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      A NOMADIC STATE? THE ‘BLEMMYEAN-BEJA’ POLITY OF THE ANCIENT EASTERN DESERT

      The Journal of African History
      Cambridge University Press (CUP)

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          Abstract

          Ancient nomadic peoples in Northeast Africa, being in the shadow of urban regimes of Egypt, Kush, and Aksum as well as the Graeco-Roman and Arab worlds, have been generally relegated to the historiographical model of the frontier ‘barbarian’. In this view, little political importance is attached to indigenous political organisation, with desert nomads being considered an amorphous mass of unsettled people beyond the frontiers of established states. However, in the Eastern Desert of Sudan and Egypt, a pastoralist nomadic people ancestrally related to the modern Beja dominated the deserts for millennia. Though generally considered as a group of politically divided tribes sharing only language and a pastoralist economy, ancient Beja society and its elites created complex political arrangements in their desert. When Egyptian, Greek, Coptic, and Arab sources are combined and analysed, it is evident that nomads formed a large confederate ‘nomadic state’ throughout late antiquity and the early medieval period — a vital cog in the political engine of Northeast Africa.

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          Most cited references30

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          Alternative Complexities: The Archaeology of Pastoral Nomadic States

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            MEROE AND THE SUDANIC KINGDOMS

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              From stone to metal: New perspectives on the later prehistory of West Africa

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                The Journal of African History
                J. Afr. Hist.
                Cambridge University Press (CUP)
                0021-8537
                1469-5138
                November 2020
                February 10 2021
                November 2020
                : 61
                : 3
                : 383-407
                Article
                10.1017/S0021853720000602
                982504e1-1c3a-41f3-b7be-b988d7ce86db
                © 2020

                https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms

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