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II The Beja Country and its Tribes 12 III Beja Origins 20 IV The Gold and Incense Lands (2500-50 B.C.) 27 V The Sabaeans and the Kingdom of Axum 38 (700 B.C.-A.D. 750) VI The Enemies of Rome (50 B.C.-A.D. 640) P VII The Arab Infiltration (640-1520) 64 VIII The Subjugation of the Tigre (750-1700) 80 IX The Turkia (I pO-I 880) 91
Feb 10, 2022 · printdisabled. External-identifier. urn:oclc:record:1302093230. urn:lcp:historyofbejatri0000paul:lcpdf:f329c015-9e41-40aa-8e72-7f3a3946f583. urn:lcp:historyofbejatri0000paul:epub:9d61bb41-8969-4763-b662-4581728331a3. Foldoutcount. 0. Identifier. historyofbejatri0000paul.
The Beja language is spoken in the eastern part of the Sudan by some 1,100,000 Muslim people, according to the 1998 census. It belongs to the Cushitic family of the Afro-Asiatic
Feb 14, 2023 · The chapter traces how nomadic people with claims to certain territories in Eastern Sudan came to be identified as Beja. Foreign interests in Beja territory have a long historical trajectory: Egyptian pharaohs, Roman and Arab armies have all invaded to extract gold and mineral resources.
Nov 8, 2023 · The Beja people are a distinct social and cultural ethnic group in Sudan and Egypt that have suffered from neglect and marginalisation. They constitute the most extensive non-Arab ethnic group from the Red Sea to the Nile.
The Beja, or Bedawiye, people speaking the Northern Cushitic language called “Bedawiet”, have literally since “time immemorial” occupied the Eastern deserts of Sudan, Egypt and possibly Eritrea.
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Abstract. Chapter Eight, “The Beja in Time and Space” is the first of two chapters pondering a curious anomaly that occurs in every medieval Islamic map of the world. Located on the eastern flank of Africa is a double-territorial ethnonym for an obscure East African tribe: the Beja.