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The Nubian people represent a civilization in Civilization VI. Their colors are cream and brown, and they are led by Amanitore. They are available with the Nubia Civilization & Scenario Pack, which was released on July 27, 2017.

The Nubians' civilization ability is "Ta-Seti," which provides them with +50% Production Production toward and extra combat experience for ranged units, +1 Production Production from Mines over strategic resources, and +2 Gold Gold from Mines over bonus and luxury resources. Their unique unit is the Pítati Archer (which replaces the Archer), and their unique tile improvement is the Nubian Pyramid.

Strategy

Ta-Seti

Nubia's civilization ability lends itself toward a focus on Production Production and military (and especially ranged units). To take full advantage of their unique improvement and ability, they should found cities near deserts, floodplains, and resources that can be improved with Mines: Diamonds, Jade, Mercury, Salt, and Silver (and, as they research the technologies needed to reveal them, Iron, Niter, Coal, Aluminum, and Uranium). By discovering Craftsmanship and getting the Agoge Policy Card early on, they can rapidly raise an army of Pítati Archers that can be used to stage lightning raids on their neighbors' cities. They should try to keep their Pítati Archers alive for as long as possible - if they do, the quick promotions that they earn will allow them to form the core of an extremely deadly assault force as they upgrade to Crossbowmen and beyond. Even in the final eras of the game, three or four ranged units with Incendiaries, Expert Marksman, and melee or cavalry support all but eliminate the need for siege units.

As their empire grows, the Nubians should build Industrial Zones adjacent to their Mines and Encampments in the cities they plan to use as unit training centers. This will allow them to keep their army large and strong as they push forth to conquer new lands, and the XP bonuses from Encampment buildings and their civ ability will allow their ranged units to catch up to their veteran units in short order.

Nubia should have little trouble founding a pantheon thanks to the Nubian Pyramid's Faith Faith bonus, but may have difficulty founding a religion without cutting back on its military. Desert Folklore, Religious Idols, and God of Craftsmen are all good choices for pantheons, and beliefs that strengthen military units or boost Production Production or Gold Gold all play to the Nubians' strengths.

Kandake of Meroë

Under Amanitore, the Nubians have an increased incentive to build multiple districts in each city. Industrial Zones and Encampments, as mentioned above, should be high priorities when pursuing the fast, aggressive playstyle that their civ ability supports; other cities should have Campuses, Theater Squares, and either Commercial Hubs or Harbors to increase their Trade Route Trade Route Trade Route limit and pay the maintenance cost of their growing army. Nubia can also build highly specialized desert cities by building one or two districts in a city and surrounding them with Nubian Pyramids, which will provide substantial bonuses to the adjacent districts' main yields.

If the Nubians have empty tiles around one of their cities, they can benefit from building the Pyramids, Petra, and Ruhr Valley.

Victory Types

Thanks to the flexible adjacency bonuses of the Nubian Pyramid, the Nubians can potentially pursue any victory condition. A Domination Victory, however, is the most logical choice, since their ranged unit Production Production and XP bonuses aren't restricted by available terrain and apply throughout the game.

Civilopedia entry

Situated along the Great Bend of the Nile River in northern Africa, Nubia served as the gateway between the Red Sea and the Nile Delta—a locus of trade that could have spanned from the source of the Nile River to its mouth in the Mediterranean. Unfortunately for Nubia, the Egyptians directly to Nubia’s north had other ideas. The two civilizations would exchange roles as wary neighbor, conqueror, and vassal for millennia, until a series of invaders from distant lands permanently ended their rivalry.

The earliest Nubian civilization began in what is today Sudan. The city-state of Kerma was located in a fertile basin just south of the Nile's Third Cataract. Kerma's ideal position beside the Nile made it a center of trade as accessible by land as it was by water. The discovery and exploitation of extensive mineral wealth such as ebony and gold cemented Kerma's ascension. With trade came wealth, and that led to raids from those who wanted wealth but were not entirely convinced that trade was the way to get it.

Kerma fortified its city and its routes, slowly extending its influence along the Nile until its allied villages, forts, and trading posts stretched nearly 800 miles (1287 km)—roughly the distance between the First through Fifth Cataracts. At that time, they were a match for Egypt in size and influence.

Very little of Kerma has survived since the Second Millennium BCE. If its people had a written language, it was long since lost. Most records of the kingdom exist in Egyptian texts—notably, of various minor conflicts with their Nubian neighbors. They described Kerma as a highly centralized state, but managing extensive territory without a written language is a daunting task.

Despite the constant conflict between neighboring kingdoms, Egypt called Nubia "the Land of the Bow” after the formidable Nubian archers who formed the bulk of Kerma's forces. To understand how strong an impression these warriors left upon their opponents, one Egyptian fort subsequently built in Nubian territory was called “Warding Off the Bows”—both proclamation and aspiration.

Kerma's strength reached its height in 1580 BCE, but an ill-fated alliance with the Hyksos led to its eventual downfall. The Hyksos were invaders from the east who seized portions of Egypt in the middle of the 17th Century BCE but found great difficulty with a rebellious populace and a surviving Egyptian dynasty based in Thebes. Kerma sought to carve up what remained, crushing Egypt once and for all.

It almost worked. For thirty years Kerma cut deep into Egyptian territory, taking religious and cultural artifacts for themselves, until Egypt finally overthrew and expelled their Hyksos overlords. So extensive and painful was Kerma's invasion that the Egyptians subsequently purged all records of it, along with any mention of the Hyksos "15th Dynasty." What they could not do was erase the accumulated Egyptian treasure in Kerma.

