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Meroe is the general name (as Island of Meroe) for the region bounded on three sides by the Nile (from the Atbara river to Khartoum), the Atbara, and the Blue Nile; and the special name of an ancient city on the east bank of the Nile, 877 miles from Wadi Haifa by river, and 554 by the route across the desert, near the site of which is a group of villages called Bakarawiya. This city was he capital of the Kushite Kingdom for several centuries.
The site of the city is marked by over two hundred pyramids in three groups, of which many are in ruinous condition. Aftes these ruins had been described by several travellers some excavations were executed, on a small scale in 1834 by G. Ferlini, who discovered (or professed to discover) various antiquities, chiefly in the form of jewelry, now in the museums of Berlin and Munich. The ruins were examined in 1844 by Carl Lepsius, who brought many plans, sketches and copies, besides actual antiquities, to Berlin. Further excavations were carried on by Reginald Wingate, governor of the Sudan, who made paths to and between the pyramids, and sank shafts, etc. It was found that the pyramids were regularly built over sepulchral chambers, containing the remains of bodies either burned or buried without being mummified. The most interesting objects found were the reliefs on the chapel walls, already described by Lepsius, and containing the names with representations of queens and some kings, with some chapters of the Book of the Dead; some steles with inscriptions in the Meroitic language, and some vessels of metal and earthenware. The best of the reliefs were taken down stone by stone in 1905, and set up partly in the British Museum and partly in the museum at Khartoum. In 1910, in consequence of a report by Professor Sayce, excavations were commenced in the mounds of the town and the necropolis by J. Garstang on behalf of the university of Liverpool, and the ruins of a palace and several temples were discovered, built by the Meroite kings.
Meroe was probably also an alternative name for the city of Napata, the ancient capital of one of the Kushite kingdom, built at the foot of Jebel Barkal. The site of Napata is indicated,by the villages of Sanam Abu Dom on the left bank of the Nile and Old Merawi on the right bank of the river. New Merawi, 1 mile east of Sanam Abu Dom and on the same side of the river, was founded by the Sudan government in 1905 and made the capital of the mudiria of Dongola.
This article incorporates text from the public domain 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica.