Xios. Xios is a Nile delta region. A city from where the Hyksos expansionists controlled by Egypt through "puppet" noble families, during a 500 year rule.
Yes, Persians are considered to be part of the Middle Eastern region.
The only territory that has been under the control of all three of those empires (Kush, Assyria, and Persia) at some time in their histories is EGYPT, not Sudan. Assyria was never able to penetrate beyond Upper Egypt, meaning that they never controlled Sudan.
It was in the middle of the Fertile Crescent - Mesopotamia-Syria, which was the subject of many invasions by expanding empires. - Assyrians, Babylonians, Persians, Macedonians, Romans etc etc.
Throughout its history, Egypt faced invasions from various groups, including the Hyksos, who came during the Second Intermediate Period, and later the Assyrians, Persians, and Greeks, notably under Alexander the Great. The Romans subsequently conquered Egypt, making it a province of the Roman Empire. In the Islamic period, Arab invaders brought Islam to Egypt in the 7th century. Additionally, the Ottoman Turks took control in the 16th century, further influencing the region's history.
Assyrians
Answer 1the assyrian empire was a great empire ,one of the worlds strongest however the effort of controlling their empire became too much for them and it weakened at the same time another group of people the aryans were becoming strong in Iran . They had come from Asia India and Iran ,they were divided into two races : the medes in the west and the persians in the east . Soon After ashrubanipal died there was a revolt in babylon which was then occupied by the assyrians. The babyliaons formed an alliance with the medes who freed babylon and went to destroy ninveh ( the capital of assyria) in the battle at Carchemish in 605 BCAnswer 2The ancient Sumerian city of Assur came under Assyrian control serving as the capital of the Assyrian Kingdom. Amorites gained control over Southern Mesopotamia ending independent Sumerian rule in the region. And then Assyria was conquered by Amorites, another Semitic people. The Amorites constituted the ruling class, while the Assyrians comprised the general population, retaining their distinct identity. The reason was war.
From Libya across to Central Asia.
Well Israel would be a prime example of history repeating itself, people have been fighting in this region for thousands of years and it started with the Jews and the region was controlled by the Assyrians, Romans, Christians, and Muslim Turks but today it is once again controlled by the Jews through the Zionist movement and the reasons for the violence have always been the same religion resources and power.
The Assyrians were particularly brutal and violent to Non-Assyrian foes, so the fall of their empire was not missed.
The name "Babylon" has never changed. It refers to a specific Kingdom/Empire that existed in the region of Mesopotamia, but not the land that it controlled. When it was overthrown by the Achaemenid Persians in the 530s BCE, the empire disappeared and its citizens simply became Babylonian Persians or splintered back into their diverse pre-Babylonian ethnicities such as Judean, Aramean, Assyrian, etc. The name Iraq did not come to the fore until the Arab conquest of the area from the Sassanid Persians in 634 C.E. and Iraq simply was the Arabic name for Mesopotamia (which was a Greek name for the region).
From Libya in the west to Central Asia in the east.