Napata
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Napata was a city on the west bank of the Nile River, some 400 km north of Khartoum, the present capital of Sudan. It was built around 1450 BC by the Nubians.
Contents |
[edit] The Rise of Napata
Since Early Dynastic times, Egyptians had been interested in Nubia, an area very rich in gold. They soon controlled that trade, which did not profit the Nubians, so that Egypt became an imperialistic power in Nubia. Egyptian customs, habits, religions spread into the land.
In 1075 BC, the High Priest of Amun at Thebes, capital of Ancient Egypt, became powerful enough to limit the power of the pharaoh over Upper Egypt. This was the beginning of the Third Intermediate Period (1075 BC-664 BC). The fragmentation of power in Egypt allowed the Nubians to regain autonomy. They founded a new kingdom, Kush, and centered it at Napata.
They began exploiting gold to their own profit. The economical growth of Kush attracted some Egyptians, who left their country, which was undergoing several political troubles, including the Libyan power over part of Lower Egypt, the subdivision of Egypt into small and relatively powerless kingdoms, and the menace of Assyrian conquest.
[edit] Kings of Napata and the conquest of Egypt
In 750 BC, Napata was a developed city, while Egypt was still suffering political instability. King Kasha profited from it, and attacked Upper Egypt. His policy was pursued by his successors Piankhi, and Shabaka (713-698 BC), who eventually brought the whole Nile Valley under Kushitic control. Shabaka also launched a monument-building policy in Egypt and Nubia. Overall, Kushite Kings ruled over Upper Egypt for one century and the whole Egypt for approximately 57 years. They constitute the Twenty-fifth Dynasty in Manetho’s work, Aegyptiaca.
Around 670 BC, the Assyrian King Esarhaddon (681-669 BC) conquered Lower Egypt, but allowed small kingdoms in Lower Egypt to still exist, in order to enlist them as his allies against Ethiopian rulers, who had been accepted with reluctance. When, King Assurbanipal succeeded Esarhaddon, the Ethiopian king Taharqa convinced some rulers of Lower Egypt to break with Assyrians. However, Asshurbanipal overpowered the coalition and deported the Egyptian leaders to his capital, Niniveh. He made Libyan chief Necho, ruler of Memphis and Sais. Necho I was the first king of the Twenty-sixth Dynasty (664BC-525BC) of Ancient Egypt. A new Ethiopian King Tantamani (664-656BC) killed him the same year that Taharqa died, in 664 BC. But Tantamani was then unable to defeat Necho’s son Psammetichus, backed by Assyrians. Tantamani eventually abandoned the conquering policy, and went back to Napata.
Back at Napata, Ethiopians became interested only in developing their own kingdom, which underwent no conquest, notwithstanding the expansionist policies of Assyrians, Babylonians, Persians and Greeks.
[edit] Civilization of Napata
Napata began reaching its height after Tantamani came back from the war against the Assyrians. Its economy was essentially due to gold. Egypt was an important economic ally. Napata could have traded copper with a kingdom in Central Africa between the 8th and 9th Centuries (UNESCO, 2003). In 660 BC, Nubians started exploiting gold, inaugurating the African Iron Age.
People of Napata were culturally egyptianized. Napatan paintings, writing script and other artistic and cultural forms were in Egyptian style. Egyptian burial customs were practiced and several Egyptian gods were worshipped. Moreover, the most important god was Amun, a Theban deity. his temple was the most important at Napata, located at the foot of Jebel Barkal, the sacred mountain of Nubians.
[edit] The fall of Napata
Around 300BC, anti-Egyptian feelings motivated the people of Napata to make their culture distinct from that of Egyptians. Furthermore, the capital was suffering politically and economically as well: Napata lost its economic influence since Egyptians were no longer autonomous (see The Late Period of ancient Egypt), the Napatan region itself was desiccating, leading to less cattle and agriculture. Moreover, a powerful Persian raid had seriously affected Napata in 591 BC. Finally, Napata was losing its role of economic capital to Meroë. The Island of Meroë, the Peninsula formed by the Nile and the Atbara courses, was an area rich in iron, which was becoming an essential source of wealth.
Meroe eventually became the capital of the kingdom of Kush, leading to the abandonment of Napata. In "The Deeds of the Divine Augustus," Augustus claims that "a penetration was made as far as the town of Napata, which is next to Meroe..."[1]
[edit] References
- ^ Augsutus, "The Deeds of the Divine Augustus," Exploring the European Past: Texts & Images, Second Edition, ed. Timothy E. Gregory (Mason: Thomson, 2008), 119.
- Hornung, Erik.1999.History of Ancient Egypt, An Introduction. Translated from German by David Lorton. Grundzüge der ägyptischen Geschichte. New York, USA: Cornell University Press
- Grimal Nicolas.1992. A History of Ancient Egypt. Translated from French by Ian Shaw. Histoire de L’Egypte Ancienne. Oxford, UK: Blackwell Publishers.
- Bianchi, Steven.1994. The Nubians. Connecticut, USA: Millbrook Press
- Taylor, John. 1991. Egypt and Nubia. London, UK: The British Museum Press
- UNESCO.2003.General History Of Africa Vol.2 Ancient Civilizations of Africa