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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Beja_peopleBeja people - Wikipedia

    Beja figure on Twelfth Dynasty ancient Egyptian tomb. The Beja are traditionally Cushitic-speaking pastoral nomads native to northeast Africa, referred to as Blemmyes in ancient texts. The geographer Abu Nasr Mutahhar al-Maqdisi wrote in the tenth century that the Beja were at that time Christians. [11]

  2. 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.

  3. Beja, nomadic people grouped into tribes and occupying mountain country between the Red Sea and the Nile and Atbara rivers from the latitude of Aswān southeastward to the Eritrean Plateau—that is, from southeastern Egypt through Sudan and into Eritrea. Numbering about 1.9 million in the early 21st.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Sep 20, 2012 · A cultural profile of the Beja people of Sudan, Eritrea and Egypt. The Beja are a grouping of dozens of smaller groups, who have varied origins. Though some of the Beja are from Arabic or Sabean (Tigre) stock, the base of the physical stock is ancient Cushite, distantly related to the ancient Egyptians.

  5. Origins of Beja Mythology. Beja mythology has its roots in the ancient Cushitic cultures of the Horn of Africa. The Beja people were traditionally nomadic herders and hunters, and their mythology reflects their close relationship with the natural world.

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  7. Dec 4, 2022 · The Beja people come from eastern Sudan, living between the mountains and the Red Sea coast, an area which is rich in gold and other resources but with little to show for it.

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