Chapter 726: Escape

After Sedom was killed, his son fled to the Nubian region.

These Nubians, along with the Turkic tribes who had already arrived here, took Sedom's youngest son as the master, and these people continued to insist on fighting against the Tang Dynasty.

Catherine, as well as Tang Zhaozong, and Shi Baoqiang, the king of the Kingdom of David, joined forces to invade the country of Nubia.

The ancestors of the Nubians established a state four or five thousand years ago and conquered Egypt in the 8th century BC (25th dynasty). Later, the Nubians in Sudan suffered from Egyptian oppression for a long time. In modern times, it suffered from the brutal colonial rule of British imperialism. It was not until Egypt and Sudan gained independence that they were freed from the shackles of colonialism.

The ancient Nubians lived in a region of northeastern Africa that included present-day southern Egypt and northern Sudan. Nubia is bordered by the Nile River and the Sahara Desert on one side and the Red Sea on the other. The Nile flows from Sudan to Egypt. "Nile, Nile, Changbi Tianhe" is a proverb that Sudanese praise the Nile.

Nubia is the name of the ancient region of Northeast Africa, thousands of years ago, the ancient Egyptians called Sudan Nubia. Nubia roughly stretches from the first waterfall of the Nile River in the north, to the shores of the Red Sea in the east, to Khartoum in the south, and to the Libyan desert in the west. Its southern half stretches all the way to the southern end of the Second Falls of the Nile, known as Kush during the reign of the pharaohs of the 18th Dynasty of ancient Egypt.

By 6000 B.C., the same or similar forms of social organization and lifestyles already existed in the vast Nubian region, including hunting, fishing, animal husbandry, and related primitive agriculture. Today, thousands of years later, although some parts of the region have been covered by the Nubian desert, in ancient times, Nubia was home to many ancient cultures. Because of their geographical location, to the east, the Nubians interacted with the Arabs; To the north, they interacted with the ancient Egyptians and the peoples of the Mediterranean; Further south, they communicate with African peoples. As a result, in the thriving trade between Egypt and the tropical interior of Africa, generations of Nubians have been in the middleman business. Africa's tropical interior is home to a variety of natural riches: gold and other precious metals, ivory, amethyst, ebony, incense, ostrich eggs and ostrich feathers, wild animals and their furs, etc.

After the unification of Egypt (c. 3100 BC), Nubia's contacts with Egypt were accompanied by wars and plunder, as the sultans located on the upper Nile River had been one of the main targets of ancient Egypt's expansion. From the pharaohs of the First Dynasty of Egypt, Nubia's minerals began to be mined. Around 2613 B.C., Pharaoh Snefru plundered Nubia, destroying the local culture. During the 5th and 6th dynasties, the governors of the Egyptian province of Aswan began to trade long-distance in Nubia, but this trade was often accompanied by armed plunder.

The Nile River originates from the plateau that meets the Great Rift Valley, from Khartoum in Sudan to the north to the Aswan Dam, the Nile River makes several bends to form an "S" shaped bend, from Aswan in Egypt to Khartoum, the capital of Sudan, from north to south, the famous first to sixth waterfalls of the Nile River are distributed in this section of the river. The Dongura area, which is located between the third and fourth waterfalls, was once the center of the Kush kingdom due to its abundance of water and arable land. The Sixth Falls, north of Khartoum, formed the north-south border of Nubia, and further north, almost all the way to the Fifth Falls, with the wide Sandi Plains in between, the seat of the later Nubian kingdom of Meroe.

Around 1920 BCE, King Senuslett of Egypt marched up the Nile and invaded the lands of the dark-skinned Nubians. The Egyptians called this area Kushi, and for the Egyptians, they coveted it for a long time. First, there are precious metals and mineral resources buried here, especially gold; secondly, they were able to catch a lot of cattle and slaves in this area; The third was that the Egyptians understood that through Kush they could penetrate deep into Africa and trade with the people there in exchange for ebony, ivory, and spices.

Over the centuries, the two kingdoms were invaded, and the Kushites looted much of Egyptian treasures and brought them back to their capital, Colmar. Colmar was built near the Third Waterfall on the Nile, on the territory of present-day Sudan.

Although this vast area, which stretches for nearly 1,000 miles (from the first to the sixth fall), has long been referred to as the source of ancient Egyptian culture, Nubia was not given enough attention until the 19th century.

The Nubians are an ancient people who have lived in present-day Egypt and Sudan since the time of ancient Egypt. After more than 1,000 years of evolution, the Nubians have formed a unique religious atmosphere and customs. Every Friday at dusk, Nubians come to Omdurman, across the river from the capital Khartoum, and gather in the lost Nubian city of Danger, the mausoleum of the Sufi sage Sheikh Hamid Al-Neil. The city was occupied by a presence in the latter part of the Merovian era, and then mysteriously abandoned. The place is facing an imminent crisis of an imminent invasion of a village's expansion, and now is their last chance to dig up the mystery. Archaeologists have discovered in time to help rewrite the cultural meaning of the Melovian period of Nubian culture, which lasted from the 3rd century BC to the 3rd century AD.

Dating back to before 3100 B.C., Nubia was the first black culture on Earth, and many believe that they were the first human race on Earth.

It is also possible that Nubia was the origin of life, the legendary Garden of Eden. For generations, Nubia has been shining culturally and economically. But suddenly it mysteriously declined and then was forgotten, and no one cared about it. It was only recently that an important discovery by a young Canadian archaeologist and her African colleagues sparked renewed interest in the abandoned Garden of Eden.

They knocked on the door of an unusually large, well-preserved temple of Amun for two thousand years. The god Amun was the national god of the sheep-headed human body and granted the throne to the ruler of Merovian. Perhaps due to arson, the temple appears to have been abandoned in a hurry. In a passage about King Akson, he claims that he took the capital of Melovi, 90 miles south of Danger. All indications are that the city of Danger may have suffered the same fate.

The above bilingual literature may be the key to deciphering the incomprehensible language of the Merovian. In short, there is no shortage of artifacts with Merovian script. Anderson's team has found countless stone slabs and inscriptions carved into the temple walls. But without that decryption stele, they are still mysterious heavenly books. By the time people can speak Nubian, they may be able to unravel their secrets

(End of chapter)