After capturing city after city along the Nile River
in 730 B.C., troops commanded by King Piye of Nubia storm the great walled
capital of Memphis with flaming arrows. Piye modeled himself after powerful
pharaohs such as Ramses II (statues), claiming to be the rightful ruler of
Egypt. His triumph over the northern chiefs would unite all Egypt under Nubian
rule for three-quarters of a century.
At the height of his power, King Taharqa leads his
queens through the crowds during a festival at the temple complex of Nubia’s
Jebel Barkal, its pinnacle gleaming with gold. Accompanied by a sacred ship
bearing an image of the god Amun, Taharqa is robed in a priestly leopard skin and
crowned with the double uraeus that declares him Lord of the Two Lands—ruler of
both Nubia and Egypt.
An ignored chapter of history tells of a time when
kings from deep in Africa conquered ancient Egypt. For 75 years Nubian kings
ruled over ancient Egypt, reunifying the country and building an empire. Until
recently, theirs was a chapter of history lost in the shadows.
By
Robert Draper
National Geographic Contributing Writer
In the year 730 B.C., a man by the name of
Piye decided the only way to save Egypt from itself was to invade it. Things
would get bloody before the salvation came.
“Harness the best steeds of your stable,”
he ordered his commanders. The magnificent civilization that had built the
great pyramids had lost its way, torn apart by petty warlords. For two decades
Piye had ruled over his own kingdom in Nubia, a swath of Africa located mostly
in present-day Sudan. But he considered himself the true ruler of Egypt as
well, the rightful heir to the spiritual traditions practiced by pharaohs such
as Ramses II and Thutmose III. Since Piye had probably never actually visited
Lower Egypt, some did not take his boast seriously. Now Piye would witness the
subjugation of decadent Egypt firsthand—“I shall let Lower Egypt taste the
taste of my fingers,” he would later write.
North on the Nile River his soldiers
sailed. At Thebes, the capital of Upper Egypt, they disembarked. Believing
there was a proper way to wage holy wars, Piye instructed his soldiers to
purify themselves before combat by bathing in the Nile, dressing themselves in
fine linen, and sprinkling their bodies with water from the temple at Karnak, a
site holy to the ram-headed sun god Amun, whom Piye identified as his own
personal deity. Piye himself feasted and offered sacrifices to Amun. Thus
sanctified, the commander and his men commenced to do battle with every army in
their path.
By the end of a yearlong campaign, every
leader in Egypt had capitulated—including the powerful delta warlord Tefnakht,
who sent a messenger to tell Piye, “Be gracious! I cannot see your face in the
days of shame; I cannot stand before your flame, I dread your grandeur.” In
exchange for their lives, the vanquished urged Piye to worship at their
temples, pocket their finest jewels, and claim their best horses. He obliged
them. And then, with his vassals trembling before him, the newly anointed Lord
of the Two Lands did something extraordinary: He loaded up his army and his war
booty, and sailed southward to his home in Nubia, never to return to Egypt
again.
When Piye died at the end of his 35-year
reign in 715 B.C., his subjects honored his wishes by burying him in an
Egyptian-style pyramid, with four of his beloved horses nearby. He was the
first pharaoh to receive such entombment in more than 500 years. A pity, then,
that the great Nubian who accomplished these feats is literally faceless to us.
Images of Piye on the elaborate granite slabs, or stelae, memorializing his
conquest of Egypt have long since been chiseled away. On a relief in the temple
at the Nubian capital of Napata, only Piye’s legs remain. We are left with a
single physical detail of the man—namely, that his skin was dark.
Piye was the first of the so-called black
pharaohs—a series of Nubian kings who ruled over all of Egypt for
three-quarters of a century as that country’s 25th dynasty. Through
inscriptions carved on stelae by both the Nubians and their enemies, it is
possible to map out these rulers’ vast footprint on the continent. The black
pharaohs reunified a tattered Egypt and filled its landscape with glorious
monuments, creating an empire that stretched from the southern border at
present-day Khartoum all the way north to the Mediterranean Sea. They stood up
to the bloodthirsty Assyrians, perhaps saving Jerusalem in the process.
