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Nubians

Nubians (/ˈnbiənz, ˈnj-/) (Nobiin: Nobī,[5] Arabic: النوبيون) are a Nilo-Saharan ethnic group indigenous to the region which is now northern Sudan and southern Egypt. They originate from the early inhabitants of the central Nile valley, believed to be one of the earliest cradles of civilization.[6] In the southern valley of Egypt, Nubians differ culturally and ethnically from other Egyptians, although they intermarried with members of other ethnic groups, especially Arabs.[7] They speak Nubian languages as a mother tongue, part of the Northern Eastern Sudanic languages, and Arabic as a second language.[8]

Nubians
Nobī
النوبيون
Regions with significant populations
 SudanUnknown
 Egypt99,000 (1960s)[1]
300,000[2]–5,000,000[3]
Languages
Nubian languages[a]
Arabic[b]
(Sudanese Arabic, Sa'idi Arabic)
Religion
Sunni Islam
Related ethnic groups
Sudanese Arabs,[4] Beja, Egyptians, Nilo-Saharans, Cushites, Nilotic peoples

Neolithic settlements have been found in the central Nubian region dating back to 7000 BC, with Wadi Halfa believed to be the oldest settlement in the central Nile valley.[9] Parts of Nubia, particularly Lower Nubia, were at times a part of ancient Pharaonic Egypt and at other times a rival state representing parts of Meroë or the Kingdom of Kush. By the Twenty-fifth Dynasty (744 BC–656 BC), all of Egypt was united with Nubia, extending down to what is now Khartoum.[10] However, In 656 BC the native Twenty-sixth Dynasty regained control of Egypt. As warriors, the ancient Nubians were famous for their skill and precision with the bow and arrow.[11] In the Middle Ages, the Nubians converted to Christianity and established three kingdoms: Nobatia in the north, Makuria in the center, and Alodia in the south. They then converted to Islam during the Islamization of the Sudan region.

Today, Nubians in Egypt primarily live in southern Egypt, especially in Kom Ombo and Nasr al-nuba north of Aswan,[12][13][14] and large cities such as Cairo, while Sudanese Nubians live in northern Sudan, particularly in the region between the city of Wadi Halfa on the Egypt–Sudan border and al Dabbah. Some Nubians migrated to Khashm el Girba and New Halfa. Additionally, a group known as the Midob live in northern Darfur, a group named Birgid in Central Darfur and several groups known as the Hill Nubians who live in Northern Kordofan in Haraza and a few villages in the northern Nuba Mountains in South Kordofan state, Sudan.[15] The main Nubian groups from north to south are the Kenzi (Nobiin: Matōki), Faadicha (Halfawi) (Nobiin: Fadīja), Sukkot, Mahas (Nobiin: Mahássi), and Danagla.[16] There also exist two large tribes of fully arabized Nubians who inhabit Northern Sudan - these groups are known as the Shaigiya (Nobiin: Šaigē) and Ja'alin.

Etymology

Throughout history various parts of Nubia were known by different names, including Ancient Egyptian: tꜣ stj "Land of the Bow", tꜣ nḥsj, jꜣm "Kerma", jrṯt, sṯjw, wꜣwꜣt, Meroitic: akin(e) «Lower "Nubia"», and Greek Aethiopia.[17] The origin of the names Nubia and Nubian are contested. Based on cultural traits, some scholars believe Nubia is derived from the Ancient Egyptian: nbw "gold",[18] although there is no such usage of the term as an ethnonym or toponym that can be found in known Egyptian texts; the Egyptians referred to people from this area as the nḥsj.w. The Roman Empire used the term "Nubia" to describe the area of Upper Egypt and northern Sudan,[17] that is Lower Nubia. This usage probably derives from the Meroitic word nob "slave" (and by extension, "Nubian"),[19] as the Kushites regarded their northern neighbors as a source of enforced agricultural workers; cf. Nobiin nob "slave" and Old Nubian ⳟⲟⲡⲁ (= /ŋoba/) "day laborer; a farmer attached to land belonging to others".[20] (A similar development is found in the relationship between "slave" and "Slav".) The derivation of the term "Nubian" has also been associated with the Greek historian Strabo, who referred to the Nubas people.[21]

History

 
Kushite king Senkamanisken c. 643–623 BC. Kerma Museum
 
Marble portrait of a Nubia denizen c. 120–100 BC

The prehistory of Nubia dates to the Paleolithic around 300,000 years ago. By about 6000 BC, peoples in the region had developed an agricultural economy. They began using a system of writing relatively late[according to whom?] in their history, when they adopted the Egyptian hieroglyphic system. Ancient history in Nubia is categorized according to the following periods:[22] A-Group culture (3700–2800 BC), C-Group culture (2300–1600), Kerma culture (2500–1500), Nubian contemporaries of the New Kingdom (1550–1069), the Twenty-fifth Dynasty (1000–653), Napata (1000–275), Meroë (275 BC–300/350 AD), Makuria (340–1317), Nobatia (350–650), and Alodia (600s–1504).

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]

Various biological anthropological studies have shown close, biological affinities between the predynastic Egyptian and the early Nubian populations.[25][26][27][28][29][30]

Frank Yurco (1996) remarked that depictions of pharonic iconography such as the royal crowns, Horus falcons and victory scenes were concentrated in the Upper Egyptian Naqada culture and A-Group Nubia. He further elaborated that "Egyptian writing arose in Naqadan Upper Egypt and A-Group Nubia, and not in the Delta cultures, where the direct Western Asian contact was made, [which] further vititates the Mesopotamian-influence argument".[31]

In 2023, Christopher Ehret reported that the existing archaeological, linguistic and biological anthropological evidence had determined the founding locales of Ancient Egypt to be the descendants of longtime populations in Northeastern Africa which included Nubia and the northern Horn of Africa.[32]

The linguistic affinities of early Nubian cultures are uncertain. Some research has suggested that the early inhabitants of the Nubia region, during the C-Group and Kerma cultures, were speakers of languages belonging to the Berber and Cushitic branches, respectively, of the Afroasiatic family. More recent research instead suggests that the people of the Kerma culture spoke Nilo-Saharan languages of the Eastern Sudanic branch and that the peoples of the C-Group culture to their north spoke Cushitic languages.[33][34][35][36] They were succeeded by the first Nubian language speakers, whose tongues belonged to another branch of Eastern Sudanic languages within the Nilo-Saharan phylum.[37][38] A 4th-century victory stela commemorative of Axumite king Ezana contains inscriptions describing two distinct population groups dwelling in ancient Nubia: a "red" population and a "black" population.[39]

Although Egypt and Nubia have a shared pre-dynastic and pharaonic history, the two histories diverge with the fall of Ancient Egypt and the conquest of Egypt by Alexander the Great in 332 BC.[10] At this point, the area of land between the 1st and the 6th cataract of the Nile became known as Nubia.

 
View of Nubians, 1683 (cropped)

Egypt was conquered first by the Persians and named the Satrapy (Province) of Mudriya, and two centuries later by the Greeks and then the Romans. During the latter period, however, the Kushites formed the kingdom of Meroë, which was ruled by a series of legendary Candaces or Queens. Mythically, the Candace of Meroë was able to intimidate Alexander the Great into retreat with a great army of elephants, while historical documents suggest that the Nubians defeated the Roman Emperor Augustus Caesar, resulting in a favorable peace treaty for Meroë.[40] The kingdom of Meroë also defeated the Persians, and later Christian Nubia defeated the invading Arab armies on three different occasions resulting in the 600 year peace treaty of Baqt, the longest lasting treaty in history.[41] The fall of the kingdom of Christian Nubia occurred in the early 1500s resulting in full Islamization and reunification with Egypt under the Ottoman Empire, the Muhammad Ali dynasty, and British colonial rule. After the 1956 independence of Sudan from Egypt, Nubia and the Nubian people became divided between Southern Egypt and Northern Sudan.

