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The Double Kingdom Under Taharqo

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The establishment of Kushite rule over Egypt during the eighth and seventh centuries BC resulted in a state of extraordinary geographic dimensions and ecological diversity, stretching from the trop...
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  • 17 January 2014
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The establishment of Kushite rule over Egypt during the eighth and seventh centuries BC resulted in a state of extraordinary geographic dimensions and ecological diversity, stretching from the tropics of Sudanese Nubia over 3,000 km to the Mediterranean. In The Double Kingdom under Taharqo, Jeremy Pope uses the copious documentary and archaeological evidence from Taharqo’s reign to address a series of questions which have dogged study of the Twenty-Fifth Dynasty: how was it possible for one king to control all of that territory? To what extent were the Kushite pharaohs’ strategies of governance influenced by the circumstances of their homeland versus the precedents of Egyptian and Libyan rule? And how did Kushite policies differ from those of their Saïte successors?

"Bringing to bear an impressive mastery of the sources and refreshingly open to anthropological and comparative approaches, Jeremy Pope's study is welcome in providing a close and careful analysis of varied sources, both historical and archaeological." David N. Edwards (University of Leicester)
"...a seminal work pioneering a new historical approach to the Twenty-Fifth Dynasty." László Török (Hungarian Academy of Sciences)
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Price: $310.00
Pages: 330
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Culture and History of the Ancient Near East
Publication Date: 17 January 2014
ISBN: 9789004262942
Format: Hardcover
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Jeremy Pope, Ph.D. (2010), Johns Hopkins University, is Assistant Professor in the Lyon Gardiner Tyler Department of History at The College of William and Mary. He has excavated at Karnak in Egypt, as well as at Gebel Barkal in Sudan.