Until recently, theirs was a chapter of
history that largely went untold. Only in the past four decades have
archaeologists resurrected their story—and come to recognize that the black
pharaohs didn’t appear out of nowhere. They sprang from a robust African civilization
that had flourished on the southern banks of the Nile for 2,500 years, going
back at least as far as the first Egyptian dynasty.
Today Sudan’s pyramids—greater in number
than all of Egypt’s—are haunting spectacles in the Nubian Desert. It is
possible to wander among them unharassed, even alone, a world away from Sudan’s
genocide and refugee crisis in Darfur or the aftermath of civil war in the
south. While hundreds of miles north, at Cairo or Luxor, curiosity seekers
arrive by the busload to jostle and crane for views of the Egyptian wonders,
Sudan’s seldom-visited pyramids at El Kurru, Nuri, and Meroë stand serenely
amid an arid landscape that scarcely hints of the thriving culture of ancient
Nubia.
Now our understanding of this civilization
is once again threatened with obscurity. The Sudanese government is building a
hydroelectric dam along the Nile, 600 miles upstream from the Aswan High Dam,
which Egypt constructed in the 1960s, consigning much of lower Nubia to the
bottom of Lake Nasser (called Lake Nubia in Sudan). By 2009, the massive Merowe
Dam should be complete, and a 106-mile-long lake will flood the terrain
abutting the Nile’s Fourth Cataract, or rapid, including thousands of
unexplored sites. For the past nine years, archaeologists have flocked to the
region, furiously digging before another repository of Nubian history goes the
way of Atlantis.
The ancient world was devoid of racism. At
the time of Piye’s historic conquest, the fact that his skin was dark was
irrelevant. Artwork from ancient Egypt, Greece, and Rome shows a clear
awareness of racial features and skin tone, but there is little evidence that
darker skin was seen as a sign of inferiority. Only after the European powers
colonized Africa in the 19th century did Western scholars pay attention to the
color of the Nubians’ skin, to uncharitable effect.
Explorers who arrived at the central
stretch of the Nile River excitedly reported the discovery of elegant temples
and pyramids—the ruins of an ancient civilization called Kush. Some, like the
Italian doctor Giuseppe Ferlini—who lopped off the top of at least one Nubian
pyramid, inspiring others to do the same—hoped to find treasure beneath. The
Prussian archaeologist Richard Lepsius had more studious intentions, but he
ended up doing damage of his own by concluding that the Kushites surely
“belonged to the Caucasian race.”
Even famed Harvard Egyptologist George
Reisner—whose discoveries between 1916 and 1919 offered the first
archaeological evidence of Nubian kings who ruled over Egypt—besmirched his own
findings by insisting that black Africans could not possibly have constructed
the monuments he was excavating. He believed that Nubia’s leaders, including
Piye, were light-skinned Egypto-Libyans who ruled over the primitive Africans. That
their moment of greatness was so fleeting, he suggested, must be a consequence
of the same leaders intermarrying with the “negroid elements.”
For decades, many historians flip-flopped:
Either the Kushite pharaohs were actually “white,” or they were bumblers, their
civilization a derivative offshoot of true Egyptian culture. In their 1942
history, When Egypt Ruled the East, highly regarded Egyptologists Keith Seele
and George Steindorff summarized the Nubian pharaonic dynasty and Piye’s
triumphs in all of three sentences—the last one reading: “But his dominion was
not for long.”