 
A Nubian woman circa 1900

Modern Nubians speak Nubian languages, Eastern Sudanic languages that is part of the Nilo-Saharan family. The Old Nubian language is attested from the 8th century, and is the oldest recorded language of Africa outside of the Afroasiatic family. It was the language of the Noba nomads who occupied the Nile between the First and Third Cataracts and also of the Makorae nomads who occupied the land between the Third and Fourth Cataracts, following the collapse of the Kingdom of Kush sometime in the fourth century. The Makorae were a separate tribe who eventually conquered or inherited the lands of the Noba: they established a Byzantine-influenced state called the Makuria, which administered the Noba lands separately as the eparchy of Nobatia. Nobadia was converted to Miaphysitism by the Orthodox priest Julian and Longinus of Constantinople, and thereafter received its bishops from the Pope of the Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria.

Nubia consisted of four regions with varied agriculture and landscapes. The Nile river and its valley were found in the north and central parts of Nubia, allowing farming using irrigation. The western Sudan had a mixture of peasant agriculture and nomadism. Eastern Sudan had primarily nomadism, with a few areas of irrigation and agriculture. Finally, there was the fertile pastoral region of the south, where Nubia's larger agricultural communities were located.[42]

Nubia was dominated by kings from clans that controlled the gold mines. Trade in exotic goods from other parts of Africa (ivory, animal skins) passed to Egypt through Nubia.

Language

Modern Nubians speak Nubian languages. They belong to the Eastern Sudanic branch of the Nilo-Saharan phylum. But there is some uncertainty regarding the classification of the languages spoken in Nubia in antiquity. There is some evidence that Cushitic languages were spoken in parts of Lower (northern) Nubia, an ancient region which straddles present-day Southern Egypt and Northern Sudan, and that Eastern Sudanic languages were spoken in Upper and Central Nubia, before the spread of Eastern Sudanic languages even further north into Lower Nubia.[36]

Peter Behrens (1981) and Marianne Bechhaus-Gerst (2000) suggest that the ancient peoples of the C-Group and Kerma civilizations spoke Afroasiatic languages of the Berber and Cushitic branches, respectively.[37][38] They propose that the Nilo-Saharan Nobiin language today contains a number of key pastoralism related loanwords that are of Berber or proto-Highland East Cushitic origin, including the terms for sheep/goatskin, hen/cock, livestock enclosure, butter and milk. This in turn, is interpreted to suggest that the C-Group and Kerma populations, who inhabited the Nile Valley immediately before the arrival of the first Nubian speakers, spoke Afroasiatic languages.[37]

Claude Rilly (2010, 2016) and Julien Cooper (2017) on the other hand, suggest that the Kerma peoples (of Upper Nubia) spoke Nilo-Saharan languages of the Eastern Sudanic branch, possibly ancestral to the later Meroitic language, which Rilly also suggests was Nilo-Saharan.[33][34] Rilly also considers evidence of significant early Afro-Asiatic influence, especially Berber, on Nobiin to be weak (and where present, more likely due to borrowed loanwords than substrata), and considers evidence of substratal influence on Nobiin from an earlier now extinct Eastern Sudanic language to be stronger.[35] Julien Cooper (2017) suggests that Nilo-Saharan languages of the Eastern Sudan branch were spoken by the people of Kerma, those further south along the Nile, to the west, and those of Saï (an island to the north of Kerma), but that Afro-Asiatic (most likely Cushitic) languages were spoken by other peoples in Lower Nubia (such as the Medjay and the C-Group culture) living in Nubian regions north of Saï toward Egypt and those southeast of the Nile in Punt in the Eastern dessert. Based partly on an analysis of the phonology of place names and personal names from the relevant regions preserved in ancient texts, he argues that the terms from "Kush" and "Irem" (ancient names for Kerma and the region south of it respectively) in Egyptian texts display traits typical of Eastern Sudanic languages, while those from further north (in Lower Nubia) and east are more typical of the Afro-Asiatic family, noting: "The Irem-list also provides a similar inventory to Kush, placing this firmly in an Eastern Sudanic zone. These Irem/Kush-lists are distinctive from the Wawat-, Medjay-, Punt-, and Wetenet-lists, which provide sounds typical to Afroasiatic languages."[36]

It is also uncertain to which language family the ancient Meroitic language is related. Kirsty Rowan suggests that Meroitic, like the Egyptian language, belongs to the Afroasiatic family. She bases this on its sound inventory and phonotactics, which, she argues, are similar to those of the Afroasiatic languages and dissimilar from those of the Nilo-Saharan languages.[43][44] Claude Rilly proposes, based on its syntax, morphology, and known vocabulary, that Meroitic, like the Nobiin language, belongs to the Eastern Sudanic branch of the Nilo-Saharan family.[45][46]

Modern Nubians

 
Nubian wedding near Aswan

The descendants of the ancient Nubians still inhabit the general area of what was ancient Nubia. They currently live in what is called Old Nubia, mainly located in modern Egypt and Sudan. Nubians have been resettled in large numbers (an estimated 50,000 people) away from Wadi Halfa North Sudan in to Khashm el Girba - Sudan and some moved to Southern Egypt since the 1960s, when the Aswan High Dam was built on the Nile, flooding ancestral lands.[47] Most Nubians nowadays work in Egyptian and Sudanese cities. Whereas Arabic was once only learned by Nubian men who travelled for work, it is increasingly being learned by Nubian women who have access to school, radio and television. Nubian women are working outside the home in increasing numbers.[47]

During the 1973 Arab–Israeli War, Egypt employed Nubian people as codetalkers.[48][49][50]

Culture

 
Old Nubian manuscript

Nubians have developed a common identity, which has been celebrated in poetry, novels, music and storytelling.[51]

Nubians in modern Sudan include the Danagla around Dongola Reach, the Mahas from the Third Cataract to Wadi Halfa, and the Sikurta around Aswan. These Nubians write using their own script. They also practice scarification: Mahas men and women have three scars on each cheek, while the Danaqla wear these scars on their temples. Younger generations appear to be abandoning this custom.[52]

Nubia's ancient cultural development was influenced by its geography. It is sometimes divided into Upper Nubia and Lower Nubia. Upper Nubia was where the ancient Kingdom of Napata (the Kush) was located. Lower Nubia has been called "the corridor to Africa", where there was contact and cultural exchange between Nubians, Egyptians, Greeks, Assyrians, Romans, and Arabs. Lower Nubia was also where the Kingdom of Meroe flourished.[42] The languages spoken by modern Nubians are based on ancient Sudanic dialects. From north to south, they are: Kenuz, Fadicha (Matoki), Sukkot, Mahas, Danagla.[53]

Kerma, Nepata and Meroe were Nubia's largest population centres. The rich agricultural lands of Nubia supported these cities. Ancient Egyptian rulers sought control of Nubia's wealth, including gold, and the important trade routes within its territories.[54] Nubia's trade links with Egypt led to Egypt's domination over Nubia during the New Kingdom period. The emergence of the Kingdom of Meroe in the 8th century BC led to Egypt being under the control of Nubian rulers for a century, although they preserved many Egyptian cultural traditions.[55] Nubian kings were considered pious scholars and patrons of the arts, copying ancient Egyptian texts and even restoring some Egyptian cultural practices.[21] After this, Egypt's influence declined greatly. Meroe became the centre of power for Nubia and cultural links with other parts of Africa gained greater influence.[55]

Religion

Today, Nubians practice Islam. To a certain degree, Nubian religious practices involve a syncretism of Islam and traditional folk beliefs.[56] In ancient times, Nubians practiced a mixture of traditional religion and Egyptian religion. Prior to the spread of Islam, many Nubians practiced Christianity.[52]

Beginning in the eighth century, Islam arrived in Nubia, though Christians and Muslims (primarily Arab merchants at this period) lived peacefully together. Over time, the Nubians gradually converted to Islam, beginning with the Nubian elite. Islam was mainly spread via Sufi preachers that settled in Nubia in the late 14th century onwards.[57] By the sixteenth century, most of the Nubians were Muslim.[58]

