Teacher's guide: Nubia and Sudan BUCHUNGEN TELEFON 089 -289 27-626 FA X 089 -289 27-707
[email protected] TELEFON MUSEUM 089 -289 27-630 ARCISSTRASSE 16 80333 MÜNCHEN DEUTSCHLAND WWW.SMAEK.DE Seite 2 The Rediscovery of Nubia European authors contemporary to Ancient Nubia were well aware of its existence – the Greeks called the entire area south of Egypt, regardless of culture, “Ethiopia” (“the land of those burned by the sun”). Herodotus, Diodorus, Strabo, Cassius Dio and Pliny all described it, and it even gets a mention in the Bible: ”… and lo, a man from the land of the Blackamoors, a Chamberlain and high official of the Candace, Queen of the Ethiopians [Meroë], who was in charge of her Treasury, had come to Jerusalem to worship.” [Acts 8:27]. Later, numerous Early Church Fathers reported on the Christianisation of the Sudan in the 6th century; of particular importance are the works of John of Ephesus. In more modern times, James Bruce was the first to recognise Ancient Meroë in the pyramid field of Begrawiyah in 1722. When Mohammed Ali sent his troops into the Sudan in pursuit of the last of the Mameluks in 1821 – and conquered the Funji Sultanate of Sennar in the process – European adventurers among the soldiers were curious about the ruins and wrote the first reports about them, sparking more interest in Ancient Nubia. The most prominent of these pioneers in archaeology is French naturalist Frédéric Cailliaud whose work, published in 1826, remains indispensable today, as it documents both in writing and sketches many sites that are now destroyed.