Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Post-Meroe in Upper Nubia

View through CrossRef
AbstractUpper Nubia stretches from the Second Cataract upstream to the Gezira region south of Khartoum, including Sinnar-Roseires on the southern Blue Nile and Kosti on the White Nile, a distance of not less than 1,500 km. Close observation of the material culture excavated in this ample territory shows a subdivision of Upper Nubia into three zones after the Meroitic Period, in spite of the broad similarities within this cultural horizon. Aspects of regionalism are based on geographical and natural elements in addition to the variety of mortuary practice and pottery production, which are the main sources of information about the period under study. One of the major problems is the lack of organized comprehensive studies in Upper Nubia. Therefore, still debatable are the conventional theories on the Axumite and Noba invasions, while as demonstrated in this text, there is no tangible evidence for such theories in archaeological material. Still open for discussion is the term “Post-Meroe.”
Title: Post-Meroe in Upper Nubia
Description:
AbstractUpper Nubia stretches from the Second Cataract upstream to the Gezira region south of Khartoum, including Sinnar-Roseires on the southern Blue Nile and Kosti on the White Nile, a distance of not less than 1,500 km.
Close observation of the material culture excavated in this ample territory shows a subdivision of Upper Nubia into three zones after the Meroitic Period, in spite of the broad similarities within this cultural horizon.
Aspects of regionalism are based on geographical and natural elements in addition to the variety of mortuary practice and pottery production, which are the main sources of information about the period under study.
One of the major problems is the lack of organized comprehensive studies in Upper Nubia.
Therefore, still debatable are the conventional theories on the Axumite and Noba invasions, while as demonstrated in this text, there is no tangible evidence for such theories in archaeological material.
Still open for discussion is the term “Post-Meroe.
”.

Related Results

The management of vegetal resources in Bronze Age Nubia
The management of vegetal resources in Bronze Age Nubia
This chapter provides an overview of the vegetal resources of Bronze Age Nubia. After providing a brief introduction to, and historiography of, archaeobotanical research in Nubia, ...
Gold exploitation in New Kingdom and Napatan Nubia
Gold exploitation in New Kingdom and Napatan Nubia
The Egyptian colonial system to extract gold from the Nubian deserts and the Nile Valley is attested to in a considerable number of texts. These texts are one way to consider diffe...
Medieval/Christian Nubia
Medieval/Christian Nubia
“Christian Nubia” is a term that describes the cultures that developed south of Egypt roughly between the 5th and 15th centuries ce. Although it is often also called “medieval Nubi...
Egyptian Conquest and Administration of Nubia
Egyptian Conquest and Administration of Nubia
AbstractAfter the Second Intermediate Period (1730–1552 bce), the reconquest of Lower Nubia and the conquest of Upper Nubia by the Egyptian army happened in several phases during t...
Paleolithic Hunter-Gatherers of Nubia
Paleolithic Hunter-Gatherers of Nubia
AbstractThe chapter is devoted to the earliest human settlement in Nubia, which took place in the Pleistocene, with numerous references to neighboring areas, especially Upper Egypt...
Foodways and cultural entanglements in New Kingdom Nubia
Foodways and cultural entanglements in New Kingdom Nubia
Foodways play an important role in both ancient and modern societies, particularly in the context of imperial expansions like the New Kingdom Egyptian occupation of Nubia after the...
Egyptian Fortresses and the Colonization of Lower Nubia in the Middle Kingdom
Egyptian Fortresses and the Colonization of Lower Nubia in the Middle Kingdom
Abstract In the early part of the 2nd millennium bce, the Egyptian state took control of Lower Nubia, building a series of monumental fortresses along the Nile that ...
Phrenic Nerve Block for Management of Post-Thoracic Outlet Decompression Cough: A Case Report and Literature Review
Phrenic Nerve Block for Management of Post-Thoracic Outlet Decompression Cough: A Case Report and Literature Review
Abstract Introduction Thoracic outlet syndrome is a group of disorders arising from compressive forces on the neurovascular bundle in that region due to different etiologies. This...

Back to Top