diff --git a/content/article/HafsaasWar.md b/content/article/HafsaasWar.md index affbd2b..3c78a3b 100644 --- a/content/article/HafsaasWar.md +++ b/content/article/HafsaasWar.md @@ -7,6 +7,11 @@ keywords: ["Warfare", "ethnicity", "headhunting", "schismogenesis", "Early Bronze Age", "Nubia", "Egypt"] --- + +![Northern Lower Nubia with sites dating to the mid-4th millenium BCE. Graphic: Henriette Hafsaas](../static/images/hafsaas/Map1.jpg "Northern Lower Nubia with sites dating to the mid-4th millenium BCE. Graphic: Henriette Hafsaas") + +**~~Map 1. Northern Lower Nubia with sites dating to the mid-4th millenium BCE. Graphic: Henriette Hafsaas.~~** + # Introduction Lower Nubia in today's southern Egypt has been studied by archaeologists @@ -23,10 +28,6 @@ drove the A-Group predecessors south of Bab el-Kalabsha while Naqada peoples settled in the area between Bab el-Kalabsha and the First Cataract (Map 1). -![Northern Lower Nubia with sites dating to the mid-4th millenium BCE. Graphic: Henriette Hafsaas](../static/images/hafsaas/Map1.jpg "Northern Lower Nubia with sites dating to the mid-4th millenium BCE. Graphic: Henriette Hafsaas") - -**~~Map 1. Northern Lower Nubia with sites dating to the mid-4th millenium BCE. Graphic: Henriette Hafsaas.~~** - The evidence for the violent expansion is interpersonal violence leading to deaths and injuries among the A-Group predecessors, young males belonging to the Naqada people buried with