyria 112 in 701 BC Taharqa and his army aided Judah and King Hezekiah in withstanding a siege by King Sennacherib of the Assyrians 2 Kings 19 9 Isaiah 37 9 113 There are various theories Taharqa s army 114 disease divine intervention Hezekiah s surrender Herodotus mice theory as to why the Assyrians failed to take Jerusalem and withdrew to Assyria 115 Sennacherib s annals record Judah was forced into tribute after the siege and Sennacherib became the ruler of the region 116 However this is contradicted by Khor s frequent utilization of an Egyptian system of weights for trade and the twenty year cessation in Assyria s pattern of repeatedly invading Khor as Assyrians had before 701 and after Sennacherib s death 117 118 In 681 BC Sennacherib was murdered by his own sons in Babylon In 679 BC Sennacherib s successor King Esarhaddon campaigned in Khor destroyed Sidon and forced Tyre into tribute in 677 676 BC Esarhaddon invaded Egypt proper in 674 BC but according to Babylonian records Taharqa and his army outright defeated the Assyrians 119 In 672 BC Taharqa brought reserve troops from Kush as mentioned in rock inscriptions 76 Taharqa s Egypt still had influence in Khor during this period as Tyre s King Ba lu put his trust upon his friend Taharqa Further evidence was Ashkelon s alliance with Egypt and Esarhaddon s inscription asking if the Kushite Egyptian forces plan and strive to wage war in any way and if the Egyptian forces will defeat Esarhaddon at Ashkelon 120 However Taharqa was defeated in Egypt in 671 BC when Esarhaddon conquered Northern Egypt captured Memphis and imposed tribute before withdrawing 109 Pharaoh Taharqa escaped to the south but Esarhaddon captured the Pharaoh s family including Prince Nes Anhuret and the royal wives 76 and sent them to Assyria In 669 BC Taharqa reoccupied Memphis and the Delta and recommenced intrigues with the king of Tyre 109 Esarhaddon led his army to Egypt again and after his death in 668 BC command passed to Ashurbanipal Ashurbanipal and the Assyrians defeated Taharqa again and advanced as far south as Thebes but direct Assyrian control was not established 109 The rebellion was stopped and Ashurbanipal appointed Necho I who had been king of the city Sais as his vassal ruler in Egypt Necho s son Psamtik I was educated at the Assyrian capital of Nineveh during Esarhaddon s reign citation needed As late as 665 BC the vassal rulers of Sais Mendes and Pelusium were still making overtures a to Taharqa in Kush 76 The vassals plot was uncovered by Ashurbanipal and all rebels but Necho of Sais were executed 76 Taharqa s successor Tantamani sailed north from Napata with a large army to Thebes where he was ritually installed as the king of Egypt 76 185 From Thebes Tantamani began his reconquest and regained control of Egypt as far north as Memphis 76 185 109 Tantamani s dream stele states that he restored order from the chaos where royal temples and cults were not being maintained 76 185 After conquering Sais and killing Assyria s vassal Necho I in Memphis some local dynasts formally surrendered while others withdrew to their fortresses 76 185 The Kushites had influence over their northern neighbors for nearly 100 years until they were repelled by the invading Assyrians The Assyrians installed the native 26th Dynasty of Egypt under Psamtik I and they permanently forced the Kushites out of Egypt around 590 BC 121 121 122 The heirs of the Kushite empire established their new capital at Napata which was also sacked by the Egyptians in 592 BC The Kushite kingdom survived for another 900 years after being pushed south to Meroe The Egyptianized culture of Nubia grew increasingly Africanized after the fall of the 25th Dynasty until Queen Amanishakhete acceded in 45 BC citation needed She temporarily arrested the loss of Egyptian culture but then it continued unchecked 105 Meroitic 542 BC 400 AD Edit Main article Meroe Aerial view at Nubian pyramids Meroe Apedemak Temple at Naqa Due to pressure from Assyrians and Egyptians Meroe 800 BC c 350 AD became the southern capital of the Kingdom of Kush 76 According to partially deciphered Meroitic texts the name of the city was Medewi or Bedewi Meroe was in southern Nubia by the east bank of the Nile about 6 km north east of the Kabushiya station near Shendi Sudan and about 200 km northeast of Khartoum Meroe is mentioned in first century AD Periplus of the Erythraean Sea farther inland in the country towards the west there lies a city called Meroe In fifth century BC Greek historian Herodotus described it as a great city said to be the mother city of the other Ethiopians 122 123 Together Musawwarat es Sufra Naqa and Meroe formed the Island of Meroe The town s importance gradually increased from the beginning of the Meroitic Period especially from the reign of Arakamani c 280 BC when the royal burial ground was transferred to Meroe from Napata Jebel Barkal Excavations revealed evidence of important high ranking Kushite burials from the Napatan Period c 800 c 280 BC in the vicinity of the settlement called the Western cemetery They buried their kings in small pyramids with steeply sloped sides that were based on New Kingdom Viceroy designs 96 At its peak the rulers of Meroe controlled the Nile Valley over a north south straight line distance of more than 1 000 km 620 mi 124 People of the Meroitic period preserved many ancient Egyptian customs but were unique in many respects The Meroitic language was spoken in Meroe and Sudan during the Meroitic period attested from 300 BC before becoming extinct around 400 AD They developed their own form of writing by using Egyptian hieroglyphs before switching