Abstract

Abstract On the eve of the Nubian march northward, Egypt was divided among multiple rival dynasts, who ruled at Tanis, Leontopolis, Bubastis, and Sais in the Delta, and Hermopolis and Herakleopolis in Middle Egypt. Whereas this loose confederacy may be a result of the 22nd/23rd Libyan Dynasty's feudalistic culture, the resulting decentralization of Egyptian government represented a break from Egyptian tradition. The Nubian invaders portrayed themselves as restorers of order, who ruled a unified country.

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