The One-Eyed #African Queen Who Defeated the #RomanEmpire

Cocky male monarchs underestimated #QueenAmanirenas for her gender, her race, and her disability. Each time, they did so at their own peril.

Adhiambo Edith Magak
Sep 22, 2021

Excerpt: "The legendary Roman emperor #CaesarAugustus was on the Greek island of Samos, preparing for an important expedition to Syria, when he received envoys from the Kingdom of #Kush, in present-day #Sudan. Journalist Selina O’Grady records in her book And Man Created God that the ambassadors presented Augustus with a bundle of golden arrows and relayed this message: 'The Candace sends you these arrows.' (Candace was the Latinized spelling of #Kandake, the Kushite term for 'queen.')

"They added that the emperor had two options for how to view the offering: 'If you want peace, they are a token of her warmth and friendship. If you want war, you will need them.'

"For an African queen to give such an ultimatum to the most powerful man in the world would have been considered a serious insult. After all, #Augustus had almost single-handedly transformed #Rome from a republic to an empire, and the territory he now reigned over stretched from as far as northern Spain, through to parts of central Europe, and all the way to Egypt. His legions wore bronze breastplates and wielded spears, swords and javelins, all much superior to the hatchets the #Kushites carried as weapons. In addition, Kush had many natural resources — such as gold mines, iron and ivory — that could have enriched the treasuries of Rome, enticing Augustus to attack, even without the insult.

"But this Kushite queen — whom the Greek geographer and historian Strabo of Amasia described as 'a masculine sort of woman and blind in one eye' — had proved to be a formidable foe for the 'son of god,' the title given to Caesar Augustus on Roman coins. He received the bundle of arrows from the envoys and promptly signed a peace treaty.

"In truth, this was not so much a treaty as it was a surrender. Augustus submitted to all of the demands made by Queen #Amanirenas, including that the Romans withdraw from all Kushite territories they had occupied and pledge that they would never again seek to collect taxes or tributes from her kingdom.

"It was a remarkable concession for the world’s most powerful man, demonstrating just how feared and respected the one-eyed queen truly was."

Read more / listen:
https://www.narratively.com/p/the-one-eyed-african-queen-who-defeated-the-roman-empire

Archived version:
https://archive.ph/PGd0v

#AfricanQueen #RomanHistory #PowerfulWomen #AfricanHistory

The One-Eyed African Queen Who Defeated the Roman Empire

Cocky male monarchs underestimated Queen Amanirenas for her gender, her race, and her disability. Each time, they did so at their own peril.

Narratively
~ Women against Rome, Amanirenas ~

Amanirenas was queen regnant (Kandake) of the Kingdom of Kush. Amanirenas is one of the most famous Meroitic queens because of her role in leading the Kushite army against the Romans.

According to Strabo's account of the Meroitic War, the Kushite forces launched an attack on Thebais and Syene while the prefect Aelius Gallus was away on his expedition to Arabia in 25 BCE. They were successful in taking Syene, Elephantine, and Philae. As they took the city, they enslaved inhabitants and destroyed the statues of Caesar Augustus. Though Strabo does not mention it specifically, the head of one such statue was buried beneath the steps of a temple (the Meroë Head), resulting in its unique preservation.

Strabo claims Gaius Petronius, the new prefect of Egypt, marched with less than ten thousand infantry against thirty thousand Kushite men in Syene. They were overwhelmed by Petronius' attack. The Kushite forces stated their invasion was due to an issue with the nomarchs, the provincial governors of Egypt; Strabo does not provide information on what the issue was. After Petronius' victory, the Kushite army fled in various directions. Strabo ascertains that "among these fugitives were the generals of Queen Candace", queen of the Ethiopians. Strabo referred to Amanirenas, who bore the title of kandake; "Candace" is a Latinization of her title and does not refer to a separate ruler.

After the success of Petronius's Nubian campaign, the Roman Empire’s southern border moved beyond Egypt to Primis (Qasr Ibrim). The Meroites were exempt from paying tribute to the Empire. The treaty allowed the Romans to continue to occupy the Dodekashoinos ("Twelve Shoenoi Land") as a military border zone.

Illustration : stele depicting the kandake Amanishakheto, 1st century BCE (for illustration purpose)

#amanirenas #art #arthistory #history #womenshistory #womenofhistory #historyofwomen #womenfromhistory #painting

The One-Eyed African Queen Who Defeated the Roman Empire

Cocky male monarchs underestimated Queen #Amanirenas for her gender, her race, and her disability. Each time, they did so at their own peril.

https://getpocket.com/explore/item/the-one-eyed-african-queen-who-defeated-the-roman-empire?utm_source=firefox-newtab-en-us

#Africa #History #RomanEmpire

The One-Eyed African Queen Who Defeated the Roman Empire

Cocky male monarchs underestimated Queen Amanirenas for her gender, her race, and her disability. Each time, they did so at their own peril.

Pocket
In an alternate timeline, the queens Cleopatra and Amanirenas march with triumph into a newly conquered Rome!
#alternatehistory #cleopatra #amanirenas #egyptian #nubian #roman #ancient #african #blackwomen #womenofcolor #illustration #digitalart #art #mastoart

Our Queens of the Nile Cleopatra and Amanirenas are posing for a selfie! Of course, this isn’t meant to be historically accurate (unless you really believe they had smartphones back in the first century BC).

#cleopatra #amanirenas #egyptian #nubian #ancient #blackwomen #womenofcolor #digitalart #art #mastoart

"The shame is that #Cleopatra gets so much attention as THE ancient queen, (...) Let me introduce you to (...) #Amanirenas of Meroë, who unlike Cleopatra held off Octavian and kept her kingdom."
https://acoup.blog/2023/05/26/collections-on-the-reign-of-cleopatra/