Home / Full timeline / Black Pharaoh Usertesen III of Egypt drives back the Black tribes of the Upper Nile Valley and attempts to confine them to the edge of the Nubian Desert. There, they set up the state of Napata.
Black Pharaoh Usertesen III of Egypt drives back the Black tribes of the Upper Nile Valley and attempts to confine them to the edge of the Nubian Desert. There, they set up the state of Napata.
c. 2660 BC - 22 BC
Usertesen III (also known as Senusrat III) drove back the Black tribes of the Upper Nile Valley and attempted to confine them to the edge of the Nubian Desert above the Second Cataract. Hemmed in here, they set up the state of Napata. Less than one hundred years later an African from the south, Ra Nehesi, was seated on the throne of the pharaohs and was called "the King's eldest son." This may mean that an incursion from the far south had placed a Black conqueror on the throne. The whole empire was in some way shaken, and two hundred years later the invasion of the Hyksos began. The domination of Hyksos kings, who may have been Blacks from Asia, lasted for 500 years.
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.