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    • Beja | Nomadic, East Africa, Cushitic | Britannica
      • Essentially pastoralists, the Beja move over vast distances with their flocks and herds of cattle and camels on whose produce—milk, butter, and meat—they subsist almost entirely. The Beja trace their ancestry through the father’s line, and their kinship organization resembles that of the Arabs.
      www.britannica.com/topic/Beja-people
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  2. 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]

  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. Nov 8, 2023 · The Beja people are organised into four main tribes, each presided over by a leader known as a “Nather.” These tribes are the Bisharis, Amarar, Hadendoa and Beni Amer, as detailed in the book Peoples and Tribes of Northern Sudan.

  5. The Beja people are an ancient Cushitic people closely kin to the ancient Egyptians, who have lived in the desert between the Nile river and the Red Sea since at least 25000 BC. Various Beja groups have intermarried with Arab or southern (dark) Cushites over the centuries.

  6. Dec 20, 2017 · A nomadic Beja tribal kingdom that thrived from around 600 BC to the 3rd century AD was named as “Blemmyes” in ancient Roman days. This kingdom was situated in Nubia, the seat of some of the earliest civilizations of ancient Africa.

  7. The Beja are descended from peoples who have lived in the area since 4000 bc or earlier. They are grouped into tribes, and some speak a Cushitic language called To Bedawi (though some speak Tigre and many use Arabic). Many Beja converted to Christianity in the 6th century, but most have been Muslim since the 13th century.

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