Visit Egypt Nubia KS2b
Visit Egypt Nubia KS2b
Visit Egypt Nubia KS2b
Nubia
Contents
Before your visit
Background information Resources Gallery information Preliminary activities
Nubia
Nubia
Background information
The African land of ancient Nubia was located in the Nile Valley immediately to the south of ancient Egypt. Over time, people in this region developed a number of cultures which drew on both African and Egyptian traditions. The Nubians traded extensively with Egypt and on occasions Nubian kings dominated Egypt.
Nubia was divided into two main regions: Lower Nubia and Upper Nubia. Lower Nubia was the northern region extending nearly 400 km from the First Nile Cataract to the area around Semna and the Second Nile Cataract. Today, it corresponds to the area of southern Egypt and northern Sudan. Upper Nubia (which was south of Lower Nubia) extended upriver along the Nile to the Sixth Nile Cataract and Khartoum. It corresponds to what is today central Sudan. The Nile River as it flows through this region is often called the Middle Nile.
A cataract on the River Nile is a section of river which flowed over rocks resulting in a section of fast flowing rapids rather than a stretch of navigable water channel.
Nubia was an important link between sub-Saharan Africa, North Africa and the Mediterranean world. The region had one of the earliest urbanized societies in north-east Africa, was crossed by important trade routes between Africa and the Mediterranean and contained rich natural resources. The ancient Egyptian pharaohs obtained large quantities of gold from Nubian mines. Control of the area passed repeatedly between the local rulers and the Egyptian pharaohs.
Nubia
Nubia
Resources
British Museum websites
Explore
The British Museum website allows you to look at over 5000 objects from the Museums collection online. To investigate objects from Nubia use the Explore option on the homepage of the British Museum website. www.britishmuseum.org
Books
For adults
Edwards, David N. The Nubian Past: An Archaeology of the Sudan, Routledge, 2004. Taylor, John H, Egypt and Nubia, British Museum Press, 1991 Welsby, D, and Anderson J. (Eds.), Sudan Ancient Treasures, British Museum Press, 2004.
For children
Filer, Joyce, Pocket Explorer Ancient Egypt and the Nile, British Museum Press, 2007
Nubia
Gallery information
Room 65 looks at the different peoples and cultures that developed in Nubia. It also looks at the interaction and contacts between Nubia and Egypt.
The objects illustrate the material culture of the Nubians from the fifth millennium BC to the Islamic period. They include objects from the kingdom of Kush (2500-1500 BC), the oldest sub-Saharan African kingdom, and ceramics, metalwork and sculpture from the Kushite kingdom which flourished in the region from the ninth century BC to the fourth century AD (including a wall from the pyramid chapel of a Nubian queen). Several objects are inscribed in Meroitic, the indigenous language of Kush, which remains untranslated.
Many objects show influences and similarities between Nubian and Egyptian cultural traits and there are sculptures from Egyptian settlements and fortresses in the region.
Case Numbers
Please note that case numbers are usually small, white and high up on the glass.
Nubia
Preliminary activities
General introductory activities
Locate the area covered by the land of ancient Nubia in an atlas and look at the modern countries which currently exist in this region of the world. Compare key dates in Nubian history with those of other ancient civilizations. Use the Explore function to look at objects from Nubia and Egypt on the British Museum website.
Nubia
Nubia
Each activity is designed to support the students in looking at, and thinking about, objects on display in the gallery. Individual activity sheets may be undertaken by single students, in pairs or as a small group. Where space is provided for recording this may be undertaken by the student or an adult helper as is most appropriate for the students involved.
Familiarise the students and accompanying adults with the chosen activity sheets at school before the day of the visit. Make sure students and adults know what they are to do and are familiar with the vocabulary used on the sheets or which they may encounter in the gallery.
Nubia
Gallery activity
Room 65
Tribute frieze
Look at the reproduction of a frieze showing tribute being brought from Nubia to the Egyptian pharaoh and talk about what you can see happening on it . Circle the animals you can see : leopard cow giraffe gazelle lion ostrich
Circle the people you can see : the Egyptian pharaoh Circle the objects you can see : bags of gold Nubians Egyptian officials
feather fans
chairs
tables
Use the boxes to describe how you would feel if you were at the tribute procession. What sounds would you hear? What noises would the animals and people make?
Now share your ideas with the group to build up an impression of what it would have been like to watch a procession such as this in ancient times.
Gallery activity
Room 65
Shabti a small figure which was placed in tombs so that it could work for the tomb owner in the afterlife
Bronze statue small statues were often made as religious gifts and taken to the temples to please the gods
Now discuss which object you think is most similar to one found in Egypt.
Gallery activity
Room 65
Fabric decoration
Pot decoration
Decide on your favourite decorative pattern and talk to the others in your group about the colours and shapes used to create the pattern.
Gallery activity
Room 65
Luxury goods
The Nubians traded with people further south in Africa for valuable materials such as ivory and ebony (a hard, dark wood).
Find this painting which shows Nubians carrying luxury goods to the Egyptian pharaoh.
Look at the painting. Circle each of the following materials that can you see:
gold rings
gold nuggets
a baboon
a monkey
leopard skins
giraffe tails
Now go round to the other side of the case and look at the objects on display which are made from some of these precious materials. Write what objects you can see that are made from these materials:
ivory
ebony
What objects would you have made for yourself from these luxury materials? Perhaps you would like one object which used them all, such as a very expensive decorated chair.
Nubia
Nubia
Nubia
Nubia