Egyptian-African relations in the era of the modern state 1550-1090 BC

Document Type : Brief summaries of Dissertations.

Author

Institute of African Research and Studies and Nile Basin . University of Aswan

Abstract

Abstract

The research talks about the Egyptian-African relations in the late era, as the Egyptian-African relations in this period changed from the previous period in the era of the modern state, where it began to secure the southern borders of Egypt and continued military campaigns to Africa until it reached the Sixth Cataract, as well as commercial trips to Africa until it reached the country Punt, but soon the nature of these relations changed in the era of the twenty-first dynasty until Egypt lost control over the African regions and during the era of the twenty-second dynasty The kings of this family tried again to control some African regions and secure the southern borders, and in the era of the twenty-fourth dynasty, these relations changed through the conflict that took place between the founder of the Kushite dynasty in the ancient Sudan, which ended with the control of the Kushite king Ankhi over most of Egypt, and the twenty-fifth dynasty began in Egypt With the Kushite kings who occupied Egypt for nearly a hundred years, with the beginning of the twenty-sixth dynasty, whose kings tried to seize the Egyptian possessions in Africa. During the period of Persian rule of Egypt, their kings tried to carry out campaigns to conquer Africa, but it ended in failure, and the thirtieth dynasty came until the Egyptian-African relations changed completely

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