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Judi Lynn

(161,925 posts)
Tue Oct 27, 2020, 01:55 AM Oct 2020

A dazzling civilization flourished in Sudan nearly 5,000 years ago. Why was it forgotten?

IN THE LAND OF KUSH

BY TEXT BY ISMA'IL KUSHKUSH; PHOTOGRAPHS BY MATT STIRN

SMITHSONIAN MAGAZINE | September 2020

If you drive north from Khartoum along a narrow desert road toward the ancient city of Meroe, a breathtaking view emerges from beyond the mirage: dozens of steep pyramids piercing the horizon. No matter how many times you may visit, there is an awed sense of discovery. In Meroe itself, once the capital of the Kingdom of Kush, the road divides the city. To the east is the royal cemetery, packed with close to 50 sandstone and red brick pyramids of varying heights; many have broken tops, the legacy of 19th-century European looters. To the west is the royal city, which includes the ruins of a palace, a temple and a royal bath. Each structure has distinctive architecture that draws on local, Egyptian and Greco-Roman decorative tastes—evidence of Meroe’s global connections.

Off the highway, men wearing Sudanese jalabiyas and turbans ride camels across the desert sands. Although the area is largely free of the trappings of modern tourism, a few local merchants on straw mats in the sand sell small clay replicas of the pyramids. As you approach the royal cemetery on foot, climbing large, rippled dunes, Meroe’s pyramids, lined neatly in rows, rise as high as 100 feet toward the sky. “It’s like opening a fairytale book,” a friend once said to me.

I first learned of Sudan’s extraordinary pyramids as a boy, in the British historian Basil Davidson’s 1984 documentary series “Africa.” As a Sudanese-American who was born and raised in the United States and the Middle East, I studied the history of ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia, the Levant, Persia, Greece and Rome—but never that of ancient Nubia, the region surrounding the Nile River between Aswan in southern Egypt and Khartoum in central Sudan. Seeing the documentary pushed me to read as many books as I could about my homeland’s history, and during annual vacations with my family I spent much of my time at Khartoum’s museums, viewing ancient artifacts and temples rescued from the waters of Lake Nasser when Egypt’s Aswan High Dam was built during the 1960s and ’70s. Later, I worked as a journalist in Khartoum, Sudan’s capital, for close to eight years, reporting for the New York Times and other news outlets about Sudan’s fragile politics and wars. But every once in a while I got to write about Sudan’s rich and relatively little known ancient history. It took me more than 25 years to see the pyramids in person, but when I finally visited Meroe, I was overwhelmed by a feeling of fulfilled longing for this place, which had given me a sense of dignity and a connection to global history. Like a long lost relative, I wrapped my arms around a pyramid in a hug.

The land south of Egypt, beyond the first cataract of the Nile, was known to the ancient world by many names: Ta-Seti, or Land of the Bow, so named because the inhabitants were expert archers; Ta-Nehesi, or Land of Copper; Ethiopia, or Land of Burnt Faces, from the Greek; Nubia, possibly derived from an ancient Egyptian word for gold, which was plentiful; and Kush, the kingdom that dominated the region between roughly 2500 B.C. and A.D. 300. In some religious traditions, Kush was linked to the biblical Cush, son of Ham and grandson of Noah, whose descendants inhabited northeast Africa.



Ruins at the Temple of Soleb, which was dedicated to the Egyptian sun god Amun-RA. The temple's patron pharaohs included Tutankhamen, who had his name inscribed on a red granite lion. (Matt Stirn)

More:
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/travel/sudan-land-kush-meroe-ancient-civilization-overlooked-180975498/

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A dazzling civilization flourished in Sudan nearly 5,000 years ago. Why was it forgotten? (Original Post) Judi Lynn Oct 2020 OP
You Tube has a wealth of African history Warpy Oct 2020 #1
Wherever they invade, they claim their victims are trash and had it coming, completely worthless. Judi Lynn Oct 2020 #2

Warpy

(112,784 posts)
1. You Tube has a wealth of African history
Tue Oct 27, 2020, 02:36 AM
Oct 2020

and the rise and fall of empires that rivaled anything in the Fertile Crescent and often surpassed it. Some grew unbelievably rich and some, like the Songhai in what's now Mali, became centers of learning.

I find the arrogance of the early white colonialist explorers astonishing, dismissing the ruins of great cities as impossible and incapable of paying any attention to the local oral historians who knew much of their history.

Judi Lynn

(161,925 posts)
2. Wherever they invade, they claim their victims are trash and had it coming, completely worthless.
Tue Oct 27, 2020, 04:25 AM
Oct 2020

It's as if they were all Trumps all along, and we didn't know. They revile everyone different from themselves.

Thanks for the information on You Tube as a resource for African history videos. I had never known about this. Wonderful!

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