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Nubians

A Dictionary of World History | 2000 | © A Dictionary of World History 2000, originally published by Oxford University Press 2000. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Nubians A people who live chiefly in Egypt and the Sudan, between the First and Fourth Cataracts of the River Nile. Their recorded history begins with raids by Egyptians c.2613 BC, When their country was called Kush. Then a Nubian dynasty ruling at Napata from c.920 BC conquered all Egypt. The Nubian Shabaka ruled as King of Kush and Egypt with Thebes as his capital but Assyrians forced Taharka, his successor, to withdraw (680–669 BC). After several further struggles, the Nubians drew back to Napata, and c.530 BC their capital moved to Meroë. The dynasty continued until 350 AD, when Aezanas of AXUM destroyed it; its 300 pyramids remain. Nubia was converted to Christianity in c.540 AD. Three Christian kingdoms emerged, but in 652 AD an Egyptian army conquered that at Dongola, granting peace for an annual tribute of slaves and at the end of the 13th century MAMELUKES took the north. The southern kingdom survived until the 16th century, when the FUNJ kingdom of Sennar absorbed it.

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