www.cofc.edu/~piccione/index.html
Back to Ancient History Sourcebook | Ancient History Sourcebook: Accounts of Mer e, Kush, and Axum, c. 430 BCE - 550 CE Below are the main accounts of Ancient Nubia and Ethiopia from classical sources. There are a few accounts missing from this text: Pliny the Elder, Claudius Ptolemaeus, and the Periplus, though they used the same source that Strabo did. Diodorus Siculus is also missing. The ...
www.fordham.edu/halsall/ancient/nubia1.html
Information about the Kingdom of Kush and Ancient Nubia. Include photo gallery.
www.homestead.com/wysinger/ancientafrica1.html
Images from World History: Ancient Sudan: Kingdom of Meroe (4th c. B.C. to 325 A.D.) ...
www.hp.uab.edu/image_archive/um/uml.html
Kingdom of Kush Beginner Level: The Kingdom of Kush (or Cush) was one of the most important in the history of the African Continent. Its existence was closely tied to ancient Egypt. The kingdom of Kush was situated in what is the home of the Nubian people today. As a result, various Websites refer to Nubia and Kush as if they are identical. The Kushite kingdom originated in the fourth millenium ...
www.stockton.edu/~gilmorew/consorti/1iafric.htm
MEROE. The royal city The kingdom of Meroe existed in 1, 200 years, only to continue in the shape of the kingodm of Nubia, which lasted another 1, 100 years. Of these two kingdoms, Meroe was a great power in its days, strong enough to eat up Egypt for half a century. The region manged to impress the people of its time, housing agricultural achievements and efficient iron industry, a high culture, ...
i-cias.com/m.s/sudan/meroe.htm