to a cursive alphabetic script with 23 signs 125 It was split into two types Meroitic Cursive which was written with a stylus and used for general record keeping and Meroitic Hieroglyphic which was carved in stone or used for royal or religious documents It is not well understood due to the scarcity of bilingual texts clarification needed The earliest inscription in Meroitic writing dates from between 180 and 170 BC These hieroglyphics were found engraved on the temple of Queen Shanakdakhete Meroitic Cursive is written horizontally and is read from right to left like all Semitic orthographies 126 The Meroitic people worshiped the Egyptian gods as well as their own such as Apedemak and the lion son of Sekhmet or Bast Meroe was the base of a flourishing kingdom whose wealth was centered around a strong iron industry and international trade with India and China 127 Metalworking is believed to have happened in Meroe possibly through bloomeries and blast furnaces 128 The centralized control of production within the Meroitic empire and distribution of certain crafts and manufactures may have been politically important Other important sites were Musawwarat es Sufra and Naqa Musawwarat es Sufra which is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site was constructed in sandstone Its main features were the Great Enclosure the Lion Temple of Apedemak 14 9 5 meters and the Great Reservoir The Great Enclosure is the main structure of the site Much of the large labyrinth like building complex which covers approximately 45 000 m2 was erected in third century BC 129 The scheme of the site is so far without parallel in Nubia and ancient Egypt According to Hintze the complicated ground plan of this extensive complex of buildings is without parallel in the entire Nile valley 130 The maze of courtyards includes three possible temples passages low walls that prevent any contact with the outside world about 20 columns ramps and two reservoirs 131 132 There is some debate about the purpose of the buildings with earlier suggestions including a college a hospital and an elephant training camp 133 The Lion Temple was constructed by Arnekhamani and bears inscriptions in Egyptian hieroglyphs representations of elephants and lions on the rear inside wall and reliefs of Apedemak depicted as a three headed god on the outside walls 134 The Great Reservoir is a hafir to retain as much as possible of the rainfall of the short wet season It is 250 m in diameter and 6 3 m deep 135 Kandake often Latinised as Candace was the Meroitic term for the sister of the king of Kush who due to matrilineal succession would bear the next heir making her a queen mother According to scholar Basil Davidson at least four Kushite queens Amanirenas Amanishakheto Nawidemak and Amanitore probably spent part of their lives in Musawwarat es Sufra 136 Pliny writes that the Queen of the Ethiopians bore the title Candace and indicates that the Ethiopians had conquered ancient Syria and the Mediterranean 137 In 25 BC the Kush kandake Amanirenas as reported by Strabo attacked the city of Syene known as Aswan today within the territory of the Roman Empire Emperor Augustus destroyed the city of Napata in retaliation 138 139 In the New Testament biblical account a treasury official of Candace queen of the Ethiopians returning from a trip to Jerusalem met with Philip the Evangelist and was baptized 140 141 Achaemenid period Edit Kusiya soldier of the Achaemenid army circa 480 BC Xerxes I tomb relief Marble portrait of a Nubian ca 120 100 BC The Achaemenids occupied the Kushan kingdom possibly from the time of Cambyses c 530 BC and more probably from the time of Darius I 550 486 BC who mentions the conquest of Kush Kusiya in his inscriptions 142 143 Herodotus mentioned an invasion of Kush by the Achaemenid ruler Cambyses II however he mentions that his expedition failed miserably in the desert 109 65 66 Derek Welsby states scholars have doubted that this Persian expedition ever took place but archaeological evidence suggests that the fortress of Dorginarti near the second cataract served as Persia s southern boundary 109 65 66 Ptolemaic period Edit The Greek Ptolemaic Kingdom under Ptolemy II Philadelphus invaded Nubia in 275 BC and annexed the northern twelve miles of this territory subsequently known as the Dodekaschoinos twelve mile land 144 Throughout the 160s and 150s BC Ptolemy VI has also reasserted Ptolemaic control over the northern part of Nubia 145 146 There is no record of conflict between the Kushites and Ptolemies However there was a serious revolt at the end of Ptolemy IV s reign and the Kushites likely tried to interfere in Ptolemaic affairs 109 67 It is suggested that this led to Ptolemy V defacing the name of Arqamani on inscriptions at Philae 109 67 Arqamani constructed a small entrance hall to the temple built by Ptolemy IV at Pselchis and constructed a temple at Philae to which Ptolemy contributed an entrance hall 109 66 There is evidence of Ptolemaic occupation as far south as the Second Cataract but recent finds at Qasr Ibrim such as the total absence of Ptolemaic pottery have cast doubts on the effectiveness of the occupation 109 67 Dynastic struggles led to the Ptolemies abandoning the area so the Kushites reasserted their control with Qasr Ibrim occupied by the Kushites and other locations perhaps garrisoned 109 67 Roman period Edit According to Welsby after the Romans assumed control of Egypt they negotiated with the Kushites at Philae and drew the southern border of Roman Egypt at Aswan 109 67 Theodore Mommsen and Welsby state the Kingdom of Kush became a client Kingdom which was similar