Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 304
Trim: 6 x 9
978-1-5381-3340-8 • Hardback • October 2020 • $132.00 • (£102.00)
978-1-5381-3341-5 • eBook • October 2020 • $125.00 • (£96.00)
Richard A. Lobban Jr.is a professional Africanist anthropologist and a writer on Sudanese or Nubian history for 50 years. He taught anthropology and African Studies at Rhode Island College where he retired as department Chair and began a second career teaching African and military studies for the US Navy.
PrefaceEditor’s ForewordAcknowledgementsReaders’ NotesGraphics and Captions ChronologyIntroductionThe DictionaryAppendices- Main Language Groups found in Medieval Nubia
- The Salvage of Ancient Nubian Temples in Egypt
- The Salvage of Ancient Nubian Temples in Sudan
- Implications of the High Dam at Aswan
- Bishops of Faras
- Kings of Christian Nubia
- Christian Faiths
BibliographyAbout the Author
“This new reference book is focused on Medieval Christian Nubia and its historical and religious context. This descends from the former Historical Dictionary of Ancient and Medieval Nubia (2004) that had combined both subjects, but new excavations and research have demanded a still deeper look at the often-neglected Christian civilizations on the Sudanese Nile. This is an extremely ample, comprehensive and deeper book by Lobban that neatly outlines and contextualizes the emergence and development of Christianity in Nubia. This region beyond the first cataract on the Nile contributed fundamentally to the development, continuity and distinctiveness of Mediterranean and African civilization evolving from the pre-Christian Greco-Roman period and evolved in the complex schisms within Christianity. This epoch was terminated by the rise of Islam in Sudan after almost 1,000 years, but actually lasted longer than the present period of Islam” Eugenio FantusatiProfessor, International Association of the Study of the Mediterranean and the Orient (ISMEO), Rome—
“It is vital that any book about Nubian history draw on relationships with contemporary Nubians, for this history belongs to them. Hence a central aspect of Richard Lobban’s work is to stay in close contact with the ‘insiders,’ the Nubians of today, listening to their understanding of their history and culture. For this reason, Dr. Lobban’s extensive knowledge of both ancient and medieval Nubia, as shown in this volume, will become a tool of reference not only for outsiders beginning or continuing Nubian studies but also for Nubians and, beyond them, Sudanese who ask themselves ‘Where do our people, and indeed myself, come from?’ and ‘Where are we heading?’”—Marcus Jaeger, Sudan Studies Association book review editor and linguist working in Nubian languages
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