The First Ethiopians. Malvern van Wyk Smith

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EGYPT (3100–30)

       Archaic Period–Old Kingdom (3100–2134)

3100–2650 Dynasties I–II
2650–2134 Old Kingdom, Dynasties III–VIII

       First Intermediate Period (2234–2040)

2134–2040 Dynasties IX–X (Heracleopolis)
2134–1991 Dynasty XI (Thebes)

       Middle Kingdom (2040–1674)

2040–1991 Dynasty XI (all Egypt)
1991–1786 Dynasty XII
1786–1674 Dynasty XIII

       Second Intermediate Period (1674–1566)

1674–1566 Hyksos Dominion
1674–1566 Dynasties XIV–XVII (minor Hyksos and Theban rulers)

       New Kingdom (1550–1080)

1550–1293 Dynasty XVIII
1293–1184 Dynasty XIX
1184–1080 Dynasty XX

       Third Intermediate Period (1070–663)

1070–945 Dynasty XXI
945–712 Dynasty XXII (Tanis)
805–712 Dynasty XXIII (Leontopolis)
718–712 Dynasty XXIV (Memphis)
712–663 Kushite Dynasty XXV
671–663 Assyrian invasion

       Late Period (663–30)

663–525 Dynasty XXVI (Saïte)
525–405 Persian occupation, Dynasty XXVII

       Egyptian Independence (405–343)

405–399 Dynasty XXVIII
399–380 Dynasty XXIX
380–343 Dynasty XXX
343–332 Persian reconquest
332–323 Alexander the Great
323–30 Ptolemaic rulers

      INTRODUCTION

      To us in the West, Africa is that part of the world which remains most deeply endowed with the two central facets of the other; that is, the mysterious and the exotic.

      —Patrick Chabal, The African Crisis: Context and Interpretation’, 1996, 45

      I thought for some reason even then of Africa, not a particular place, but a shape, a strangeness, a wanting to know.

      —Graham Greene, Journey without Maps, 1936

      This book is a history of the idea of ‘Africa’ in the consciousness of the early Mediterranean and European world. G.M. Young once remarked that ‘the real, central theme of history is not what happened, but what people felt about it when it was happening’ (1952, vi), and the present study has been conceived in these terms.

      In 1979 Jean Devisse concluded the second volume of the magisterial The Image of the Black in Western Art, produced for the Menil Foundation by a team of scholars under the general editorship of Ladislas Bugner, with the following thoughts:

      Many see the sixteenth century as the starting point of relations between Europe and Black Africa, and in a way this is not inexact, give or take fifty years. This book, however, proves that these relations had a long prehistory. If Africa hardly dreamed of Europe before the middle of the fifteenth century, Europe, on the other hand, had had certain images of the black continent and its peoples for centuries before (1979, 2: 2. 258).

      Despite Devisse’s optimism that the Bugner enterprise had ‘proven’ the long antecedence of European images of Africa and Africans, these volumes also made it clear that much further work was needed to explain the provenance and import, rather than merely to record the persistence, of such images. In his Preface to the first volume of The Image of the Black in Western Art, the general editor had himself suggested one way forward: ‘What is most urgently needed is an in-depth examination of the literary sources in relation to our theme.’ This sentiment chimed well with my own interests at the time.

      A life-long personal engagement with a particular set of perceptions of Africa, namely those of a white South African, seemed to confer privileged insights into the iconographic history of Africa in the European imagination even as it challenged the very substance and legitimacy of such concepts. Unlike Patrick Chabal, I am not one of ‘us in the West’, but have experienced Africa as both ‘mysterious and exotic’, yet also as home and intimate. Growing up in one of the world’s most unambivalently pariah states, namely apartheid South Africa, yet with no other country to think of remotely as home, I had to embark on an early intellectual pilgrimage to resolve how I could relate to that vast landmass and its people north of me, a world of which I was an unmistakable part, but that was somehow also forbidden and (officially) irredeemably ‘other’.

      An early venture into such explorations produced a study of the poetry of the Anglo-Boer War (Van Wyk Smith, 1978), in which I attempted to place the substantial legacy of verse that this southern African conflict of 1899–1902 had produced within the wider history and context of the emergence of the poetry of war. In 1988, at the time of the by-then inevitably controversial commemoration of the rounding of the Cape of Good Hope by the Portuguese in 1488 and the resultant colonisation of southern Africa, it seemed appropriate to compile an anthology of poetry inspired by this theme, from the Lusiads onward, that stressed not the celebratory and imperialist aspects, but rather the tragic endeavours and missed opportunities of that high emprise (Van Wyk Smith, 1988).

      But by the late 1980s, it had also become clear to me that the southern African encounter between indigenous peoples and Europeans, and the conflicts among rival imperial powers in the region, had not only rehearsed ancient European-African disharmonies, but were the local manifestation of racial dynamics, expansionist drives,

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