All races of people see blacks as the most inferior race of people.
The light-skinned blacks of the north (eg: Egypt) viewed the sub0saharans as little more than cattle
Maybe there's a reason everyone reaches the same conclusion?
Egypt's history was almost 3000 years long before the non-Africans took control of it.
There is no evidence that I am aware of that mentions "light skinned blacks" or "dark skinned blacks", or any such prejudice of that sort whatever, either
Scholars continue to debate the founding first dynasty (which was the combination of the two KINGDOMS, one the upper Nile and the other the lower Nile) but a lot of evidence supports the theory that the first Pharaoh of the TWO KINGDOMS ie. the FIRST DYNASTY was from the UPPER NILE Kingdom and it was he who conquorered the LOWER NILE (the delta people).
It would have been interesting to know whether the unification of the Two Lands was explicitly mentioned; which was of all events the momentous achievement which in the eyes of the Egyptians marked the beginning of human history. A remembrance of it is found in the words 'Union of Upper and Lower Egypt; circling the wall(s)' on the Palermo Stone and elsewhere the first year of each king was characterized. This evidently referred to the ceremony which legitimized him as descended from the founder of his line. The walls here alluded to will have been those of Memphis, the foundation of which is ascribed to Menes by Herodotus and with some confusion by Diodorus. Also the Rosetta Stone, referring to Memphis, speaks of the ceremonies customarily performed there by the king on assuming his high office. Thus the removal of the royal residence from somewhere in the south to this admirably situated position at the apex of the Delta must be viewed as a direct consequence of the establishment of the double kingdom. The other important acts attributed to Menes by Herodotus have been discussed by Sethe with great ingenuity. They are the creation of a great embankment which protected Memphis from being overwhelmed by the Nile-flood and the building of the Temple of Ptah to the south of the fortified walls. Confirmation of the later event is implied by a palette of the 19th Dynasty mentioning the Ptah of Menes.
The Light skinned Pharoahs (Ptolemic Dynasty) that you seem to be referring to were Pharaoh's-come lately... come VERY lately by Egyptian standards.
Here's the amazingly long timeline of the Egyptian dynasties.
Early Dynastic Period
Old Kingdom
Middle Kingdom
New Kingdom
Third Intermediate Period
Late Period
Roman Period
Islamic Period
The following notes when the Hellenic culture finally took over that AFRICAN Empire.
Following Alexander's death, his generals divided the Empire, each setting up their own kingdoms. One of them, Ptolemy, took Egypt as his share and made Alexandria his capital, ruling as Ptolemy I Soter and thus established the last dynasty that would rule Egypt with the title of Pharaoh. He brought Alexander's body with him to be buried in the city, reuniting the famed conqueror with the city that bore his name. For the next two-and-a-half centuries, the Ptolemaic dynasty of the Greeks would successfully rule Egypt, mingling Hellenic traditions with the mighty legacy of the Pharaohs.
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