Examples of Kush in the following topics:
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Nubia
- This is the earliest Egyptian reference to Kush.
- During the New Kingdom of Egypt, Nubia (Kush) was an Egyptian colony, from the 16th century BCE.
- In addition, Kush was no longer dependent on the Nile to trade with the outside world.
- Christianity began to gain over the old pharaonic religion, and by the mid-6th century CE the Kingdom of Kush was dissolved.
- Explain some of the sources of wealth that the Kingdom of Kush had access to
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Art and Architecture in the Kingdom of Kush
- The Kingdom of Kush was an ancient African state whose art and architecture were inspired by Egyptian design, but were distinctly African.
- The Kingdom of Kush was an ancient African state situated on the confluences of the Blue Nile, White Nile, and River Atbara in what is now the Republic of Sudan.
- Established after the Bronze Age collapse and the disintegration of the New Kingdom of Egypt, Kush was centered at Napata in modern day northern Sudan in its early phase, and then moved further south to Meroë in 591 BCE.
- The kings of Kush adopted the Egyptian architectural idea of building pyramids as funerary monuments.
- Evaluate the influence of both Egyptian and African art on the art produced by the Kingdom of Kush
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The Achaemenid Empire
- This expansion continued even further afield with Anatolia and the Armenian Plateau, much of the Southern Caucasus, Macedonia, parts of Greece and Thrace, Central Asia as far as the Aral Sea, the Oxus and Jaxartes areas, the Hindu Kush and the western Indus basin, and parts of northern Arabia and northern Libya.
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Kingdom of Aksum
- The state established its hegemony over the declining Kingdom of Kush and regularly entered the politics of the kingdoms on the Arabian Peninsula, eventually extending its rule over the region with the conquest of the Himyarite Kingdom.
- By 350, Aksum conquered the Kingdom of Kush.
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Expansion and Decline of the Kushan Empire
- The Yuezhi reached the Greco-Bactrian Kingdom, located in northern Afghanistan and Uzbekistan, around 135 BCE, and displaced the Greek dynasties that resettled to the southeast in areas of the Hindu Kush and the Indus basin, in present-day Afghanistan and Pakistan.
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The Third Intermediate Period
- Rulers under this dynasty originated in the Nubian Kingdom of Kush.
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Art of Ancient Africa
- The Nubian Kingdom of Kush in modern Sudan was in close and often hostile contact with Egypt, and produced monumental sculpture mostly derivative of styles that did not lead to the north.
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Rise of the Maurya Empire
- At its greatest extent, the empire stretched to the north along the natural boundaries of the Himalayas, to the east into Assam, to the west into Balochistan (southwest Pakistan and southeast Iran) and into the Hindu Kush mountains of what is now Afghanistan.