Ancient Nepata was an important religious centre in Nubia. It was the location of Gebel Barkal, a massive sandstone hill resembling a rearing cobra in the eyes of the ancient inhabitants. Egyptian priests declared it to be the home of the ancient deity Amun, further enhancing Nepata as an ancient religious site. This was the case for both Egyptians and Nubians. Egyptian and Nubian deities alike were worshipped in Nubia for 2,500 years, even while Nubia was under the control of the New Kingdom of Egypt.[21] Nubian kings and queens were buried near Gebel Barkal, in pyramids as the Egyptian pharaohs were. Nubian pyramids were built at Gebel Barkal, at Nuri (across the Nile from Gebel Barkal), at El Kerru, and at Meroe, south of Gebel Barkal.[21]

 
Ornately decorated Nubian gate

Architecture

Modern Nubian architecture in Sudan is distinctive, and typically features a large courtyard surrounded by a high wall. A large, ornately decorated gate, preferably facing the Nile, dominates the property. Brightly colored stucco is often decorated with symbols connected with the family inside, or popular motifs such as geometric patterns, palm trees, or the evil eye that wards away bad luck.[52]

Nubians invented the Nubian vault, a type of curved surface forming a vaulted structure.[59]

Genetics

Autosomal DNA has been extensively studied in recent years, and some of the findings are as follows:

  • Babiker, H.M., Schlebusch, C.M., Hassan, H.Y. et al. (2011) revealed that individuals from northern Sudan clustered with those from Egypt, while individuals from South Sudan clustered with those from Karamoja (Uganda). They conclude that "the similarity of the Nubian and Egyptian populations suggest that migration, potentially bidirectional, occurred along the Nile river Valley, which is consistent with the historical evidence for long-term interactions between Egypt and Nubia.[60]
  • Dobon et al. (2015) identified an ancestral autosomal component of West Eurasian origin that is common to many Sudanese Arabs, Nubians and Afroasiatic-speaking populations in the region. Nubians were found to be genetically modelled similar to their Cushitic and Semitic (Afro-Asiatic) neighbors (such as the Beja, Sudanese Arabs, and Ethiopians) rather than to other Nilo-Saharan speakers who lack this Middle Eastern/North African influence. The study showed that these populations formed a "North-East cluster", which included Northern Sudanese. This may be explained by the aforementioned groups being a mixture of a population similar to Modern Coptic Egyptians, and an ancestral Southern African one.[61]
  • Hollfelder et al. (2017) analysed various populations in Sudan and observed close autosomal affinities between their Nubian and Sudanese Arab samples. The authors concluded that the "Nubians can be seen as a group with substantial genetic material relating to Nilotes that later received much gene-flow from Eurasians and East Africans. The strongest admixture came from Eurasian populations and was likely quite extensive: 39.41%-47.73%."[62]
  • Sirak et al. (2015) analysed the DNA of a Christian-period inhabitant of Kulubnarti in northern Nubia near the Egyptian border. They found that this individual was most closely related to Middle Eastern populations.[63] Further excavations of two Early Christian period (AD 550-800) cemeteries at Kulubnarti, one located on the mainland and the other on an island, revealed the existence of two ancestrally and socioeconomically distinct local populations. Preliminary results, including mitochondrial haplogroup analysis, suggests there may be substantial differences in the genetic composition between the two communities, with 70% of individuals from the island cemetery demonstrating African-based haplogroups (L2, L1, and L5), compared to only 36.4% of mainlanders, who instead show an increased prevalence of European and Near Eastern haplogroups (including K1, H, I5, and U1).[64]
  • In 2018, Carina M. Schlebusch and Mattias Jakobsson in the Annual Review of Genomics and Human Genetics, found that Nilotic populations from South Sudan (e.g. Dinka, Nuer and Shilluk) remained isolated and received little to no geneflow from Eurasians, West African Bantu-speaking farmers, and other surrounding groups. In contrast, Nubians and Arabs in the north showed admixture from Western Eurasian populations. The population structure analysis and inferred ancestry showed that "the Nubian, Arab, and Beja populations of northeastern Africa roughly display equal admixture fractions from a local northeastern African gene pool (similar to the Nilotic component) and an incoming Eurasian migrant component."[65]

Christian-Era DNA

Sirak et al. 2021 obtained and analyzed the whole genomes of 66 individuals from the site of Kulubnarti situated between the 2nd and 3rd cataract and dated to the Christian period between 650 and 1000 CE. The samples were obtained from two cemeteries, R and S. Grave materials between the two cemeteries did not differ, but physical analyses of the remains found differences in morbidity and mortality indicating that the R cemetery individuals were of a higher social class than the cemetery S individuals. The study analyzed the data they obtained along with other published ancient and modern samples from Africa and West Eurasia. The genetic profile of the sampled Christian-era Nubians was found to be a mixture between West Eurasian and Sub Saharan Dinka-related ancestries. The samples were estimated to have approximately 60% West Eurasian related ancestry that likely came from ancient Egyptians but ultimately resembles that found in Bronze or Iron Age Levantines. They also carried approximately 40% Dinka-related ancestry. The study commented that the results reflect deep biological connections among the populations of the Nile Valley and further confirm the presence of West Eurasian ancestry in the Nile valley prior to Arab migrations.

The two cemeteries showed minimal differences in their West Eurasian/Dinka ancestry proportions, formed a genetic clade with each other in relation to other populations, and had a small FST value of 0.0013 reflecting a small genetic distance. 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.

The study found some difference in Y haplogroups profiles between the two cemeteries with the S cemetery having more west Asian clades. the difference was found to be insignificant, and the study viewed it as likely to be a statistical fluctuation and not evidence of heterogeneity among males from the two cemeteries.

Regarding modern Nubians, despite their superficial resemblance to the Kulubnarti Nubians on the PCA, they 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 found in the ancient samples.[66]

Notable Nubians

See also

  • Barabra is an old ethnographical term for the Nubian peoples of Sudan and southern Egypt.
  • Nubian wig worn by the affluent society of ancient Egypt
  • Aethiopia is an ancient Greek geographical term which referred to the regions of Sudan and areas south of the Sahara desert.

Notelist

  1. ^ Nubian languages include Nobiin, Kenzi, Dongolawi, Birgid, Midob and the Hill Nubian dialect continuum. They are spoken as either sole native languages or alongside a variant of Arabic by majority of Nubians.
  2. ^ Arabic variants are widely spoken by Nubians as a second or prestige language depending on locale.

References

Inline citations

  1. ^ . Reuters (in Arabic). 18 October 2015. Archived from the original on 15 July 2020. Retrieved 13 July 2020.
  2. ^ "Changing Egypt Offers Hope to Long-Marginalized Nubians". National Geographic News. 1 February 2014. Retrieved 13 July 2020.
  3. ^ "Egypt's young Nubians revive dream of return to homeland". Associated Press. 15 July 2018.
  4. ^ Hale, Sondra (1973). Nubians: A Study in Ethnic Identity. Institute of African and Asian Studies, University of Khartoum. p. 24. Retrieved 14 November 2017.
  5. ^ Reinisch, Leo (1879). Die Nuba-Sprache. Wien: Wilhelm Braumüller.
  6. ^ Charles Keith Maisels (1993). The Near East: Archaeology in the "Cradle of Civilization. Routledge. ISBN 0-415-04742-0.
  7. ^ "Egypt - People | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 7 September 2022.
  8. ^ "Sudan | History, Map, Area, Population, Religion, & Facts | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 7 September 2022.
  9. ^ . ancientsudan.org. Archived from the original on 6 September 2008.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  10. ^ a b "Nubia - ancient region, Africa".
  11. ^ Brier, Bob; Hobbs, A. Hoyt (2008). Daily Life of the Ancient Egyptians. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 249. ISBN 978-0-313-35306-2.
  12. ^ "52 Years After Displacement, Scars Of Loss Remain For Nubians". Egypt Today. 25 October 2016. Retrieved 18 July 2020.
  13. ^ "For Egypt's Nubians, years of patience wear thin and anger rises". Reuters. 17 November 2015. Retrieved 18 July 2020.
  14. ^ "جماعات النوبة.. اعتزال الآخر وانصهار مع الذات". aljazeera.net (in Arabic). Retrieved 18 July 2020.
  15. ^ Sesana, Renato Kizito; Borruso, Silvano (2006). I Am a Nuba. Paulines Publications Africa. p. 26. ISBN 9789966081797.
  16. ^ Lobban Jr., Richard A. (2003). Historical Dictionary of Ancient and Medieval Nubia. Scarecrow Press. p. 214. ISBN 9780810865785.
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  18. ^ Bianchi, Robert Steven (2004). Daily Life Of The Nubians. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 2, 5. ISBN 9780313325014.
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  25. ^ "When Mahalanobis D2 was used,the Naqadan and Badarian Predynastic samples exhibited more similarity to Nubian, Tigrean, and some more southern series than to some mid- to late Dynasticseries from northern Egypt (Mukherjee et al., 1955). The Badarian have been found to be very similar to a Kerma sample (Kushite Sudanese), using both the Penrose statistic (Nutter, 1958) and DFA of males alone (Keita,1990). Furthermore, Keita considered that Badarian males had a southern modal phenotype, and that together with a Naqada sample, they formed a southern Egyptian cluster as tropical variants together with a sample from Kerma". 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.
  26. ^ Keita, S. O. Y. (2005). "Early Nile Valley Farmers From El-Badari: Aboriginals or "European" Agro-Nostratic Immigrants? Craniometric Affinities Considered With Other Data". Journal of Black Studies. 36 (2): 191–208. doi:10.1177/0021934704265912. ISSN 0021-9347. JSTOR 40034328. S2CID 144482802.
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  47. ^ a b Fernea, Robert A. (2005). Nubian Ceremonial Life: Studies in Islamic Syncretism And Cultural Change. American University in Cairo Press. pp. ix–xi. ISBN 9789774249556.
  48. ^ "Changing Egypt Offers Hope to Long-Marginalized Nubians". 1 February 2014. Retrieved 9 August 2016.
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  62. ^ Hollfelder, Nina; Schlebusch, Carina M.; Günther, Torsten; Babiker, Hiba; Hassan, Hisham Y.; Jakobsson, Mattias (24 August 2017). "Northeast African genomic variation shaped by the continuity of indigenous groups and Eurasian migrations". PLOS Genetics. 13 (8): e1006976. doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.1006976. ISSN 1553-7404. PMC 5587336. PMID 28837655.
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  66. ^ Sirak, Kendra A.; Fernandes, Daniel M.; Lipson, Mark; Mallick, Swapan; Mah, Matthew; Olalde, Iñigo; Ringbauer, Harald; Rohland, Nadin; Hadden, Carla S.; Harney, Éadaoin; 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.

General references

  • Rouchdy, Aleya (1991). Nubians and the Nubian Language in Contemporary Egypt: A Case of Cultural and Linguistic Contact. Leiden: Brill Academic Publishers. ISBN 90-04-09197-1.
  • Spaulding, Jay (2006). "Pastoralism, Slavery, Commerce, Culture and the Fate of the Nubians of Northern and Central Kordofan Under Dar Fur Rule, ca. 1750-ca. 1850". The International Journal of African Historical Studies. Boston University African Studies Center. 39 (3). ISSN 0361-7882.
  • Valbelle, Dominique; Charles Bonnet (2007). The Nubian Pharaohs: Black Kings on the Nile. Cairo: American University in Cairo Press. ISBN 978-977-416-010-3.
  • Warnock Fernea, Elizabeth; Robert A. Fernea (1990). Nubian Ethnographies. Chicago: Waveland Press Inc. ISBN 0-88133-480-4.
  • Black Pharaohs - National Geographic Feb 2008

External links

  • [Usurped!]
  • Nubian people history
  • Johanna Granville "Nubians of Egypt and Sudan Past and Present"
  • Nubians 29 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine by
  • Nubians Use Hip-hop to Preserve Culture - Sudan Tribune
  • "The Forgotten Minorities: Egypt's Nubians and Amazigh in the Amended Constitution"

