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Votes:0 Home > Articles > Africa > Neither Goddesses Nor Doormats: The Role of Women in Nubia Menu Home Articles E-books Links Search About the HTA --> Informative Articles Support the HTA Build A Dream Home Make your home building project a success through the help of our construction experts. Angel Perfume Direct Textbooks Please visit our sponsors Shop at Amazon.com! privacy policy Email to a friend Printer friendly Neither Goddesses Nor Doormats: The Role of Women in Nubia Tara Kneller Syracuse University 5 April 1993 Why Such an Undertaking? The Kingdom is Possible Because of the Queen... The King is the Sign...While the Queen is the Symbol.... -Warren Blakely Nubia is an area of scholarship that was largely overlooked in favor of its splendid neighbor, Egypt. Past finds in the area were attr Read More Go to Site
Votes:0 | what's new | announcements | public programs | | website information & statistics | copyrights & permissions | comments | | website navigational aid | THE NUBIA SALVAGE PROJECT ORIENTAL INSTITUTE MUSEUM VANISHED KINGDOMS OF THE NILE The Rediscovery of Ancient Nubia An exhibit in conjunction with the Centennial celebration of The University of Chicago February 4 - December 31, 1995 Figure 1: A Nubian Princess in her Ox-chariot, from the Egyptian Tomb of Huy, ca. 1320 B.C. Figure 2: Map of Nubia NUBIA THE LAND AND ITS PEOPLE Nubia is located in today's southern Egypt and northern Sudan. This land has one of the harshest climates in the world. The temperatures are high throughout most of the year, and rainfall is infrequent. The banks of the Nile are narrow in much of Nubia, making farming Read More Go to Site
Votes:0 Back to Ancient History Sourcebook | Ancient History Sourcebook: Accounts of Mer?e, Kush, and Axum, c. 430 BCE - 550 CE Below are the main accounts of Ancient Nubia and Ethiopia from classical sources. There are a few accounts missing from this text: Pliny the Elder, Claudius Ptolemaeus, and the Periplus, though they used the same source that Strabo did. Diodorus Siculus is also missing. The Loeb version is still under copyright; but since the accounts of Strabo and Diodorus are virtually the same, thisis not much of a problem (again, they used the same source). The Selection of Aspalta as King of Kush , c. 600 BCE Herodotus, The Histories , c. 430 BCE, Book III. Strabo: Geography , c. 22 CE, XVI.iv.4-17; XVII.i.53-54, ii.1-3, iii.1-11. Acts of the Apostles 8:26-39 Dio Cassius: History of Read More Go to Site
Votes:0 Ancient Nubia: Egypt's Rival in Africa Gallery of Artifacts Bead Necklaces. Anibeh and Buhen. 100 B.C.- A.D. 300 Collected in 1908 by the E.B. Coxe, Jr. Expedition. 33cm long; 36cm long; 40cm long; 44cm long. (E 7767; E 7794; E 7922; E 15784) Bronze Caldron and Bronze Bowl. Anibeh. Meroitic Period. Collected in 1908 by the E.B. Coxe, Jr. Expedition. 11.2cm high x 13.5cm diameter and 6.5cm high x 9.2cm diameter. (E 7129 and E 7137) Ceramic Cups. Anibeh. 100 B.C. - A.D. 300 Collected in 1908 by the E.B. Coxe, Jr. Expedition. 9.9cm high x 10.4cm diameter; 8.3cm high x 9.1cm diameter; and 8.0cm high x 9.3cm diameter. (E 8645; E 8724; and E 8451) Bottle, green glass. Anibeh. 100 B.C. - A.D. 300 Collected in 1908 by the E.B. Coxe, Jr. Expedition. 13.0cm high x 4.8cm wide x 5.5cm deep. (E 7339) C Read More Go to Site
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