埃及堡垒与中王国下努比亚的殖民

Laurel D. Bestock
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在公元前2000年的早期,埃及政府控制了下努比亚,在尼罗河沿岸建造了一系列巨大的堡垒,这些堡垒以其复杂的军事建筑而闻名。这是埃及第一次在传统边界之外进行大规模扩张。帝国主义和核心-外围相互作用的各种理论模型被引入到堡垒及其人口的研究中,试图解释纪念碑原始建筑背后的军事、经济和意识形态目的,以及它们占领的明显变化性质,从可能的轮换驻军到更永久的定居,以及它们与当地人口的相互作用(参见Trigger 1976:64-81;亚当斯1977:183 - 88;Zibelius-Chen 1988:69 - 135;S.T. Smith 1995,2003;威廉姆斯1999;Flammini 2008;托罗2009:79 - 101;沃格尔2004;2008年来说)。由此产生的埃及占领努比亚的图景即使不是完全一致,也是微妙的。这些堡垒对考古学的重要性更大,因为它们为考虑国家对外国领土的控制提供了丰富的文献案例研究;它们属于关于帝国主义、殖民主义和殖民主义的更广泛的论述,如何在物质记录中理解不同的国家控制策略,以及人们如何在边境地区生活和互动。中央王国的控制方法可以与埃及早期和后期与努比亚互动的策略形成对比,而且该地区是现代殖民纠葛之一,这使得对其在中央王国的占领采取批判性的方法变得更加重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Egyptian Fortresses and the Colonization of Lower Nubia in the Middle Kingdom
In the early part of the 2nd millennium bce, the Egyptian state took control of Lower Nubia, building a series of monumental fortresses along the Nile that are remarkable for their sophisticated military architecture. This was Egypt’s first major expansion beyond its traditional borders. Various theoretical models of imperialism and core-periphery interactions have been brought to bear on studies of the forts and their populations, seeking to explain the military, economic, and ideological purposes behind the original construction of the monuments as well as the apparently shifting nature of their occupation, from probable rotating garrisons to more permanent settlement, and their interactions with local populations (cf. Trigger 1976:64–81; Adams 1977:183–88; Zibelius-Chen 1988:69–135; S.T. Smith 1995, 2003; Williams 1999; Flammini 2008; Török 2009:79–101; Vogel 2004; Knoblauch 2008). The resulting picture of Egyptian occupation of Nubia is a nuanced if not entirely agreed upon one. The fortresses are important to archaeology more broadly because they offer a richly documented case study for consideration of state control of foreign territory; they belong in the broader discourse about imperialism, colonization, and colonialism, how different state strategies of control can be understood in the material record, and how people live and interact in border zones. That the methods of Middle Kingdom control can be contrasted to both earlier and later Egyptian strategies of interaction with Nubia, and that the region is one of modern colonial entanglements, makes a critical approach to its occupation in the Middle Kingdom all the more vital.
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