Black Pharaohs
KwameAl-Sudan
あらすじ
For centuries, the story of ancient Egypt has been told in fragments-golden tombs, monumental pyramids, gods carved in stone. But missing from most tellings is the chapter where the kings of Kush, from the land we now call Sudan, marched north and claimed the throne of Egypt. These were not outsiders-they were Africans shaped by centuries of shared culture, faith, and blood. They saw themselves not as conquerors, but as restorers. In the 8th century BCE, while Egypt was divided and spiritually adrift, the Nubian pharaohs brought unity, renewal, and a return to divine order. They reigned not in imitation of Egypt's past glory, but in continuity with its sacred traditions-reviving temples, honoring the gods, and commanding one of the largest empires the Nile would ever see. Yet, their legacy has been buried-first by the sands of time, then by the biases of modern scholarship. Colonial historians downplayed or dismissed the 25th Dynasty, uncomfortable with the idea that Africa's heartland once ruled over one of humanity's most celebrated civilizations. This book seeks to correct that record. Here, we resurrect the lives of kings like Piye and Taharqa, explore the grandeur of Napata and Meroë, and trace a river of culture and power that flowed not from north to south, but from Africa's deep interior outward. This is not just a story of pharaohs. It is a story of reclamation-of Africa's place at the center of world history.