Land!
Both At Different Points in History.Egypt took over nubia once, then got invaded by Libyans then the Nubians Took over again ect.
They took over Eygpt in 2000 B.C. because they ahd great soil & water because they were right next to the Nile River. Hope this helped!
the egyptians developed nukes
cant help you
because Egypt wanted there natural resources
Nubia had a lot of gold, ivory, ebony, and animal skins so they traded with Egypt until Egypt took Nubia over.
Both At Different Points in History.Egypt took over nubia once, then got invaded by Libyans then the Nubians Took over again ect.
yes. in the end Nubia took over Eygipt
Well the Egyptian pharaoh ThutmoseIII sent his armies to Nubia first. Then the Egyptians took over the Nubia and the Nubians were under the Egyptians control for 700 years
Egypt took over Nubia because they were really greedy and wanted more... when they found out that Nubia had a lot of land they wanted it... so the Nubians kept moving to small places. But pretty soon the Egyptiians could not take care of all of the land so they died out. They moved back where they origanally united.
The relationship between Egypt and Nubia changed over time because Egyptians had a good peaceful relationship until they decided to expand there borders into Nubia/Kush and then the Hyksos took over and Egypt became so Kush became independent but then Egypt took over again but they were still weak so Kush was still free but Egypt regained power and took over Kush again forcing Kuh to find a new capital of Menoe.
Egypt
they changed from sad to happy
they changed from sad to happy
They took over Eygpt in 2000 B.C. because they ahd great soil & water because they were right next to the Nile River. Hope this helped!
the egyptians developed nukes
Nubia, also known as the Kingdom of Kush, rose to power through its control of trade routes and its wealth in natural resources such as gold, ivory, and ebony. It developed a strong military and expanded its territory through conquest. Nubia also benefited from its strategic location on the Nile River, which allowed it to control and profit from the trade between Egypt and the rest of Africa.