nubians, people, uganda, uganda, nobiin, nobī, arabic, النوبيون, nilo, saharan, ethnic, group, indigenous, region, which, northern, sudan, southern, egypt, they, originate, from, early, inhabitants, central, nile, valley, believed, earliest, cradles, civilizat. For the people in Uganda see Nubians Uganda Nubians ˈ n uː b i en z ˈ n j uː Nobiin Nobi 5 Arabic النوبيون are a Nilo Saharan ethnic group indigenous to the region which is now northern Sudan and southern Egypt They originate from the early inhabitants of the central Nile valley believed to be one of the earliest cradles of civilization 6 In the southern valley of Egypt Nubians differ culturally and ethnically from other Egyptians although they intermarried with members of other ethnic groups especially Arabs 7 They speak Nubian languages as a mother tongue part of the Northern Eastern Sudanic languages and Arabic as a second language 8 NubiansNobiالنوبيونRegions with significant populations SudanUnknown Egypt99 000 1960s 1 300 000 2 5 000 000 3 LanguagesNubian languages a Arabic b Sudanese Arabic Sa idi Arabic ReligionSunni IslamRelated ethnic groupsSudanese Arabs 4 Beja Egyptians Nilo Saharans Cushites Nilotic peoplesNeolithic settlements have been found in the central Nubian region dating back to 7000 BC with Wadi Halfa believed to be the oldest settlement in the central Nile valley 9 Parts of Nubia particularly Lower Nubia were at times a part of ancient Pharaonic Egypt and at other times a rival state representing parts of Meroe or the Kingdom of Kush By the Twenty fifth Dynasty 744 BC 656 BC all of Egypt was united with Nubia extending down to what is now Khartoum 10 However In 656 BC the native Twenty sixth Dynasty regained control of Egypt As warriors the ancient Nubians were famous for their skill and precision with the bow and arrow 11 In the Middle Ages the Nubians converted to Christianity and established three kingdoms Nobatia in the north Makuria in the center and Alodia in the south They then converted to Islam during the Islamization of the Sudan region Today Nubians in Egypt primarily live in southern Egypt especially in Kom Ombo and Nasr al nuba north of Aswan 12 13 14 and large cities such as Cairo while Sudanese Nubians live in northern Sudan particularly in the region between the city of Wadi Halfa on the Egypt Sudan border and al Dabbah Some Nubians migrated to Khashm el Girba and New Halfa Additionally a group known as the Midob live in northern Darfur a group named Birgid in Central Darfur and several groups known as the Hill Nubians who live in Northern Kordofan in Haraza and a few villages in the northern Nuba Mountains in South Kordofan state Sudan 15 The main Nubian groups from north to south are the Kenzi Nobiin Matōki Faadicha Halfawi Nobiin Fadija Sukkot Mahas Nobiin Mahassi and Danagla 16 There also exist two large tribes of fully arabized Nubians who inhabit Northern Sudan these groups are known as the Shaigiya Nobiin Saige and Ja alin Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 3 Language 4 Modern Nubians 5 Culture 5 1 Religion 6 Architecture 7 Genetics 7 1 Christian Era DNA 8 Notable Nubians 9 See also 10 Notelist 11 References 11 1 Inline citations 11 2 General references 12 External linksEtymology EditThroughout history various parts of Nubia were known by different names including Ancient Egyptian tꜣ stj Land of the Bow tꜣ nḥsj jꜣm Kerma jrṯt sṯjw wꜣwꜣt Meroitic akin e Lower Nubia and Greek Aethiopia 17 The origin of the names Nubia and Nubian are contested Based on cultural traits some scholars believe Nubia is derived from the Ancient Egyptian nbw gold 18 although there is no such usage of the term as an ethnonym or toponym that can be found in known Egyptian texts the Egyptians referred to people from this area as the nḥsj w The Roman Empire used the term Nubia to describe the area of Upper Egypt and northern Sudan 17 that is Lower Nubia This usage probably derives from the Meroitic word nob slave and by extension Nubian 19 as the Kushites regarded their northern neighbors as a source of enforced agricultural workers cf Nobiin nob slave and Old Nubian ⳟⲟⲡⲁ ŋoba day laborer a farmer attached to land belonging to others 20 A similar development is found in the relationship between slave and Slav The derivation of the term Nubian has also been associated with the Greek historian Strabo who referred to the Nubas people 21 History EditFurther information Nubia Kushite king Senkamanisken c 643 623 BC Kerma Museum Marble portrait of a Nubia denizen c 120 100 BC The prehistory of Nubia dates to the Paleolithic around 300 000 years ago By about 6000 BC peoples in the region had developed an agricultural economy They began using a system of writing relatively late according to whom in their history when they adopted the Egyptian hieroglyphic system Ancient history in Nubia is categorized according to the following periods 22 A Group culture 3700 2800 BC C Group culture 2300 1600 Kerma culture 2500 1500 Nubian contemporaries of the New Kingdom 1550 1069 the Twenty fifth Dynasty 1000 653 Napata 1000 275 Meroe 275 BC 300 350 AD Makuria 340 1317 Nobatia 350 650 and Alodia 600s 1504 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 Various biological anthropological studies have shown close biological affinities between the predynastic Egyptian and the early Nubian populations 25 26 27 28 29 30 Frank Yurco 1996 remarked that depictions of pharonic iconography such as the royal crowns Horus falcons and victory scenes were concentrated in the Upper Egyptian Naqada culture and A Group Nubia He further elaborated that Egyptian writing arose in Naqadan Upper Egypt and A Group Nubia and not in the Delta cultures where the direct Western Asian contact was made which further vititates the Mesopotamian influence argument 31 In 2023 Christopher Ehret reported that the existing archaeological linguistic and biological anthropological evidence had determined the founding locales of Ancient Egypt to be the descendants of longtime populations in Northeastern Africa which included Nubia and the northern Horn of Africa 32 The linguistic affinities of early Nubian cultures are uncertain Some research has suggested that the early inhabitants of the Nubia region during the C Group and Kerma cultures were speakers of languages belonging to the Berber and Cushitic branches respectively of the Afroasiatic family More recent research instead suggests that the people of the Kerma culture spoke Nilo Saharan languages of the Eastern Sudanic branch and that the peoples of the C Group culture to their north spoke Cushitic languages 33 34 35 36 They were succeeded by the first Nubian language speakers whose tongues belonged to another branch of Eastern Sudanic languages within the Nilo Saharan phylum 37 38 A 4th century victory stela commemorative of Axumite king Ezana contains inscriptions describing two distinct population groups dwelling in ancient Nubia a red population and a black population 39 Although Egypt and Nubia have a shared pre dynastic and pharaonic history the two histories diverge with the fall of Ancient Egypt and the conquest of Egypt by Alexander the Great in 332 BC 10 At this point the area of land between the 1st and the 6th cataract of the Nile became known as Nubia View of Nubians 1683 cropped Egypt was conquered first by the Persians and named the Satrapy Province of Mudriya and two centuries later by the Greeks and then the Romans During the latter period however the Kushites formed the kingdom of Meroe which was ruled by a series of legendary Candaces or Queens Mythically the Candace of Meroe was able to intimidate Alexander the Great into retreat with a great army of elephants while historical documents suggest that the Nubians defeated the Roman Emperor Augustus Caesar resulting in a favorable peace treaty for Meroe 40 The kingdom of Meroe also defeated the Persians and later Christian Nubia defeated the invading Arab armies on three different occasions resulting in the 600 year peace treaty of Baqt the longest lasting treaty in history 41 The fall of the kingdom of Christian Nubia occurred in the early 1500s resulting in full Islamization and reunification with Egypt under the Ottoman Empire the Muhammad Ali dynasty and British colonial rule After the 1956 independence of Sudan from Egypt Nubia and the Nubian people became divided between Southern Egypt and Northern Sudan A Nubian woman circa 1900 Modern Nubians speak Nubian languages Eastern Sudanic languages that is part of the Nilo Saharan family The Old Nubian language is attested from the 8th century and is the oldest recorded language of Africa outside of the Afroasiatic family It was the language of the Noba nomads who occupied the Nile between the First and Third Cataracts and also of the Makorae nomads who occupied the land between the Third and Fourth Cataracts following the collapse of the Kingdom of Kush sometime in the fourth century The Makorae were a separate tribe who eventually conquered or inherited the lands of the Noba they established a Byzantine influenced state called the Makuria which administered the Noba lands separately as the eparchy of Nobatia Nobadia was converted to Miaphysitism by the Orthodox priest Julian and Longinus of Constantinople and thereafter received its bishops from the Pope of the Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria Nubia consisted of four regions with varied agriculture and landscapes The Nile river and its valley were found in the north and central parts of Nubia allowing farming using irrigation The