ABSTRACT

This cutting-edge synthesis of the archaeology of Nubia and Sudan from prehistory to the nineteenth century AD is the first major work on this area for over three decades. Drawing on results of the latest research and developing new interpretive frameworks, the area which has produced the most spectacular archaeology in sub-Saharan Africa is examined here by an author with extensive experience in this field.

The geographical range of the book extends through the Nubian north, the Middle Nile Basin, and includes what has become the modern Sudan. Using period-based chapters, the region's long-term history is traced and a potential for a more broadly framed and inclusive 'historical archaeology' of Sudan's more recent past is explored.

This text breaks new ground in its move beyond the Egyptocentric and more traditional culture-histories of Nubia, often isolated in Africanist research, and it relocates the early civilizations and their archaeology within their Sudanic Africa context.

This is a captivating study of the area's history, and will inform and enthral all students and researchers of Archaeology and Egyptology.

chapter 1|15 pages

NUBIA, THE SUDAN AND SUDANIC AFRICA

chapter |5 pages

Cultural landscapes and social space

chapter |1 pages

Looking back: the Late Palaeolithic

chapter 3|11 pages

The Neolithic: developing complexity and expanding worlds (c.5000–3000 BC)

Developing complexity and expanding worlds (c.5000–3000

chapter |17 pages

Changing material worlds

chapter |2 pages

The western plains

chapter |7 pages

The Abkan and A-Group

chapter 4|5 pages

KERMA AND BRONZE AGE KUSH

chapter |10 pages

Chronologies

chapter |13 pages

Middle Kerma (Kerma Moyen)

chapter |3 pages

New Kingdom domination

chapter |6 pages

Lower Nubia in the New Kingdom

chapter 5|4 pages

THE KUSHITE REVIVAL

The XXVth Dynasty and the kingdom of Napata

chapter |6 pages

Napatan origins

chapter |19 pages

Later Napatan history

chapter 6|15 pages

Meroitic Kush (c.300 BC–AD 350)

chapter |26 pages

Lower and Middle Nubia

chapter 7|30 pages

Post-Meroitic transitions (c.AD 350–550)

chapter 8|8 pages

Medieval Nubia (c.AD 500–1500)

chapter |13 pages

Nobadia

chapter |15 pages

Ecclesiastical organization