to the situation under Ptolemaic rule of Egypt Kushite ambition and excessive Roman taxation are two theories for a revolt supported by Kushite armies 109 67 68 The ancient historians Strabo and Pliny give accounts of the conflict with Roman Egypt Meroitic prince smiting his enemies early first century AD Strabo describes a war with the Romans in first century BC He stated that the Kushites sacked Aswan with an army of 30 000 men and destroyed imperial statues at Philae 109 68 A fine over life size bronze head of the emperor Augustus was found buried in Meroe in front of a temple 109 68 After the initial victories of Kandake or Candace Amanirenas against Roman Egypt the Kushites were defeated and Napata was sacked 147 Napata s fall was not a crippling blow to the Kushites and did not frighten Candace enough to prevent her from again engaging in combat with the Roman military In 22 BC a large Kushite force moved northward with the intention of attacking Qasr Ibrim 148 Alerted to the advance Petronius again marched south and managed to reach Qasr Ibrim and bolster its defences before the invading Kushites arrived Welsby states after a Kushite attack on Primis Qasr Ibrim 109 69 70 the Kushites sent ambassadors to negotiate a peace settlement with Petronius which succeeded on favourable terms 147 Trade between the two nations increased and the Roman Egyptian border being extended to Hiera Sykaminos Maharraqa 148 149 109 70 This arrangement guaranteed peace for most of the next 300 years and there is no definite evidence of further clashes 109 70 During this time different parts of the region divided into smaller groups with individual leaders or generals each commanding small armies of mercenaries They fought for control of what is now Nubia and its surrounding territories leaving the entire region weak and vulnerable to attack Meroe would eventually be defeated by the new rising Kingdom of Aksum to their south ruled by King Ezana A stele of Ge ez of an unnamed ruler of Aksum thought to be Ezana was found at the site of Meroe From his description in Greek he was King of the Aksumites and the Omerites i e of Aksum and Himyar It is likely this king ruled sometime around 330 AD While some authorities interpret these inscriptions as proof that the Axumites destroyed the kingdom of Meroe others note that archeological evidence points to an economic and political decline in Meroe around 300 149 Moreover some view the stele as military aid from Aksum to Meroe to quell the revolt and rebellion by the Nuba peoples However conclusive evidence and proof to which view is correct does not currently exist At some point during fourth century AD the region was conquered by the Noba from which the name Nubia may derive another possibility is that it comes from the Egyptian word for gold 150 From then on the Romans referred to the area as Nobatia Christian Nubia Edit Main articles Makuria Nobadia and Alodia Wall painting from Faras first half of 11th c CE National Museum in Warsaw Around 350 AD the area was invaded by the Kingdom of Aksum and the Meroitic kingdom collapsed Three smaller Christian kingdoms replaced it the northernmost was Nobatia capital Pachoras now modern day Faras Egypt between the first and second cataract of the Nile River in the middle was Makuria capital Old Dongola and southernmost was Alodia capital Soba King Silky of Nobatia defeated the Blemmyes and recorded his victory in a Greek language inscription carved in the wall of the temple of Talmis modern Kalabsha around 500 AD Christianity had been introduced to the region by the fourth century Bishop Athanasius of Alexandria consecrated Marcus as bishop of Philae before his death in 373 AD John of Ephesus records that a Miaphysite priest named Julian converted the king and his nobles of Nobatia around 545 AD He also writes that the kingdom of Alodia was converted around 569 However John of Biclarum wrote that the kingdom of Makuria converted to Catholicism the same year suggesting that John of Ephesus might be mistaken Further doubt is cast on John s clarification needed testimony by an entry in the chronicle of the Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Alexandria Eutychius of Alexandria which states that in 719 AD the church of Nubia transferred its allegiance from the Greek to the Coptic Orthodox Church After the official Christianization of Nubia the Isis cult of Philae remained for the sake of the Nubians The edict of Theodosius I 390 AD was not enforced at Philae Later attempts to suppress the cult of Isis led to armed clashes between the Nubians and Romans Finally in 453 AD a treaty recognizing the traditional religious rights of Nubians at Philae was signed By the seventh century Makuria expanded and became the dominant power in the region It was strong enough to halt the southern expansion of Islam after the Arabs had taken Egypt After several failed invasions the new Muslim rulers agreed to a treaty with Dongola called Baqt to allow peaceful coexistence and trade contingent on the Nubians making an annual payment consisting of slaves and other tributes to the Islamic Governor at Aswan it guaranteed that any runaway slaves were returned to Nubia 151 The treaty was kept for six hundred years 151 Throughout this period Nubia s main exports were dates and slaves though ivory and gold were also exchanged for Egyptian ceramics textiles and glass 152 Over time the influx of Arab traders introduced Islam to Nubia and it gradually supplanted Christianity After an interruption in the annual tribute of slaves the Egyptian Mamluk ruler invaded in 1272 and declared himself sovereign over half