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Under Egyptian pharaoh Shoshenq I, the Ethiopian kingdom expands and rules all of Egypt for a century.
750 BC - 308 BC
When Black Egyptian pharaoh Shesheng (or Shoshenq) I, the Libyan, seized the throne of the pharaohs in the tenth century BC, the Egyptian legitimate dynasty went to Napata as king priests and established a theocratic monarchy. Gathering strength, the Ethiopian kingdom under this dynasty expanded north around 750 BC and for a century ruled all of Egypt. During the early Napata period there were twenty-six Black kings. The first king was Piankhy (Piankhi) and some of his successors were Kashta the Kushite, Shabaka, Tarharqa (Taharka), and Tanutamen. Napata was an administrative center and became the first capital of Kush.
References:
- • Diggs, E. I. (1983). Black Chronology: From 4000 B.C. to the abolition of the Slave Trade. G.K. Hall. Retrieved from https://archive.org/details/blackchronologyf0000digg/page/n5/mode/2up.