Still, the pharaohs remembered their humiliation. Thutmosis I repaid it a century later when he captured the city of Kerma. His successor Thutmosis III pushed even further into Nubian territory, eventually proclaiming the mountain of Jebel Barkal and the nearby city of Napata the new southern border of Egypt.

Nubia spent roughly four centuries under Egyptian rule. There were many rebellions, of course, but as time passed Nubian and Egyptian cultures intermingled. Kerma faded and the loyal province of Nubia eventually became the source of Egypt's gold, its route to the Red Sea, and its archers—now feared by Egypt's enemies.

By the 10th Century BCE, Egypt's focus on Mediterranean affairs (and the subsequent collapse of Egypt’s New Kingdom) left Nubia to its own affairs. Slowly, over the next few centuries, the Kingdom of Kush rose to prominence when Libyan princes subjugated an overextended Egypt.

In a strange twist of fate, the Kushite King Piye proclaimed divine mandate by the god Amun—an Egyptian god whose temple at Jebel Barkal was constructed by Egyptian pharaoh Thutmosis III—to liberate Lower Egypt from its Libyan interlopers. And with that, the Nubian king seized control of the Nile Delta, formed the 25th Dynasty, and sought to restore Egypt to its former glory.

For a time, it did. Piye and his successors made it a priority to rebuild the monuments, temples, and public works that had long since languished under foreign control. This revitalization of Egyptian culture was the 25th Dynasty’s greatest accomplishment—but not a lasting one.

No matter how small the wasp’s nest, it is rarely a good idea to give it a swift kick. This lesson was lost on multiple pharaohs of the 25th Dynasty who sought to extend their influence into the Near East. This put them in conflict with the powerful Neo-Assyrian Empire who considered the Near East its vassals. (Piye’s support of Canaan’s rebellion against their Neo-Assyrian overlords did not help matters.) Neo-Assyria’s King Esarhaddon made his position abundantly clear when he invaded Egypt in 674 BCE. In three short years, the invaders had deposed the 25th Dynasty, permanently ending Nubia’s flirtations with empire.

Nubia’s withdrawal from Egypt ultimately worked out in their favor—after Neo-Assyria’s example, other Mediterranean powers would find Egypt a tempting candidate for vassal. A prudent relocation of Nubia’s capital from Napata to the more distant Meroe provided access to the Greek traders on the Red Sea, then far more lucrative than trade along the Nile. It also discouraged invasion from the north—neither Persia, Macedon, nor Ptolemaic Egypt made any serious effort to extend into the Meroitic Kingdom of Kush.

Then, in 25 BCE, Nubia fell afoul of Rome. The Roman general Petronius repeatedly clashed with Nubia’s one-eyed Kandake (or “queen”) Amanirenas. After Roman forces sacked Napata and razed the Temple of Amun to the ground, Amanirenas’s resistance was ferocious enough to convince Petronius that peace was more favorable than conquest. Augustus Caesar signed a peace treaty with Kush that was surprisingly favorable to Nubia, treating them as a friendly protectorate rather than a former belligerent.

Following this period of Roman destruction came the dawn of the Meroitic builders, begun in 1 BCE by Kandake Amanitore (her story is detailed elsewhere). This time of rebuilding ended when the Beja dynasty to their northeast captured Meroe in the 1st Century. Despite attempts by the Beja to expand Nubia, internal rebellion and conflict with the Kingdom of Aksum led to their eventual and permanent conquest.

City Names

Citizen Names

Males:

  • Alara
  • Amanislo
  • Apedemak
  • Arensnuphis
  • Arqamani
  • Dedun
  • Mandulis
  • Mut
  • Piye
  • Sebiumeker

Females:

  • Amanikhatashan
  • Amanirenas
  • Amanishakheto
  • Amenirdis
  • Amesemi
  • Kadimalo
  • Khalese
  • Nasala
  • Shanakdakheto
  • Tabiry

Modern Males:

  • Barschanbu
  • Douddil
  • Eirpanome
  • Mashshouda
  • Orinourta
  • Qalidurut
  • Semamun
  • Shekanda
  • Siti
  • Tapara

Modern Females:

  • Aideosa
  • Anthelia
  • Damasti
  • Eikkir
  • Eitou
  • Genseoua
  • Iesousyko
  • Kel
  • Ouareno
  • Pongita

Trivia

  • The Nubian civilization's symbol is a disk with three sets of concentric rings at its bottom, inspired by the patterns found on Nubian baskets and other craftwork.

Gallery

Videos

CIVILIZATION_VI_–_First_Look-_Nubia

CIVILIZATION VI – First Look- Nubia

Related achievements

Pyramid Scheme
Pyramid Scheme
As Nubia, earn six different adjacency bonuses on a Nubian Pyramid
A pun on an actual marketing strategy with the same name where people are being recruited based on promises rather than investments.
The 25th Dynasty
The 25th Dynasty
Playing as Nubia, liberate the original Egyptian capital in a liberation war with the capital's conqueror.
The 25th dynasty of Egypt was in fact Nubian in origin after taking over from various foreign rulers in Egypt.
gg nub
gg nub
Win a regular game as Amanitore
A pun on 'noob' as this is a common expression in online gaming communities meaning 'good game newbie' (mostly used sarcastically).

External links

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