of Nubia 151 While there are records of a bishop Timothy at Qasr Ibrim in 1372 his see included Faras It is also clear that the cathedral of Dongola had been converted to a mosque in 1317 153 The influx of Arabs and Nubians to Egypt and Sudan had contributed to the suppression of the Nubian identity following the collapse of the last Nubian kingdom around 1504 A vast majority of the Nubian population is currently Muslim and the Arabic language is their main medium of communication in addition to their indigenous Nubian language The unique characteristic of Nubian is shown in their culture dress dances traditions and music Islamic Nubia Edit Main article Islamization of SudanFurther information Turco Egyptian conquest of Sudan 1820 1824 Invasion of Nubia In the fourteenth century the Dongolan government collapsed and the region was divided and dominated by Arabs Several Arab invasions into the region and the establishment of smaller kingdoms occurred over the next few centuries Northern Nubia was brought under Egyptian control while the south was controlled by the Kingdom of Sennar in the sixteenth century The entire region came under Egyptian control during Muhammad Ali s rule in the early nineteenth century and later became a joint Anglo Egyptian condominium 21st century archaeology EditIn 2003 archaeologist Charles Bonnet led a team of Swiss archaeologists to excavate near Kerma and discovered a cache of monumental black granite statues of the Pharaohs of the 25th Dynasty of Egypt now displayed at the Kerma Museum Among the sculptures are ones belonging to the dynasty s last two pharaohs Taharqa and Tanoutamon whose statues are described as masterpieces that rank among the greatest in art history 154 Craniometric analysis of Kerma fossils that compared them to various other early populations inhabiting the Nile Valley and Maghreb found that they were morphologically close to Predynastic Egyptians from Naqada 4000 3200 BC 155 Dental trait analysis of Kerma fossils found affinities with various populations inhabiting the Nile Valley Horn of Africa and Northeast Africa especially to other ancient populations from the central and northern Sudan Among the sampled populations the Kerma people were overall nearest to the Kush populations in Upper Nubia the A Group culture bearers of Lower Nubia and Ethiopians 156 Contemporary issues EditFurther information Nubian people Nubia was divided between Egypt and Sudan after colonialism ended and the Republic of Egypt was established in 1953 and the Republic of Sudan seceded from Egypt in 1956 In the early 1970s many Egyptian and Sudanese Nubians were forcibly relocated to make room for Lake Nasser after dams were constructed at Aswan 157 Nubian villages can be found north of Aswan on the west bank of the Nile and on Elephantine Island Many Nubians now live in large cities like Cairo 157 Ancient DNA EditSirak et al 2021 obtained and analyzed the whole genomes of 66 individuals from the site of Kulubnarti situated in northern Nubia between the 2nd and 3rd cataract near the modern Egyptian border and dated to the Christian period between 650 and 1000 CE The samples were obtained from two cemeteries The samples genetic profile was found to be a mixture between West Eurasian and Sub Saharan Dinka related ancestries with 60 West Eurasian related ancestry that likely came from ancient Egyptians but ultimately resembles that found in Bronze or Iron age Levantines and 40 Dinka related ancestry The two cemeteries showed minimal differences in their West Eurasian Dinka ancestry proportions These findings in addition to multiple cross cemetery relatives that the analyses have revealed indicate that people of both the R and S cemeteries were part of the same population despite the archaeological and anthropological differences between the two burials showing social stratification Modern Nubians despite their superficial resemblance to the Kulubnarti Nubians on the PCA were not found to be descended from Kulubnarti Nubians without additional later admixtures Modern Nubians were found to have an increase in Sub Saharan ancestry along with a change in their west Eurasian ancestry from that was found in the ancient samples 158 Nubian Images Edit Nubian terracotta female figurine from the Neolithic period ca 3500 3100 BC Brooklyn Museum Nubian king with bow Buhen Fortress 1650 BC Univ of Chicago Museum Nubian Tribute Presented to the King Tomb of Huy MET DT221112 Nubians bringing tribute for King Tut Tomb of Huy Temple of Amun Jebel Barkal Entrance to Great Enclosure Musawwarat es Sufra Column and elephant part of temple complex in Musawwarat es Sufra Pyramid of Amanishakheto Jewelry of Kandake Amanishakheto Copy of relief from Naqa depicting Amanitore second from left Natakamani second from right and two princes approaching a three headed Apedemak The Archer King an unknown king of Meroe 3rd century BC National Museum of Sudan Bishop Petros Christian Nubia The Relief of Gebel Sheikh Suleiman probably shows the victory of an early Pharaoh possibly Djer over A Group Nubians circa 3000 BC Now gone Christian Nubian wall painting in the Temple of KalabshaSee also EditKerma culture List of monarchs of Kerma Kingdom of Kush List of monarchs of Kush Napata Twenty fifth Dynasty of Egypt Twenty fifth Dynasty of Egypt family tree Meroe Kandake Queens of Meroe Military of ancient Nubia Nubian pyramids Nubiology Merowe Dam AethiopiaNotes Edit Elshazly Hesham Kerma and the royal cache a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Reinisch Leo 1879 Die Nuba Sprache Wien p 271 Appiah Anthony Gates Henry Louis 2005 Africana The Encyclopedia of