western Sudan had a mixture of peasant agriculture and nomadism Eastern Sudan had primarily nomadism with a few areas of irrigation and agriculture Finally there was the fertile pastoral region of the south where Nubia s larger agricultural communities were located 42 Nubia was dominated by kings from clans that controlled the gold mines Trade in exotic goods from other parts of Africa ivory animal skins passed to Egypt through Nubia Language EditModern Nubians speak Nubian languages They belong to the Eastern Sudanic branch of the Nilo Saharan phylum But there is some uncertainty regarding the classification of the languages spoken in Nubia in antiquity There is some evidence that Cushitic languages were spoken in parts of Lower northern Nubia an ancient region which straddles present day Southern Egypt and Northern Sudan and that Eastern Sudanic languages were spoken in Upper and Central Nubia before the spread of Eastern Sudanic languages even further north into Lower Nubia 36 Peter Behrens 1981 and Marianne Bechhaus Gerst 2000 suggest that the ancient peoples of the C Group and Kerma civilizations spoke Afroasiatic languages of the Berber and Cushitic branches respectively 37 38 They propose that the Nilo Saharan Nobiin language today contains a number of key pastoralism related loanwords that are of Berber or proto Highland East Cushitic origin including the terms for sheep goatskin hen cock livestock enclosure butter and milk This in turn is interpreted to suggest that the C Group and Kerma populations who inhabited the Nile Valley immediately before the arrival of the first Nubian speakers spoke Afroasiatic languages 37 Claude Rilly 2010 2016 and Julien Cooper 2017 on the other hand suggest that the Kerma peoples of Upper Nubia spoke Nilo Saharan languages of the Eastern Sudanic branch possibly ancestral to the later Meroitic language which Rilly also suggests was Nilo Saharan 33 34 Rilly also considers evidence of significant early Afro Asiatic influence especially Berber on Nobiin to be weak and where present more likely due to borrowed loanwords than substrata and considers evidence of substratal influence on Nobiin from an earlier now extinct Eastern Sudanic language to be stronger 35 Julien Cooper 2017 suggests that Nilo Saharan languages of the Eastern Sudan branch were spoken by the people of Kerma those further south along the Nile to the west and those of Sai an island to the north of Kerma but that Afro Asiatic most likely Cushitic languages were spoken by other peoples in Lower Nubia such as the Medjay and the C Group culture living in Nubian regions north of Sai toward Egypt and those southeast of the Nile in Punt in the Eastern dessert Based partly on an analysis of the phonology of place names and personal names from the relevant regions preserved in ancient texts he argues that the terms from Kush and Irem ancient names for Kerma and the region south of it respectively in Egyptian texts display traits typical of Eastern Sudanic languages while those from further north in Lower Nubia and east are more typical of the Afro Asiatic family noting The Irem list also provides a similar inventory to Kush placing this firmly in an Eastern Sudanic zone These Irem Kush lists are distinctive from the Wawat Medjay Punt and Wetenet lists which provide sounds typical to Afroasiatic languages 36 It is also uncertain to which language family the ancient Meroitic language is related Kirsty Rowan suggests that Meroitic like the Egyptian language belongs to the Afroasiatic family She bases this on its sound inventory and phonotactics which she argues are similar to those of the Afroasiatic languages and dissimilar from those of the Nilo Saharan languages 43 44 Claude Rilly proposes based on its syntax morphology and known vocabulary that Meroitic like the Nobiin language belongs to the Eastern Sudanic branch of the Nilo Saharan family 45 46 Modern Nubians Edit Nubian wedding near Aswan The descendants of the ancient Nubians still inhabit the general area of what was ancient Nubia They currently live in what is called Old Nubia mainly located in modern Egypt and Sudan Nubians have been resettled in large numbers an estimated 50 000 people away from Wadi Halfa North Sudan in to Khashm el Girba Sudan and some moved to Southern Egypt since the 1960s when the Aswan High Dam was built on the Nile flooding ancestral lands 47 Most Nubians nowadays work in Egyptian and Sudanese cities Whereas Arabic was once only learned by Nubian men who travelled for work it is increasingly being learned by Nubian women who have access to school radio and television Nubian women are working outside the home in increasing numbers 47 During the 1973 Arab Israeli War Egypt employed Nubian people as codetalkers 48 49 50 Culture Edit Old Nubian manuscript Nubians have developed a common identity which has been celebrated in poetry novels music and storytelling 51 Nubians in modern Sudan include the Danagla around Dongola Reach the Mahas from the Third Cataract to Wadi Halfa and the Sikurta around Aswan These Nubians write using their own script They also practice scarification Mahas men and women have three scars on each cheek while the Danaqla wear these scars on their temples Younger generations appear to be abandoning this custom 52 Nubia s ancient cultural development was influenced by its geography It is sometimes divided into Upper Nubia and Lower Nubia Upper Nubia was where the ancient Kingdom of Napata the Kush was located Lower Nubia has been called the corridor to Africa where there was contact and cultural exchange between Nubians Egyptians Greeks Assyrians Romans and Arabs Lower Nubia was also where the Kingdom of Meroe flourished 42 The languages spoken by modern Nubians are based on ancient Sudanic dialects From north to south they are Kenuz Fadicha Matoki Sukkot Mahas Danagla 53 Kerma Nepata and Meroe were Nubia s largest population centres The rich agricultural lands of Nubia supported these cities Ancient Egyptian rulers sought control of Nubia s wealth including gold and the important trade routes within its territories 54 Nubia s trade links with Egypt led to Egypt s domination over Nubia during the New Kingdom period The emergence of the Kingdom of Meroe in the 8th century BC led to Egypt being under the control of Nubian rulers for a century although they preserved many Egyptian cultural traditions 55 Nubian kings were considered pious scholars and patrons of the arts copying ancient Egyptian texts and even restoring some Egyptian cultural practices 21 After this Egypt s influence declined greatly Meroe became the centre of power for Nubia and cultural links with other parts of Africa gained greater influence 55 Religion Edit Today Nubians practice Islam To a certain degree Nubian religious practices involve a syncretism of Islam and traditional folk beliefs 56 In ancient times Nubians practiced a mixture of traditional religion and Egyptian religion Prior to the spread of Islam many Nubians practiced Christianity 52 Beginning in the eighth century Islam arrived in Nubia though Christians and Muslims primarily Arab merchants at this period lived peacefully together Over time the Nubians gradually converted to Islam beginning with the Nubian elite Islam was mainly spread via Sufi preachers that settled in Nubia in the late 14th century onwards 57 By the sixteenth century most of the Nubians were Muslim 58 Ancient Nepata was an important religious centre in Nubia It was the location of Gebel Barkal a massive sandstone hill resembling a rearing cobra in the eyes of the ancient inhabitants Egyptian priests declared it to be the home of the ancient deity Amun further enhancing Nepata as an ancient religious site This was the case for both Egyptians and Nubians Egyptian and Nubian deities alike were worshipped in Nubia for 2 500 years even while Nubia was under the control of the New Kingdom of Egypt 21 Nubian kings and queens were buried near Gebel Barkal in pyramids as the Egyptian pharaohs were Nubian pyramids were built at Gebel Barkal at Nuri across the Nile from Gebel Barkal at El Kerru and at Meroe south of Gebel Barkal 21 Ornately decorated Nubian gateArchitecture EditMain article Nubian architecture Modern Nubian architecture in Sudan is distinctive and typically features a large courtyard surrounded by a high wall A large ornately decorated gate preferably facing the Nile dominates the property Brightly colored stucco is often decorated with symbols connected with the family inside or popular motifs such as geometric patterns palm trees or the evil eye that wards away bad luck 52 Nubians invented the Nubian vault a type of curved surface forming a vaulted structure 59 Genetics EditAutosomal DNA has been extensively studied in recent years and some of the findings are as follows Babiker H M Schlebusch C M Hassan H Y et al 2011 revealed that individuals from northern Sudan clustered with those from Egypt while individuals from South Sudan clustered with those from Karamoja Uganda They conclude that the similarity of the Nubian and Egyptian populations suggest that migration potentially bidirectional occurred along the Nile river Valley which is consistent with the historical evidence for long term interactions between Egypt and Nubia 60 Dobon et al 2015 identified an ancestral autosomal component of West Eurasian origin that is common to many Sudanese Arabs Nubians and Afroasiatic speaking populations in the region Nubians were found to be genetically modelled similar to their Cushitic and Semitic Afro Asiatic