Ethiopia in Smiths Bible Dictionary
(burnt faces). The country which the Greeks and Romans
described as "AEthiopia" and the Hebrews as "Cush" lay to the
south of Egypt, and embraced, in its most extended sense, the
modern Nubia, Sennaar, Kordofan and northern Abyssinia, and in
its more definite sense the kingdom of Meroe. Eze 29:10 The
Hebrews do not appear to have had much practical acquaintance
with Ethiopia itself, though the Ethiopians were well known to
them through their intercourse with Egypt. The inhabitants of
Ethiopia were a Hamitic race. Ge 10:6 They were divided into
various tribes, of which the Sabeans were the most powerful.
The history of Ethiopia is closely interwoven with that of
Egypt. The two countries were not unfrequently united under
the rule of the same sovereign. Shortly before our Saviour's
birth a native dynasty of females, holding the official title
of Candace (Plin. vi. 35), held sway in Ethiopia, and even
resisted the advance of the Roman arms. One of these is the
queen noticed in Ac 8:27
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