the African and African American Experience Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 517055 9 Janice Kamrin Adela Oppenheim The Land of Nubia www metmuseum org Retrieved 2020 07 31 Raue Dietrich 2019 06 04 Handbook of Ancient Nubia Walter de Gruyter GmbH amp Co KG ISBN 978 3 11 042038 8 a b Elmar Edel Zu den Inschriften auf den Jahreszeitenreliefs der Weltkammer aus dem Sonnenheiligtum des Niuserre Teil 2 In Nachrichten der Akademie der Wissenschaften in Gottingen Nr 5 Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht Gottingen 1964 pp 118 119 a b Christian Leitz et al Lexikon der agyptischen Gotter und Gotterbezeichnungen Bd 6 H s Peeters Leuven 2002 ISBN 90 429 1151 4 p 697 a b Bechaus Gerst Marianne Blench Roger 2014 Kevin MacDonald ed The Origins and Development of African Livestock Archaeology Genetics Linguistics and Ethnography Linguistic evidence for the prehistory of livestock in Sudan 2000 Routledge p 453 ISBN 978 1135434168 Retrieved 15 September 2014 a b Behrens Peter 1986 Libya Antiqua Report and Papers of the Symposium Organized by Unesco in Paris 16 to 18 January 1984 Language and migrations of the early Saharan cattle herders the formation of the Berber branch Unesco p 30 ISBN 9231023764 Retrieved 14 September 2014 a b Rilly C 2010 Recent Research on Meroitic the Ancient Language of Sudan PDF a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b Rilly C January 2016 The Wadi Howar Diaspora and its role in the spread of East Sudanic languages from the fourth to the first millennia BCE Faits de Langues 47 151 163 doi 10 1163 19589514 047 01 900000010 S2CID 134352296 a b Rilly C 2008 Enemy brothers Kinship and relationship between Meroites and Nubians Noba Polish Centre for Mediterranean Archaeology doi 10 31338 uw 9788323533269 pp 211 226 ISBN 9788323533269 a b Cooper J 2017 Toponymic Strata in Ancient Nubian placenames in the Third and Second Millennium BCE a view from Egyptian Records Dotawo A Journal of Nubian Studies 4 Archived from the original on 2020 05 23 Edwards David 2004 The Nubian Past Oxon Routledge pp 2 90 106 ISBN 9780415369886 a b c d e f g Haynes Joyce 1992 Nubia Ancient Kingdoms of Africa Boston Massachusetts USA Museum of Fine Arts pp 8 59 ISBN 0878463623 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae O Connor David 1993 Ancient Nubia Egypt s Rival in Africa University of Pennsylvania USA University Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology pp 1 112 ISBN 0924171286 Dr Stuart Tyson Smith ucsb edu PlanetQuest The History of Astronomy Retrieved on 2007 08 29 Late Neolithic megalithic structures at Nabta Playa by Fred Wendorf 1998 Vogel Joseph 1997 Encyclopedia of precolonial Africa archaeology history languages cultures and environments Walnut Creek Calif AltaMira Press pp 465 472 ISBN 0761989021 Davidson Basil 1991 Africa in history themes and outlines Rev and expanded ed New York Collier Books p 15 ISBN 0684826674 Keita Shomarka and Boyce A J December 1996 The Geographical Origins and Population Relationships of Early Ancient Egyptians In Egypt in Africa Theodore Celenko ed Indiana University Press pp 20 33 ISBN 978 0253332691 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Gatto Maria C The Nubian Pastoral Culture as Link between Egypt and Africa A View from the Archaeological Record Wengrow David Dee Michael Foster Sarah Stevenson Alice Ramsey Christopher Bronk March 2014 Cultural convergence in the Neolithic of the Nile Valley a prehistoric perspective on Egypt s place in Africa Antiquity 88 339 95 111 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00050249 ISSN 0003 598X S2CID 49229774 Smith Stuart Tyson 1 January 2018 Gift of the Nile Climate Change the Origins of Egyptian Civilization and Its Interactions within Northeast Africa Across the Mediterranean Along the Nile Studies in Egyptology Nubiology and Late Antiquity Dedicated to Laszlo Torok Budapest 325 345 E Pischikova J P Budka amp K Grifn Eds 2018 Wildung D African in Egyptian Art In Thebes in the first millennium BC art and archaeology of the Kushite period and beyond London pp 300 380 ISBN 978 1906137595 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Shaw Ian Jameson Robert eds 2002 A Dictionary of Archaeology Wiley p 433 ISBN 978 0 631 23583 5 a b c d Emberling Geoff 2011 Kim Julienne ed Nubia Ancient Kingdoms of Africa New York University The Institute for the Study of the Ancient World pp 5 57 ISBN 9780615481029 Hafsaas Henriette January 2009 Hierarchy and heterarchy the earliest cross cultural trade along the Nile Connecting South and North Sudan Studies from Bergen in Honour of Mahmoud Salih Retrieved 2016 06 08 Mohktar Gamal 1981 General History of Africa volume 2 Ancient Civilizations of Africa Unesco General History of Africa London Heinemann Educational Books p 148 ISBN 978 0435948054 Williams Bruce 2011 Before the Pyramids Chicago Illinois Oriental Institute Museum Publications pp 89 90 ISBN 978 1 885923 82 0 The Nubia Salvage Project The Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago oi uchicago edu O Connor David Bourke Silverman David P 1995 Ancient Egyptian Kingship ISBN 978 9004100411 Retrieved 2016 05 28 O Connor David 2011 Before the Pyramids Chicago Illinois Oriental Institute Museum Publications pp 162 163 ISBN 978 1 885923 82 0 Shaw Ian 2003 10 23 The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt p 63 ISBN 9780191604621 Retrieved 2016 05 28 D Wengrow 2006 05 25 The Archaeology of Early Egypt Social Transformations in North East Africa p 167 ISBN 9780521835862 Retrieved 2016 05 28 Peter Mitchell 2005 African Connections An Archaeological Perspective on Africa and the Wider World p 69 ISBN 9780759102590 Retrieved 2016 05 28 Laszlo Torok 2009 Between Two Worlds The Frontier Region Between Ancient Nubia and Egypt p 577 ISBN 978 9004171978 Retrieved 2016 05 28 Bianchi Robert Steven 2004 Daily Life of the Nubians ISBN 9780313325014 Retrieved 2016 05 28 Lobban Richard A Jr 20 October 2020 Historical Dictionary of Medieval Christian Nubia Rowman amp Littlefield p 163 ISBN 978 1 5381 3341 5 Hendrickx Stan Darnell John Coleman Gatto Maria Carmela December 2012 The earliest representations of royal power in Egypt the rock drawings of Nag el Hamdulab Aswan Antiquity 86 334 1068 1083 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00048250 ISSN 0003 598X S2CID 53631029 Emberling Geoff 2011 Nubia Ancient Kingdoms of Africa New York Institute for the study of the ancient world p 8 ISBN 978 0 615 48102 9 An Introduction to the Archaeology of Ancient Egypt by Kathryn A Bard 2015 p 110 Hill Jane A 2004 Cylinder Seal Glyptic in Predynastic Egypt and Neighboring Regions Archaeopress ISBN 978 1 84171 588 9 Zakrzewski Sonia R April 2007 Population continuity or population change Formation of the ancient Egyptian state American Journal of Physical Anthropology 132 4 501 509 doi 10 1002 ajpa 20569 PMID 17295300 Keita S O Y September 1990 Studies of ancient crania from northern Africa American Journal of Physical Anthropology 83 1 35 48 doi 10 1002 ajpa 1330830105 ISSN 0002 9483 PMID 2221029 Tracy L Prowse Nancy C Lovell Concordance of cranial and dental morphological traits and evidence for endogamy in ancient Egypt American Journal of Physical Anthropology Vol 101 Issue 2 October 1996 Pages 237 246 Godde Kane A biological perspective of the relationship between Egypt Nubia and the Near East during the Predynastic period 2020 Retrieved 16 March 2022 Keita S O Y November 2005 Early Nile Valley Farmers From El Badari Aboriginals or European AgroNostratic Immigrants Craniometric Affinities Considered With Other Data Journal of Black Studies 36 2 191 208 doi 10 1177 0021934704265912 ISSN 0021 9347 S2CID 144482802 The Cambridge history of Africa Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1975 1986 pp 500 509 ISBN 9780521222150 The Oxford history of ancient Egypt New ed Oxford Oxford University Press 2003 p 479 ISBN 0192804588 Ancient Nubia A Group 3800 3100 BC The Oriental Institute Retrieved 1 July 2016 Hafsaas Henriette January 2006 The C Group people in Lower Nubia 2500 1500 BC Cattle pastoralists in a multicultural setting www academia edu Retrieved 2016 06 08 Erman amp Grapow Worterbuch der agyptischen Sprache 2 186 1 2 de Souza A M 2019 New Horizons The Pan Grave Ceramic Tradition in Context London Golden House a b Petrie Flinders 1939 The making of Egypt London p 155 Bromiley Geoffrey William 1979 The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia Wm B Eerdmans Publishing ISBN 978 0 8028 3782 0 Lobban Richard A 2003 12 09 Historical Dictionary of Ancient and Medieval Nubia Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 6578 5 a b Lobban Richard A Jr 10 April 2021 Historical Dictionary of Ancient Nubia Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 9781538133392 Morris Ellen 2018 08 06 Ancient Egyptian Imperialism John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1 4051 3677 8 Wildung Deitrich About the autonomy of the arts of ancient Sudan In M Honegger Ed Nubian archaeology in the XXIst Century pp 105 112 F J Yurco The ancient Egyptians Biblical Archaeology Review Vol 15 no 5 1989 General History of Africa Volume II Ancient civilizations of Africa ed G Moktar UNESCO p 152 Crawford Keith W 1 December 2021 Critique of the Black Pharaohs Theme Racist Perspectives of Egyptian and Kushite Nubian Interactions in Popular Media African Archaeological Review 38 4 695 712 doi 10 1007 s10437 021 09453 7 ISSN 1572 9842 S2CID 238718279 Morris Ellen 6 August 2018 Ancient Egyptian Imperialism John Wiley amp Sons p 72 ISBN 978 1 4051 3677 8 Van de Mieroop Marc 2021 A history of ancient Egypt Second ed Chichester West Sussex p 99 ISBN 978 1119620877 Fletcher Joann 2017 The story of Egypt the civilization that shaped the world First Pegasus books paperback ed New York pp Chapter 12 ISBN 978 1681774565 Smith Stuart Tyson 8 October 2018 Ethnicity Constructions of Self and Other in Ancient Egypt Journal of Egyptian History 11 1 2 113 146 doi 10 1163 18741665 12340045 ISSN 1874 1665 S2CID 203315839 Hafsaas Henriette January 2010 Between Kush and Egypt The C Group people of Lower Nubia during the Middle Kingdom and Second Intermediate Period Between the Cataracts Retrieved 2016 06 08 Bard op cit p 486 a b Wilkinson op cit p 147 Shaw op cit p 201 Steindorff amp Seele op cit p 28 Gardiner op cit p 76 Hafsaas Tsakos Henriette 2009 The Kingdom of Kush An African Centre on the Periphery of the Bronze Age World System Norwegian Archaeological Review 42 1 50 70 doi 10 1080 00293650902978590 S2CID 154430884 Retrieved 2016 06 08 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq Torok Laszlo 1998 The Kingdom of Kush Handbook of the Napatan Meroitic Civilization Leiden BRILL pp 132 133 153 184 ISBN 90 04 10448 8 Tomb Reveals Ancient Egypt s Humiliating Secret The Times London 2003 Elkab s hidden treasure Al Ahram Archived from the original on 2009 02 15 James G Cusick 5 March 2015 Studies in Culture Contact Interaction Culture Change and Archaeology SIU Press pp 269 ISBN 978 0 8093 3409 4 Richard Bulliet Pamela Crossley Daniel Headrick 1 January 2010 The Earth and Its Peoples Cengage Learning pp 66 ISBN 0 538 74438 3 Anne Burton 1973 Diodorus Siculus Book 1 A Commentary BRILL pp 129 ISBN 90 04 03514 1 James R Akerman Robert W