neighbors such as the Beja Sudanese Arabs and Ethiopians rather than to other Nilo Saharan speakers who lack this Middle Eastern North African influence The study showed that these populations formed a North East cluster which included Northern Sudanese This may be explained by the aforementioned groups being a mixture of a population similar to Modern Coptic Egyptians and an ancestral Southern African one 61 Hollfelder et al 2017 analysed various populations in Sudan and observed close autosomal affinities between their Nubian and Sudanese Arab samples The authors concluded that the Nubians can be seen as a group with substantial genetic material relating to Nilotes that later received much gene flow from Eurasians and East Africans The strongest admixture came from Eurasian populations and was likely quite extensive 39 41 47 73 62 Sirak et al 2015 analysed the DNA of a Christian period inhabitant of Kulubnarti in northern Nubia near the Egyptian border They found that this individual was most closely related to Middle Eastern populations 63 Further excavations of two Early Christian period AD 550 800 cemeteries at Kulubnarti one located on the mainland and the other on an island revealed the existence of two ancestrally and socioeconomically distinct local populations Preliminary results including mitochondrial haplogroup analysis suggests there may be substantial differences in the genetic composition between the two communities with 70 of individuals from the island cemetery demonstrating African based haplogroups L2 L1 and L5 compared to only 36 4 of mainlanders who instead show an increased prevalence of European and Near Eastern haplogroups including K1 H I5 and U1 64 In 2018 Carina M Schlebusch and Mattias Jakobsson in the Annual Review of Genomics and Human Genetics found that Nilotic populations from South Sudan e g Dinka Nuer and Shilluk remained isolated and received little to no geneflow from Eurasians West African Bantu speaking farmers and other surrounding groups In contrast Nubians and Arabs in the north showed admixture from Western Eurasian populations The population structure analysis and inferred ancestry showed that the Nubian Arab and Beja populations of northeastern Africa roughly display equal admixture fractions from a local northeastern African gene pool similar to the Nilotic component and an incoming Eurasian migrant component 65 Christian Era DNA Edit Sirak et al 2021 obtained and analyzed the whole genomes of 66 individuals from the site of Kulubnarti situated between the 2nd and 3rd cataract and dated to the Christian period between 650 and 1000 CE The samples were obtained from two cemeteries R and S Grave materials between the two cemeteries did not differ but physical analyses of the remains found differences in morbidity and mortality indicating that the R cemetery individuals were of a higher social class than the cemetery S individuals The study analyzed the data they obtained along with other published ancient and modern samples from Africa and West Eurasia The genetic profile of the sampled Christian era Nubians was found to be a mixture between West Eurasian and Sub Saharan Dinka related ancestries The samples were estimated to have approximately 60 West Eurasian related ancestry that likely came from ancient Egyptians but ultimately resembles that found in Bronze or Iron Age Levantines They also carried approximately 40 Dinka related ancestry The study commented that the results reflect deep biological connections among the populations of the Nile Valley and further confirm the presence of West Eurasian ancestry in the Nile valley prior to Arab migrations The two cemeteries showed minimal differences in their West Eurasian Dinka ancestry proportions formed a genetic clade with each other in relation to other populations and had a small FST value of 0 0013 reflecting a small genetic distance 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 The study found some difference in Y haplogroups profiles between the two cemeteries with the S cemetery having more west Asian clades the difference was found to be insignificant and the study viewed it as likely to be a statistical fluctuation and not evidence of heterogeneity among males from the two cemeteries Regarding modern Nubians despite their superficial resemblance to the Kulubnarti Nubians on the PCA they 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 found in the ancient samples 66 Notable Nubians EditSee also List of rulers of Makuria Alara of Kush founder of the Twenty fifth Dynasty of Egypt Mentuhotep II the sixth ruler of the Eleventh Dynasty United Egypt and established the Middle Kingdom of Egypt Amenemhat I founder of the Twelfth Dynasty Many scholars in recent years have argued that his mother was of Nubian descent Taharqa Pharaoh of the Twenty fifth Dynasty Amanitore Kandake queen of the Kingdom of Kush centered on Meroe Silko 6th century King of the Noubades and all of the Ethiopians associated with the Christianization of Nubia Qalidurut 7th century King of Makuria defeated the Arab Muslim invasion at the First Battle of Dongola and Second Battle of Dongola signed the Baqt Merkourios 8th century King of Dotawo unifier of Nobatia and Makuria referred to as the New Constantine by John the Deacon Kyriakos of Makuria 8th Century King of Makuria Invaded Egypt to rescue Patriarch of Alexandria Michael Rafael of Makuria 10 century Nubian King of Makuria Built the famous Red Palace at Dongola Salomo of Makuria 11th century King of Dotawo United the kingdom of Dongola and Soba Moses Georgios of Makuria 12th century king of Alodia Makuria Nobadia Dalmatia g and Axioma mostly known for his conflict with Ayyubids Georgios I of Makuria King of Makuria Son of Zacharias III Renegotiated the Baqt with the Abassids Jaafar an Nimeiry former Sudanese president Khalil Farah 20th century Sudanese Nubian musician Mohamed Mounir Egyptian Nubian Singer known as The King Mohammed Wardi Sudanese Nubian singer Mo Ibrahim Sudanese British mobile communications entrepreneur and billionaire Hamza El Din Singer and musicologist Khalil Kalfat Literary critic political and economic thinker and writer Abdallah Khalil Ex Sudanese Prime Minister co founder of the White Flag League co founder and ex general secretary of the Umma Party Mohamed Hussein Tantawi Soliman Egyptian Field Marshal and statesman commander in chief of the Egyptian Armed Forces de facto head of state of Egypt Muhammad Ahmad 19th century Sufi sheikh and revolutionary leader of the Ansar Osama Abdul Latif a Sudanese businessman chairman of DAL Group Idris Ali Egyptian novelist and short story writer Fathi Hassan Painter Ali Ghazal Egyptian footballer Ali Hassan Kuban Singer Taha Abdelmagid Abdel Raouf Amjad Ismail Haitham Mustafa Mazin Mohamedein Musab Ahmed Mohamed HomosSee also EditBarabra is an old ethnographical term for the Nubian peoples of Sudan and southern Egypt Nubian wig worn by the affluent society of ancient Egypt Aethiopia is an ancient Greek geographical term which referred to the regions of Sudan and areas south of the Sahara desert Notelist Edit Nubian languages include Nobiin Kenzi Dongolawi Birgid Midob and the Hill Nubian dialect continuum They are spoken as either sole native languages or alongside a variant of Arabic by majority of Nubians Arabic variants are widely spoken by Nubians as a second or prestige language depending on locale References EditInline citations Edit تحقيق نوبيون في مصر لا يرون في مقعدهم البرلماني الوحيد أملا في العودة لأرض الآباء Reuters in Arabic 18 October 2015 Archived from the original on 15 July 2020 Retrieved 13 July 2020 Changing Egypt Offers Hope to Long Marginalized Nubians National Geographic News 1 February 2014 Retrieved 13 July 2020 Egypt s young Nubians revive dream of return to homeland Associated Press 15 July 2018 Hale Sondra 1973 Nubians A Study in Ethnic Identity Institute of African and Asian Studies University of Khartoum p 24 Retrieved 14 November 2017 Reinisch Leo 1879 Die Nuba Sprache Wien Wilhelm Braumuller Charles Keith Maisels 1993 The Near East Archaeology in the Cradle of Civilization Routledge ISBN 0 415 04742 0 Egypt People Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 7 September 2022 Sudan History Map Area Population Religion amp Facts Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 7 September 2022 Ancient Sudan Nubia Burials Prehistory ancientsudan org Archived from the original on 6 September 2008 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link a b Nubia ancient region Africa Brier Bob Hobbs A Hoyt 2008 Daily Life of the Ancient Egyptians Greenwood Publishing Group p 249 ISBN 978 0 313 35306 2 52 Years After Displacement Scars Of Loss Remain For Nubians Egypt Today 25 October 2016 Retrieved 18 July 2020 For Egypt s Nubians years of patience wear thin and anger rises Reuters 17 November 2015 Retrieved 18 July 2020 جماعات النوبة اعتزال الآخر وانصهار مع الذات aljazeera net in Arabic Retrieved 18 July 2020 Sesana Renato Kizito Borruso Silvano 2006 I Am a Nuba Paulines Publications Africa p 26 ISBN 9789966081797 Lobban Jr Richard A 2003 Historical Dictionary of Ancient and Medieval Nubia Scarecrow Press p 214 ISBN 9780810865785 a b The History of Ancient Nubia The Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago oi uchicago edu Bianchi Robert Steven 2004 Daily Life Of The Nubians Greenwood Publishing Group pp 2 5 ISBN 9780313325014 Rilly Claude 2016 Wendrich Willeke ed Meroitc UCLA encyclopedia of Egyptology Retrieved 21 April 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Rilly