The neglect of Nubian history reflected not
only the bigoted worldview of the times, but also a cult-like fascination with
Egypt’s achievements—and a complete ignorance of Africa’s past. “The first time
I came to Sudan,” recalls Swiss archaeologist Charles Bonnet, “people said:
‘You’re mad! There’s no history there! It’s all in
Egypt!’ ”
That was a mere 44 years ago. Artifacts
uncovered during the archaeological salvage campaigns as the waters rose at
Aswan in the 1960s began changing that view. In 2003, Charles Bonnet’s decades
of digging near the Nile’s Third Cataract at the abandoned settlement of Kerma
gained international recognition with the discovery of seven large stone statues
of Nubian pharaohs. Well before then, however, Bonnet’s labors had revealed an
older, densely occupied urban center that commanded rich fields and extensive
herds, and had long profited from trade in gold, ebony, and ivory. “It was a
kingdom completely free of Egypt and original, with its own construction and
burial customs,” Bonnet says. This powerful dynasty rose just as Egypt’s Middle
Kingdom declined around 1785 B.C. By 1500 B.C. the Nubian empire stretched
between the Second and Fifth Cataracts.
Revisiting that golden age in the African
desert does little to advance the case of Afrocentric Egyptologists, who argue
that all ancient Egyptians, from King Tut to Cleopatra, were black Africans.
Nonetheless, the saga of the Nubians proves that a civilization from deep in
Africa not only thrived but briefly dominated in ancient times, intermingling
and sometimes intermarrying with their Egyptian neighbors to the north. (King
Tut’s own grandmother, the 18th-dynasty Queen Tiye, is claimed by some to be of
Nubian heritage.)
The Egyptians didn’t like having such a
powerful neighbor to the south, especially since they depended on Nubia’s gold
mines to bankroll their dominance of western Asia. So the pharaohs of the 18th
dynasty (1539-1292 B.C.) sent armies to conquer Nubia and built garrisons along
the Nile. They installed Nubian chiefs as administrators and schooled the
children of favored Nubians at Thebes. Subjugated, the elite Nubians began to
embrace the cultural and spiritual customs of Egypt—venerating Egyptian gods,
particularly Amun, using the Egyptian language, adopting Egyptian burial styles
and, later, pyramid building. The Nubians were arguably the first people to be
struck by “Egyptomania.”
Egyptologists of the latter 19th and early
20th centuries would interpret this as a sign of weakness. But they had it
wrong: The Nubians had a gift for reading the geopolitical tea leaves. By the
eighth century B.C., Egypt was riven by factions, the north ruled by Libyan
chiefs who put on the trappings of pharaonic traditions to gain legitimacy.
Once firmly in power, they toned down the theocratic devotion to Amun, and the
priests at Karnak feared a godless outcome. Who was in a position to return
Egypt to its former state of might and sanctity?
The Egyptian priests looked south and found
their answer—a people who, without setting foot inside Egypt, had preserved
Egypt’s spiritual traditions. As archaeologist Timothy Kendall of Northeastern
University puts it, the Nubians “had become more Catholic than the pope.”
Under Nubian rule, Egypt became Egypt
again. When Piye died in 715 B.C., his brother Shabaka solidified the 25th
dynasty by taking up residence in the Egyptian capital of Memphis. Like his
brother, Shabaka wed himself to the old pharaonic ways, adopting the throne
name of the 6th-dynasty ruler Pepi II, just as Piye had claimed the old throne
name of Thutmose III. Rather than execute his foes, Shabaka put them to work
building dikes to seal off Egyptian villages from Nile floods.
Shabaka lavished Thebes and the Temple of
Luxor with building projects. At Karnak he erected a pink granite statue
depicting himself wearing the Kushite crown of the double uraeus—the two cobras
signifying his legitimacy as Lord of the Two Lands. Through architecture as
well as military might, Shabaka signaled to Egypt that the Nubians were here to
stay.
To the east, the Assyrians were fast
building their own empire. In 701 B.C., when they marched into Judah in
present-day Israel, the Nubians decided to act. At the city of Eltekeh, the two
armies met. And although the Assyrian emperor, Sennacherib, would brag lustily
that he “inflicted defeat upon them,” a young Nubian prince, perhaps 20, son of
the great pharaoh Piye, managed to survive. That the Assyrians, whose tastes
ran to wholesale slaughter, failed to kill the prince suggests their victory
was anything but total.