Karrow 2007 Maps Finding Our Place in the World University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 01075 5 Rawlinson George 1881 History of Ancient Egypt Vol II London Longmans Green and Co p 209 a b Gestoso Singer Graciela Ahmose Nefertari the Woman in Black Terrae Antiqvae Mokhtar G 1990 General History of Africa II Ancient Civilizations of Africa Berkeley CA University of California Press pp 1 118 ISBN 978 0 520 06697 7 Martin Bernal 1987 Black Athena Afroasiatic Roots of Classical Civilization The Fabrication of Ancient Greece 1785 1985 vol I New Jersey Rutgers University Press Yurco Frank J 1989 Were the ancient Egyptians black or white Biblical Archaeology Review 15 24 29 Gitton Michel 1973 Ahmose Nefertari sa vie et son culte posthume Ecole Pratique des Hautes etudes 5e Section Sciences Religieuses 85 82 84 doi 10 3406 ephe 1973 20828 ISSN 0183 7451 Tyldesley Joyce Chronicle of the Queens of Egypt Thames amp Hudson 2006 ISBN 0 500 05145 3 Hodel Hoenes S amp Warburton D trans Life and Death in Ancient Egypt Scenes from Private Tombs in New Kingdom Thebes Cornell University Press 2000 p 268 Dodson Aidan Hilton Dyan 2004 The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt London Thames amp Hudson ISBN 0 500 05128 3 Dodson Aidan Hilton Dyan 2004 The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt London Thames amp Hudson ISBN 0 500 05128 3 The Remarkable Women of Ancient Egypt by Barbara S Lesko page 14 B C Scribe Publications 1996 ISBN 978 0 930548 13 1 Vassilika Elena 2009 I capolavori del Museo Egizio di Torino in Italian Florence Fondazione Museo delle antichita egizie di Torino ISBN 978 88 8117 950 3 Fage John Tordoff with William 2013 10 23 A History of Africa Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 79727 2 a b Sudan History Map Flag Government Religion amp Facts Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2020 07 23 Piye king of Cush Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2020 07 23 Middleton John 2015 06 01 World Monarchies and Dynasties Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 45158 7 Fage John Tordoff with William 2013 10 23 A History of Africa Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 79727 2 Drury Allen 1980 Egypt The Eternal Smile Reflections on a Journey Doubleday ISBN 9780385001939 Museums for Intercultural Dialogue Statue of Iriketakana www unesco org Retrieved 2020 07 23 Cush Kush www jewishvirtuallibrary org Retrieved 2020 07 23 statue British Museum The British Museum Retrieved 2020 07 23 Shillington Kevin 2013 07 04 Encyclopedia of African History 3 Volume Set Routledge ISBN 978 1 135 45669 6 a b Nubia Definition History Map amp Facts Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2020 07 23 Dive beneath the pyramids of Sudan s black pharaohs National Geographic 2 July 2019 Herodotus 2003 The Histories Penguin Books pp 106 107 133 134 ISBN 978 0 14 044908 2 a b Mokhtar G 1990 General History of Africa California USA University of California Press pp 161 163 ISBN 0 520 06697 9 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Welsby Derek A 1996 The Kingdom of Kush London UK British Museum Press pp 64 65 ISBN 071410986X Welsby Derek A 1996 The Kingdom of Kush London UK British Museum Press p 158 ISBN 071410986X Welsby Derek A 1996 The Kingdom of Kush London UK British Museum Press p 169 ISBN 071410986X Coogan Michael David Coogan Michael D 2001 The Oxford History of the Biblical World Oxford Oxford University Press p 53 ISBN 0 19 513937 2 Aubin Henry T 2002 The Rescue of Jerusalem New York NY Soho Press Inc pp x 141 144 ISBN 1 56947 275 0 Aubin Henry T 2002 The Rescue of Jerusalem New York NY Soho Press Inc pp x 127 129 130 139 152 ISBN 1 56947 275 0 Aubin Henry T 2002 The Rescue of Jerusalem New York NY Soho Press Inc pp x 119 ISBN 1 56947 275 0 Roux Georges 1992 Ancient Iraq Third ed London Penguin ISBN 0 14 012523 X Aubin Henry T 2002 The Rescue of Jerusalem New York NY Soho Press Inc pp x 155 156 ISBN 1 56947 275 0 Aubin Henry T 2002 The Rescue of Jerusalem New York NY Soho Press Inc pp x 152 153 ISBN 1 56947 275 0 Aubin Henry T 2002 The Rescue of Jerusalem New York NY Soho Press Inc pp x 158 161 ISBN 1 56947 275 0 Aubin Henry T 2002 The Rescue of Jerusalem New York NY Soho Press Inc pp x 159 161 ISBN 1 56947 275 0 Edwards David 2004 The Nubian Past Oxon Routledge pp 2 75 77 78 ISBN 9780415369886 Herodotus 1949 Herodotus Translated by J Enoch Powell Translated by Enoch Powell Oxford Clarendon Press pp 121 122 Connah Graham 1987 African Civilizations Precolonial Cities and States in Tropical Africa An Archaeological Perspective Cambridge University Press p 24 ISBN 978 0 521 26666 6 Adams William Yewdale 1977 Nubia Corridor to Africa Princeton University Press p 302 ISBN 978 0 691 09370 3 Meroe writing digitalegypt Fischer Steven Roger 2004 History of Writing Reaktion Books pp 133 134 ISBN 1861895887 Stofferahn Steven Wood Sarah 2016 2003 Rauh Nicholas K ed Lecture 30 Ancient Africa CLCS 181 Classical World Civilizations student lecture notes West Lafayette IN Purdue University School of Languages and Cultures retrieved February 28 2017 Humphris Jane Charlton Michael F Keen Jake Sauder Lee Alshishani Fareed 2018 Iron Smelting in Sudan Experimental Archaeology at The Royal City of Meroe Journal of Field Archaeology 43 5 399 doi 10 1080 00934690 2018 1479085 ISSN 0093 4690 The Great Enclosure Hintze Fritz 1978 The Kingdom of Kush The Meroitic Period The Brooklyn Museum pp 89 93 Zamani Project Google Books Sudan The Bradt Travel Guide p 131 2 UNESCO Nomination document p 43 Gilda Ferrandino and Matteo Lorenzini 3D Reconstruction of the Lion Temple