The history of Sudan provides an exemplary and heroic role played by Sudanese queens (Kandakas) during the kingdoms of
Kushite and Nepta by resisting and defeating the Roman Empire in their attempt to conquer the kingdom of Nepta.
Far less compelling and more speculative is his further brief discussion of the identity of the biblical Shishak, likely a Ramesside, and of Zerah the
Kushite (2 Chron.
Kandaka Amanishaketo ruled
Kushite Kingdom for ten years and repulsed invasion attempt by the Roman Empire and held a number of its soldiers captives.
More pyramids call to be explored here than in Egypt; being here, one can imagine the wealth that the
Kushite Kingdoms drew to themselves and exported to eager customers living in a vast region spanning the Middle East and much of Africa.
Waziri pointed out that the canopic jars were found in a nearly cubic cutting in the floor in an intrusive burial compartment cut into the south wall of the Pillared Hall in the
Kushite tomb of Karabasken (TT 391).
The area of the Nile valley known as Nubia, which lies within present-day Sudan, was home to three
Kushite kingdoms during antiquity.
Highlights of her trip of a lifetime include riding a camel named Charlie Brown to Egypt's most famous landmark, the pyramids at Giza, her tour of the ancient tomb of
Kushite Queen Qalhata in Sudan, filled with fascinating hieroglyphics, and undergoing a Sudanese beauty treatment that involved sitting over a charcoal fire.
Highlights of her trip of a lifetime include riding a camel named Charlie Brown to Egypt's pyramids at Giza, her tour of the ancient tomb of
Kushite Queen Qalhata in Sudan, filled with fascinating hieroglyphics, and undergoing a Sudanese beauty treatment that involved sitting over a charcoal fire.
Highlights of her trip of a lifetime include riding a camel named Charlie Brown to Egypt's pyramids at Giza, her tour of the ancient tomb of
Kushite Queen Qalhata, in Sudan, filled with fascinating hieroglyphics, and undergoing a Sudanese beauty treatment that involved sitting over a charcoal fire.
But what is not so well-known is that, to manage their lives and their societies, Kemetic, Nubian and
Kushite leadership relied heavily upon divine mandate delivered via altered mental states like samadhi.
The answer is simple: The
Kushite kingdoms knew God and served the Almighty before Christ was born.