In any event, when the Assyrians left town
and massed against the gates of Jerusalem, that city’s embattled leader,
Hezekiah, hoped his Egyptian allies would come to the rescue. The Assyrians
issued a taunting reply, immortalized in the Old Testament’s Book of II Kings:
“Thou trustest upon the staff of this bruised reed [of] Egypt, on which if a
man lean, it will go into his hand, and pierce it: So is Pharaoh king of Egypt
unto all that trust on him.”
Then, according to the Scriptures and other
accounts, a miracle occurred: The Assyrian army retreated. Were they struck by
a plague? Or, as Henry Aubin’s provocative book, The Rescue of Jerusalem,
suggests, was it actually the alarming news that the aforementioned Nubian
prince was advancing on Jerusalem? All we know for sure is that Sennacherib
abandoned the siege and galloped back in disgrace to his kingdom, where he was
murdered 18 years later, apparently by his own sons.
The deliverance of Jerusalem is not just
another of ancient history’s sidelights, Aubin asserts, but one of its pivotal
events. It allowed Hebrew society and Judaism to strengthen for another crucial
century—by which time the Babylonian king Nebuchadrezzar could banish the
Hebrew people but not obliterate them or their faith. From Judaism, of course,
would spring Christianity and Islam. Jerusalem would come to be recast, in all
three major monotheistic religions, as a city of a godly significance.
It has been easy to overlook, amid these
towering historical events, the dark-skinned figure at the edge of the
landscape—the survivor of Eltekeh, the hard-charging prince later referred to
by the Assyrians as “the one accursed by all the great gods”: Piye’s son
Taharqa.
So sweeping was Taharqa’s influence on
Egypt that even his enemies could not eradicate his imprint. During his rule,
to travel down the Nile from Napata to Thebes was to navigate a panorama of
architectural wonderment. All over Egypt, he built monuments with busts,
statues, and cartouches bearing his image or name, many of which now sit in
museums around the world. He is depicted as a supplicant to gods, or in the
protective presence of the ram deity Amun, or as a sphinx himself, or in a
warrior’s posture. Most statues were defaced by his rivals. His nose is often
broken off, to foreclose him returning from the dead. Shattered as well is the
uraeus on his forehead, to repudiate his claim as Lord of the Two Lands. But in
each remaining image, the serene self-certainty in his eyes remains for all to
see.
His father, Piye, had returned the true
pharaonic customs to Egypt. His uncle Shabaka had established a Nubian presence
in Memphis and Thebes. But their ambitions paled before those of the
31-year-old military commander who received the crown in Memphis in 690 B.C.
and presided over the combined empires of Egypt and Nubia for the next 26
years.
Taharqa had ascended at a favorable moment
for the 25th dynasty. The delta warlords had been laid low. The Assyrians,
after failing to best him at Jerusalem, wanted no part of the Nubian ruler.
Egypt was his and his alone. The gods granted him prosperity to go with the
peace. During his sixth year on the throne, the Nile swelled from rains,
inundating the valleys and yielding a spectacular harvest of grain without
sweeping away any villages. As Taharqa would record in four separate stelae,
the high waters even exterminated all rats and snakes. Clearly the revered Amun
was smiling on his chosen one.
Taharqa did not intend to sit on his
profits. He believed in spending his political capital. Thus he launched the
most audacious building campaign of any pharaoh since the New Kingdom (around
1500 B.C.), when Egypt had been in a period of expansion. Inevitably the two
holy capitals of Thebes and Napata received the bulk of Taharqa’s attention.
