Madiqen

Ɛfi Wikipedia

Na Madiqen yɛ Nubia hemmaa a na ɔwɔ Misrifo abodin sɛ ɔhene yere, ɔhene yere a ɔte ase [1] ne ɔhene nuabea . Na ne maame yɛ ɔhemmaa Nasalsa . Ɛda adi kɛse sɛ na ne papa yɛ ɔhene Senkamanisken . Wonnim n’ahemfie kunu no yiye, nanso ɛda adi kɛse sɛ Aspelta ne Anlamani na wobetumi apaw. [2] Wonim Madiqen fi bere a wosiee no wɔ Nuri (Nu 27) . Na n’asie yɛ pyramid a asɔredan ketewaa bi wɔ n’anim. Antweri bi wɔ hɔ a esian kɔ amusiei adan abien a wohuu sɛ wɔafow nneɛma no mu. Wohuu sika kɔkɔɔ nkuku ne alabaster nkuku. Na shabti 80 nso wɔ hɔ a ɛde ne din ne ne din ma. [3] Wɔ Aspelta stela bi so no wɔka sɛ ɔhene no maa no dibea sɛ Amun odwontofo wɔ Napata . Afei wɔde saa dibea yi maa ne babea Henuttakhebit .

Nsɛm a wɔde gyinaa so[sesa]

  1. Alexey K. Vinogradov: On the Titulary of the “King’s Sister” Madiqen, in Antike Sudan. Mitteilungen der Sudanarchäologischen Gesellschaft zu Berlin e. V.20 (2009), 163-168 online.
  2. Dows Dunham and M. F. Laming Macadamː Names and Relationships of the Royal Family of Napata, in The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology˞, Vol. 35 (Dec., 1949), pp. 144, pl. XVI (no. 38); Angelika Lohwasser: Die königlichen Frauen im antiken Reich von Kusch. 25. Dynastie bis zur Zeit des Nastasen. Harrassowitz, Berlin 2001, ISBN 3-447-04407-1, (Meroitica 19), pp. 165–166.
  3. Dows Dunhamː The Royal cemeteries of Kush, vol. II, Nuri, Boston 1955, pp. 109-111 online