at Musawwarat es Sufra 3D model and domain ontologies in The Kushite World 2015 Proceedings of the 11th International Conference for Meroitic Studies Vienna 1 4 September 2008 Claudia Naser The Great Hafir at Musawwarat as Sufra Fieldwork of the Archaeological Mission of Humboldt University Berlin in 2005 and 2006 On Between the Cataracts Proceedings of the 11th Conference of Nubian Studies Warsaw University 27 August 2 September 2006 In Polish Centre of Mediterranean Aerchaeology University of Warsaw PAM Supplement Series 2 2 1 2 Basil Davidson Old Africa Rediscovered Prentice Hall 1970 Turner Sharon 1834 The Sacred History of the World as Displayed in the Creation and Subsequent Events to the Deluge Attempted to be Philosophically Considered in a Series of Letters to a Son Vol 2 Longman pp 480 482 Fluehr Lobban Carolyn August 20 1998 Nubian Queens in the Nile Valley and Afro Asiatic Cultural History PDF Ninth International Conference for Nubian Studies Museum of Fine Arts Boston U S A Retrieved 2018 06 07 Budge Sir Ernest Alfred Wallis 1911 Cook s handbook for Egypt and the Egyptian Sudan T Cook amp Son p 737 Isaiah 53 7 8 Acts 8 39 Dandamaev M A 1989 A Political History of the Achaemenid Empire BRILL pp 80 81 ISBN 9004091726 Curtis John Simpson St John 2010 The World of Achaemenid Persia History Art and Society in Iran and the Ancient Near East I B Tauris p 222 ISBN 9780857718013 Agatharchides FGrH 86 F20 Diodorus Siculus Bibliotheca 1 37 5 Torok Laszlo 2009 Between Two Worlds The Frontier Region Between Ancient Nubia and Egypt 3700 BC AD 500 Leiden New York Koln Brill pp 400 404 ISBN 978 90 04 17197 8 Grainger 2010 p 325harvnb error no target CITEREFGrainger2010 help a b Arthur E Robinson The Arab Dynasty of Dar For Darfur Part II Journal of the Royal African Society Lond XXVIII 55 67 October 1928 a b Jackson Robert B 2002 At Empire s Edge Exploring Rome s Egyptian Frontier Yale University Press ISBN 0300088566 Munro Hay Stuart C 1991 Aksum An African Civilisation of Late Antiquity Edinburgh University Press pp 79 224 ISBN 978 0 7486 0106 6 Nubia Catholic Encyclopedia New Advent Retrieved 31 July 2019 a b c Adams William Y 1993 Expedition Magazine Penn Museum 35 2 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Medieval Nubia the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago Hassan Arabs 125 Digging into Africa s past Archived from the original on 2008 04 11 Retrieved 2008 04 26 Marta Mirazon Lahr et al 2010 Human Skeletal Remains Fazzan Libya The Society for Libyan Studies Haddow Scott Donald Dental Morphological Analysis of Roman Era Burials from the Dakhleh Oasis Egypt PDF Institute of Archaeology University College London Retrieved 2 June 2017 a b About Nubia Nubian Foundation 2018 Retrieved 31 July 2019 Sirak Kendra A Fernandes Daniel M Lipson Mark Mallick Swapan Mah Matthew Olalde Inigo Ringbauer Harald Rohland Nadin Hadden Carla S Harney Eadaoin Adamski Nicole Bernardos Rebecca Broomandkhoshbacht Nasreen Callan Kimberly Ferry Matthew Lawson Ann Marie Michel Megan Oppenheimer Jonas Stewardson Kristin Zalzala Fatma Patterson Nick Pinhasi Ron Thompson Jessica C Van Gerven Dennis Reich David 14 December 2021 Social stratification without genetic differentiation at the site of Kulubnarti in Christian Period Nubia Nature Communications 12 1 7283 Bibcode 2021NatCo 12 7283S doi 10 1038 s41467 021 27356 8 PMC 8671435 PMID 34907168 Further reading EditAdams William Y 1977 Nubia Corridor to Africa London Adams William Y February March 1980 Nubia s corridor of time From the kingdom of Kush to the triumph of Islam PDF UNESCO Courrier Victory in Nubia The greatest archaeological rescue operation of all time 25 29 Bell Herman 2009 Paradise Lost Nubia before the 1964 Hijra DAL Group Black Pharaohs National Geographic Feb 2008 Bulliet et al 2001 Nubia The Earth and Its Peoples pp 70 71 Houghton Mifflin Company Boston Drower M 1970 Nubia A Drowning Land London Longmans Emberling Geoff 2011 Nubia Ancient Kingdoms of Africa New York Institute for the Study of the Ancient World Fisher Marjorie et al 2012 Ancient Nubia African Kingdoms on the Nile The American University in Cairo Press Hassan Yusuf Fadl 1973 The Arabs and the Sudan Khartoum Jennings Anne 1995 The Nubians of West Aswan Village Women in the Midst of Change Lynne Reinner Publishers O Connor David 1993 Ancient Nubia Egypt s Rival in Africa Philadelphia The University Museum University of Pennsylvania Thelwall Robin 1978 Lexicostatistical relations between Nubian Daju and Dinka Etudes nubiennes colloque de Chantilly 2 6 juillet 1975 265 286 Thelwall Robin 1982 Linguistic Aspects of Greater Nubian History in Ehret C amp Posnansky M eds The Archeological and Linguistic Reconstruction of African History Berkeley Los Angeles 39 56 Torok Laszlo 1997 The Kingdom of Kush Handbook of the Napatan Meroitic Civilization Brill Academic Publishers Valbelle Dominique and Bonnet Charles 2006 The Nubian Pharaohs New York The American University in Cairo Press Notes Edit Definition 3External links Edit Media related to Nubia at Wikimedia Commons Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Nubia African Kingdoms Ancient Sudan Website Usurped Racism and the Rediscovery of Ancient Nubia Medieval Sai Project Journey to Ethiopia Eastern Sudan and Nigritia was written by Pierre Tremaux in 1862 63 It features extensive descriptions and drawings of Nubia 1960s Nubia Scrapbook Nubian Foundation for Preserving a Cultural Heritage Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nubia amp oldid 1133457408, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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