Ancient Egypt in AfricaDavid O'Connor, Andrew Reid Routledge, 2016 M06 16 - 233 pages Geographically, Egypt is clearly on the African continent, yet Ancient Egypt is routinely regarded as a non-African cultural form. The significance of Ancient Egypt for the rest of Africa is a hotly debated issue with complex ramifications. This book considers how Ancient Egypt was dislocated from Africa, drawing on a wide range of sources. It examines key issues such as the evidence for actual contacts between Egypt and other early African cultures, and how influential, or not, Egypt was on them. Some scholars argue that to its north Egypt's influence on Mediterranean civilization was downplayed by western scholarship. Further a field, on the African continent perceptions of Ancient Egypt were colored by biblical sources, emphasizing the persecution of the Israelites. An extensive selection of fresh insights are provided, several focusing on cultural interactions between Egypt and Nubia from 1000 BCE to 500 CE, developing a nuanced picture of these interactions and describing the limitations of an 'Egyptological' approach to them. |
Contents
Modern Theories Past Realities | 1 |
2 Afrocentrism and Historical Models for the Foundation of Ancient Greece | 23 |
Reflections on Black Athena | 31 |
4 The Unity of Africa | 39 |
5 Ancient Egypt and the Source of the Nile | 55 |
6 Views of Ancient Egypt from a West African Perspective | 77 |
7 Cheikh Anta Diop arid Ancient Egypt in Africa | 93 |
8 Ancient Egypt Missionaries and Christianity in Southern Africa | 107 |
The African Foundations of Ancient Egyptian Civilization Reconsidered | 121 |
A Case of Mistaken Identity?
| 137 |
The Adaptation Demise and Resurrection of Ideas in Writing Nubian History | 151 |
12 Pharaonic or Sudanic? Models for Meroitic Society and Change | 169 |
185 | |
211 | |
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Common terms and phrases
19th century African continent Afrocentrism Afrocentrist Ancient Egypt ancient Egyptian Ancient Model archaeological areas argued Bernal Black Athena Brugsch Buganda burials cemetery Central Sudan Chapter Christian chronology classical colonial common context Diop Diop’s distinct early neolithic East Egypt in Africa Egyptian civilization Egyptian culture Egyptology el-Kurru elite Ethiopia ethnography European Fhzqu Figure Greek groups Hamitic Hypothesis ideas important indigenous influence interpretation Jebel Moya Kendall king king’s kingship Kushite Lakes Lakes Africa language late Libyan Lower Nubia material culture McIntosh Meroe Meroitic Kingdom Middle Nile missionaries modern monuments Morkot Napatan neolithic Nile Valley North O’Connor pastoral period pharaoh Piye political populations pyramid racial region Reisner relationship ritual role Rowlands royal Sahara scholars Seligman significant similar social societies sources southern African sub-Saharan Africa suggested symbolic Theban theory Török traditions twenty-fifth Dynasty volume Wengrow West Africa Yoruba