Claude de Voogt Alexander Johan 2012 The Meroitic language and writing system Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 104 105 ISBN 9781107008663 a b c d Remier Pat 2010 Egyptian Mythology A to Z Infobase Publishing p 135 ISBN 9781438131801 Bianchi Robert Steven 2004 Daily Life Of The Nubians Greenwood Publishing Group pp 2 3 ISBN 9780313325014 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 When Mahalanobis D2 was used the Naqadan and Badarian Predynastic samples exhibited more similarity to Nubian Tigrean and some more southern series than to some mid to late Dynasticseries from northern Egypt Mukherjee et al 1955 The Badarian have been found to be very similar to a Kerma sample Kushite Sudanese using both the Penrose statistic Nutter 1958 and DFA of males alone Keita 1990 Furthermore Keita considered that Badarian males had a southern modal phenotype and that together with a Naqada sample they formed a southern Egyptian cluster as tropical variants together with a sample from Kerma 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 2005 Early Nile Valley Farmers From El Badari Aboriginals or European Agro Nostratic Immigrants Craniometric Affinities Considered With Other Data Journal of Black Studies 36 2 191 208 doi 10 1177 0021934704265912 ISSN 0021 9347 JSTOR 40034328 S2CID 144482802 Godde Kanya A biological perspective of the relationship between Egypt Nubia and the Near East during the Predynastic period Retrieved 20 February 2022 So Keita Aj Boyce 2008 Temporal variation in phenetic affinity of early Upper Egyptian male cranial series Human Biology 80 2 141 159 doi 10 3378 1534 6617 2008 80 141 TVIPAO 2 0 CO 2 ISSN 0018 7143 PMID 18720900 S2CID 25207756 Keita 1992 using craniometrics discovered that the Badarian series is distinctly different from the later Egyptian series a conclusion that is mostly confirmed here In the current analysis the Badari sample more closely clusters with the Naqada sample and the Kerma sample Godde K 2009 An examination of Nubian and Egyptian biological distances support for biological diffusion or in situ development Homo Internationale Zeitschrift Fur die Vergleichende Forschung Am Menschen 60 5 389 404 doi 10 1016 j jchb 2009 08 003 ISSN 1618 1301 PMID 19766993 Ehret Christopher 20 June 2023 Ancient Africa A Global History to 300 CE Princeton Princeton University Press pp 84 85 ISBN 978 0 691 24409 9 Frank J Yurco 1996 The Origin and Development of Ancient Nile Valley Writing in Egypt in Africa Theodore Celenko ed Indianapolis Ind Indianapolis Museum of Art pp 34 35 ISBN 0 936260 64 5 Ehret Christopher 20 June 2023 Ancient Africa A Global History to 300 CE Princeton Princeton University Press pp 83 86 167 169 ISBN 978 0 691 24409 9 Archived from the original on 22 March 2023 Retrieved 20 March 2023 a b Rilly C 2010 Recent Research on Meroitic the Ancient Language of Sudan PDF 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 millenia BCE Faits de Langues 47 151 163 doi 10 1163 19589514 047 01 900000010 S2CID 134352296 a b Rilly Claude 2008 Enemy brothers Kinship and relationship between Meroites and Nubians Noba Between the Cataracts Proceedings of the 11th International Conference for Nubian Studies Warsaw University 27 August 2 September 2006 Part 1 Main Papers doi 10 31338 uw 9788323533269 pp 211 226 ISBN 978 83 235 3326 9 a b c Cooper J 2017 Toponymic Strata in Ancient Nubia until the Common Era Dotawo A Journal of Nubian Studies 4 doi 10 5070 d64110028 a b c Bechhaus Gerst Marianne 27 January 2006 Linguistic evidence for the prehistory of livestock in Sudan In Blench Roger MacDonald Kevin eds The Origins and Development of African Livestock Archaeology Genetics Linguistics and Ethnography Routledge pp 469 481 doi 10 4324 9780203984239 37 ISBN 978 1 135 43416 8 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 Asiatic Society Monograph Series Volume 15 Asiatic Society 1968 p 43 Retrieved 10 October 2017 Meroe World History Encyclopedia Jakobielski S 1992 Chapter 8 Christian Nubia at the Height of its Civilization UNESCO General History of Africa Volume III University of California Press a b Lobban Richard 2004 Historical Dictionary of Ancient and Medieval Nubia Scarecrow Press pp liii ISBN 9780810847842 Rowan Kirsty 2011 Meroitic Consonant and Vowel Patterning Lingua Aegytia 19 Rowan Kirsty 2006 Meroitic An Afroasiatic Language Archived 27 December 2015 at the Wayback Machine SOAS Working Papers in Linguistics 14 169 206 Rilly Claude de Voogt Alex 2012 The Meroitic Language and Writing System Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1107008663 Rilly Claude 2004 The Linguistic Position of Meroitic PDF Sudan Electronic Journal of Archaeology and Anthropology Archived from the original PDF on 23 September 2015 Retrieved 10 October 2017 a b Fernea Robert A 2005 Nubian Ceremonial Life Studies in Islamic Syncretism And Cultural Change American University in Cairo Press pp ix xi ISBN 9789774249556 Changing Egypt Offers Hope to Long Marginalized Nubians 1 February 2014 Retrieved 9 August 2016 Remembering Nubia the Land of Gold Politics Egypt Ahram Online Retrieved 9 August 2016 West Cairo 2 April 2014 El Nuba Cairo West Magazine Retrieved 9 August 2016 Kemp Graham amp Douglas P Fry 2003 Keeping the Peace Conflict Resolution and Peaceful Societies Around the World Psychology Press p 99 ISBN 9780415947626 a b c Clammer Paul 2010 Sudan the Bradt travel guide Bradt Travel Guides p 138 ISBN 9781841622064 Lobban Richard 2004 Historical Dictionary of Ancient and Medieval Nubia Scarecrow Press pp liv ISBN 9780810847842 Bulliet Richard W and Pamela Kyle Crossley Daniel R Headrick Lyman L Johnson Steven W Hirsch 2007 The Earth and Its Peoples A Global History to 1550 Cengage Learning p 82 ISBN 9780618771509 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Bulliet Richard W and Pamela Kyle Crossley Daniel R Headrick Lyman L Johnson Steven W Hirsch 2007 The Earth and Its Peoples A Global History to 1550 Cengage Learning p 83 ISBN 9780618771509 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Fernea Robert A 2005 Nubian Ceremonial Life Studies in Islamic Syncretism And Cultural Change American University in Cairo Press pp iv ix ISBN 9789774249556 Werner Roland 2013 Das Christentum in Nubien Geschichte und Gestalt einer afrikanischen Kirche in German LIT Verlag Munster pp 155 156 ISBN 978 3 643 12196 7 Skutsch Carl ed 2005 Encyclopedia of the World s Minorities New York Routledge p 306 ISBN 1 57958 468 3 Nubian Vault a historical masterpiece dreamivill com Retrieved 29 May 2020 Babiker Hiba MA Schlebusch Carina M Hassan Hisham Y Jakobsson Mattias 4 May 2011 Genetic variation and population structure of Sudanese populations as indicated by 15 Identifiler sequence tagged repeat STR loci Investigative Genetics 2 1 12 doi 10 1186 2041 2223 2 12 ISSN 2041 2223 PMC 3118356 PMID 21542921 Begona Dobon et al 28 May 2015 The genetics of East African populations a Nilo Saharan component in the African genetic landscape Scientific Reports 5 9996 Bibcode 2015NatSR 5E9996D doi 10 1038 srep09996 PMC 4446898 PMID 26017457 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Hollfelder Nina Schlebusch Carina M Gunther Torsten Babiker Hiba Hassan Hisham Y Jakobsson Mattias 24 August 2017 Northeast African genomic variation shaped by the continuity of indigenous groups and Eurasian migrations PLOS Genetics 13 8 e1006976 doi 10 1371 journal pgen 1006976 ISSN 1553 7404 PMC 5587336 PMID 28837655 Optimizing ancient DNA yield from Saharan African samples Sirak et al Retrieved 10 April 2016 Sirak Kendra Frenandes Daniel Novak Mario Van Gerven Dennis Pinhasi Ron 2016 Abstract Book of the IUAES Inter Congress 2016 A community divided Revealing the community genome s of Medieval Kulubnarti using next generation sequencing Abstract Book of the Iuaes Inter Congress 2016 IUAES 115 Schlebusch Carina M Jakobsson Mattias 31 August 2018 Tales of Human Migration Admixture and Selection in Africa Annual Review of Genomics and Human Genetics 19 1 405 428 doi 10 1146 annurev genom 083117 021759 ISSN 1527 8204 PMID 29727585 S2CID 19155657 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 General references Edit Rouchdy Aleya 1991 Nubians and the Nubian Language in Contemporary Egypt A Case of Cultural and Linguistic Contact Leiden Brill Academic Publishers ISBN 90 04 09197 1 Spaulding Jay 2006 Pastoralism Slavery Commerce Culture and the Fate of the Nubians of Northern and Central Kordofan Under Dar Fur Rule ca 1750 ca 1850 The International Journal of African Historical Studies Boston University African Studies Center 39 3 ISSN 0361 7882 Valbelle Dominique Charles Bonnet 2007 The Nubian Pharaohs Black Kings on the Nile Cairo American University in Cairo Press ISBN 978 977 416 010 3 Warnock Fernea Elizabeth Robert A Fernea 1990 Nubian Ethnographies Chicago Waveland Press Inc ISBN 0 88133 480 4 Black Pharaohs National Geographic Feb 2008External links EditNubia at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Resources from Wikiversity AncientSudan org Usurped Nubian people history Johanna Granville Nubians of Egypt and Sudan Past and Present Nubians Archived 29 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine by Abubakr Sidahmed Nubians Use Hip hop to Preserve Culture Sudan Tribune The Forgotten Minorities Egypt s Nubians and Amazigh in the Amended Constitution Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nubians amp oldid 1155597853, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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