The Africa Zone |
Sudan is a country in northeastern Africa. It is the largest in the African continent and the Arab World, and tenth largest in the world by area. It is bordered by Egypt to the north, the Red Sea to the northeast, Eritrea and Ethiopia to the east, Kenya and Uganda to the southeast, Democratic Republic of the Congo and the Central African Republic to the southwest, Chad to the west and Libya to the northwest. The country's name derives from the Arabic Bilad-al-Sudan, literally "land of the blacks." Sudan has recently emerged as the world's most unstable country according to the 2007 Failed States Index, mainly due to its military dictatorship and the ongoing war in Darfur. The country has long been plagued by civil war stemming from political and economic inequality: most people in Sudan's northern region, which includes the capital city of Khartoum, are Arab African Muslims; while most southerners are non-Arab Black Africans who mainly practice traditional African religions or Christianity. Southern Sudan is widely acknowledged to have one of the worst health situations in the world. Despite its internal conflicts, Sudan has managed to achieve economic growth. Archaeological evidence has confirmed that the area in the North of Sudan was inhabited at least 60,000 years ago. A settled culture appeared in the area around 8,000 BC, living in fortified villages, where they subsisted on hunting and fishing, as well as grain gathering and cattle herding while also being shepherds. The area was
known to the Egyptians as Kush and had strong cultural and religious
ties to Egypt. In the
8th century BC, however, Kush came under the rule of an aggressive
line of monarchs, ruling from the capital city, Napata, who gradually
extended their influence into Egypt. About 750 BC, a Kushite king
called Kashta conquered Upper Egypt and became ruler of Thebes
until approximately 740 BC. His successor, Piankhy, subdued the
delta, reunited Egypt under the Twenty-fifth Dynasty, and founded
a line of kings who ruled Kush and Thebes for about a hundred
years. The dynasty's intervention in the area of modern Syria
caused a confrontation between Egypt and Assyria. When the Assyrians
in retaliation invaded Egypt, Taharqa (688-663 BC), the last Kushite
pharaoh, withdrew and returned the dynasty to Napata, where it
continued to rule Kush and extended its dominions to the south
and east. The pharaonic tradition persisted among Meroe's rulers, who raised stelae to record the achievements of their reigns and erected pyramids to contain their tombs. These objects and the ruins at palaces, temples and baths at Meroe attest to a centralized political system that employed artisans' skills and commanded the labour of a large work force. A well-managed irrigation system allowed the area to support a higher population density than was possible during later periods. By the 1st century BC, the use of hieroglyphs gave way to a Meroitic script that adapted the Egyptian writing system to an indigenous, Nubian-related language spoken later by the region's people. In the 6th century AD, the people known as the Nobatae occupied the Nile's west bank in northern Kush. Eventually they intermarried and established themselves among the Meroitic people as a military aristocracy. Until nearly the 5th century, Rome subsidized the Nobatae and used Meroe as a buffer between Egypt and the Blemmyes. About CE 350, an Axumite army from Abyssinia captured and destroyed Meroe city, ending the kingdom's independent existence.
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