Standing today amid the hallowed clutter of the Karnak temple complex near
Thebes is a lone 62-foot-high column. That pillar had been one of ten, forming
a gigantic kiosk that the Nubian pharaoh added to the Temple of Amun. He also
constructed a number of chapels around the temple and erected massive statues
of himself and of his beloved mother, Abar. Without defacing a single
preexisting monument, Taharqa made Thebes his.
He did the same hundreds of miles upriver,
in the Nubian city of Napata. Its holy mountain Jebel Barkal—known for its
striking rock-face pinnacle that calls to mind a phallic symbol of
fertility—had captivated even the Egyptian pharaohs of the New Kingdom, who
believed the site to be the birthplace of Amun. Seeking to present himself as
heir to the New Kingdom pharaohs, Taharqa erected two temples, set into the
base of the mountain, honoring the goddess consorts of Amun. On Jebel Barkal’s
pinnacle—partially covered in gold leaf to bedazzle wayfarers—the black pharaoh
ordered his name inscribed.
Around the 15th year of his rule, amid the
grandiosity of his empire-building, a touch of hubris was perhaps overtaking
the Nubian ruler. “Taharqa had a very strong army and was one of the main
international powers of this period,” says Charles Bonnet. “I think he thought
he was the king of the world. He became a bit of a megalomaniac.”
The timber merchants along the coast of
Lebanon had been feeding Taharqa’s architectural appetite with a steady supply
of juniper and cedar. When the Assyrian king Esarhaddon sought to clamp down on
this trade artery, Taharqa sent troops to the southern Levant to support a
revolt against the Assyrian. Esarhaddon quashed the move and retaliated by
crossing into Egypt in 674 B.C. But Taharqa’s army beat back its foes.
The victory clearly went to the Nubian’s
head. Rebel states along the Mediterranean shared his giddiness and entered
into an alliance against Esarhaddon. In 671 B.C. the Assyrians marched with
their camels into the Sinai desert to quell the rebellion. Success was instant;
now it was Esarhaddon who brimmed with bloodlust. He directed his troops toward
the Nile Delta.
Taharqa and his army squared off against
the Assyrians. For 15 days they fought pitched battles—“very bloody,” by
Esarhaddon’s grudging admission. But the Nubians were pushed back all the way
to Memphis. Wounded five times, Taharqa escaped with his life and abandoned
Memphis. In typical Assyrian fashion, Esarhaddon slaughtered the villagers and
“erected piles of their heads.” Then, as the Assyrian would later write, “His
queen, his harem, Ushankhuru his heir, and the rest of his sons and daughters,
his property and his goods, his horses, his cattle, his sheep, in countless
numbers, I carried off to Assyria. The root of Kush I tore up out of Egypt.” To
commemorate Taharqa’s humiliation, Esarhaddon commissioned a stela showing
Taharqa’s son, Ushankhuru, kneeling before the Assyrian with a rope tied around
his neck.
As it happened, Taharqa outlasted the
victor. In 669 B.C. Esarhaddon died en route to Egypt, after learning that the
Nubian had managed to retake Memphis. Under a new king, the Assyrians once
again assaulted the city, this time with an army swollen with captured rebel
troops. Taharqa stood no chance. He fled south to Napata and never saw Egypt
again.
A measure of Taharqa’s status in Nubia is
that he remained in power after being routed twice from Memphis. How he spent
his final years is a mystery—with the exception of one final innovative act.
Like his father, Piye, Taharqa chose to be buried in a pyramid. But he eschewed
the royal cemetery at El Kurru, where all previous Kushite pharaohs had been
laid to rest. Instead, he chose a site at Nuri, on the opposite bank of the
Nile. Perhaps, as archaeologist Timothy Kendall has theorized, Taharqa selected
the location because, from the vista of Jebel Barkal, his pyramid precisely
aligns with the sunrise on ancient Egypt’s New Year’s Day, linking him in perpetuity
with the Egyptian concept of rebirth.
Just as likely, the Nubian’s motive will
remain obscure, like his people’s history.
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