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Ngundeng Pyramid

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Ngundeng Pyramid
Bi̱ɛh Ŋundɛŋ
Ngundeng Pyramid in 1901 by Dr Edward Smyth Crispin
LocationWec Deng, Nyirol County, Jonglei State, South Sudan
RegionNuerland
TypeHoly Site
Circumference300 feet
Height50–60 feet
History
Founded1870
Abandoned1928
CulturesNuer people

Ngundeng Pyramid (Thok Naath: Bi̱ɛh ŋundɛŋ or Yi̱k, Arabic: هرم نغوندنغ), also known as Pyramid of Dengkur, was a large mound shrine constructed by the Nuer people's prophet Ngundeng Bong (died 1906) at the end of the nineteenth century and added to by his son Guek Ngundeng (died 1929).[1][2] The Ngundeng Pyramid, which was around 300 feet in circumference and 50 to 60 feet tall, cone-shaped, and encircled by a row of elephant tusks, was a symbol of the Nuer people's resistance to colonialism. The monument was dynamited on the orders of British colonial commander Percy Coriat in 1928, shortly after the first attempt to demolish it failed.[3][4]

The construction of the Ngundeng Pyramid was believed to have begun in 1870 and was completed in four years in stages. The first phase began with the construction of huts for Ngundeng followers, who are the builders, which lasted one year; the second phase, which was the building phase, lasted two years; and the final stage, in which the Prophet Ngundeng fasted for seven days and summoned all Nuer from Nuerland to assemble in his village, lasted one year. For a four-year period, thousands of Nuer worked under the prophet's supervision building the Pyramid.[1][5] Unlike the Nubian Pyramids in Northern Sudan, the Ngundeng Pyramid/Pyramid of Dengkur was constructed entirely of ash, animal dung, cotton soil, and clay—not a single stone or brick was used.[1][6]

Purpose

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According to the Nuer, Ngundeng built it to honor his God, Dengtath (God of Creation), as well as to serve as a sanctuary and place of worship for the Nuer people.[7] One of the prime examples was when Gaajiok(section of Eastern Jikany Nuer) women were once smitten with childlessness, and for many years they bore no male children. Finally, they undertook pilgrimages to the Ngundeng Pyramid in Lou Nuer territory, which had already established a reputation for holiness. They brought with them gifts of ivory tusks, beads, calves for slaughter, and so on, and it was at this time that the vast collection of tusks, embedded in the earth encircling the mound and gracing its top, was collected. Their prayers were answered, and they bore children again.[8]

According to Percy Coriat, an administrator among the Nuer, and the first British official who became fluent in the Nuer language, the pyramid was built because the Nuer were plagued by smallpox and rinderpest, which were unknown to them at the time. Nuer believed that the pandemic had something to do with the earth or land. Prophet Ngundeng devised the notion of hiding these plagues beneath the ground. After the pyramid was completed and the sacrifice was made, the sicknesses stopped and did not occur again.[9][10][1]

Demolition

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The Anglo-Egyptian army had taken control of the Sudan in 1898, it was not until 1916 that patrols were sent into Nuerland. By 1918, Guek Ngundeng, the son of Prophet Ngundeng who was possessed by Deng divinity (Sky God) after his father's death, was leading massive raids against the Dinka, bearing his pipe, magical spear, and a white bull. During one attack, his Nuer warriors destroyed nine Sudanese Regiments on the Dinka side. In September 1927, Major Jasper William George Wyld, known in short as "Wyld" or "Tiger", Bor's District Commissioner, said that his interpreter, a mamur and a Dinka chief, reported that Guek was plotting rebellion and he was planning to kill Percy Coriat. In November 1927, H.C. Jackson, the man who had first contacted Guek in 1921, wrote from Halfa Province, where he was then governor, and pointed out that when reports of Guek's alleged rebellion poured into Malakal in 1921, the pieces of evidence against Guek were completely false when he personally visited Guek - Jackson suggested that the same procedure should be followed.[11][12]

British Royal Air Force at Abwong in 1927

The relationship between Guek and the government deteriorated when a local court and a native police force were established, significantly limiting Guek's authority, and when the government suggested building a road through Nuerland to connect it to the region of their adversaries, the Dinka. Soon, hundreds of bulls were sacrificed at the Pyramid's base, and warriors from all over Nuerland arrived, including forces led by two additional prophets, Char Koryom and Puok Kerjiok. In 1927, the Western Nuer District Commissioner Captain V.H. Fergusson was supposedly slain, along with a Greek merchant, by a group of Nuer led by minor Western Nuer prophet Gatluak Nyang, resulting in an order to arrest Guek.[1][11]

On November 29, 1928, Percy Coriat and C. Armine Willis, known as "Chunky" Willis, the army's commander-in-chief of the military forces in Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, dispatched four British Royal Air Forces carrying 20-pound bombs to destroy the Ngundeng Pyramid, which the government had already identified as a symbol of Nuer resistance. The 20-pound bombs carried by four bi-plane bombers missed the Pyramid, and the Nuer fled to their sorghum fields. Another bombing and machine gun run against the Pyramid and the Nuer occurred the other day. The Royal Air Force raids killed two old men and 200 cattle during these plane attacks.[12][13]

A large number of government troops successfully dispersed the Nuer and reached the Pyramid a few days after the Royal Air Force raids. The failure to destroy the pyramid lowered the government's prestige. The Royal Engineers were summoned in to demolish it using explosives. The second attempt to destroy the pyramid failed, as Percy Coriat described it: "A puff of white smoke and a few lumps of earth tumbling down the side was all they saw." The pyramid's foundation remained intact, while just the top had been removed. Nevertheless, the Khartoum administration informed the public and the world at large that the pyramid had been "completely destroyed".[12][13]

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e McGregor (2001-03-30). "A Nuer Pyramid: Upper Nile Province, South Sudan | Aberfoyle International Security". Retrieved 2024-06-25.
  2. ^ "Short Biography of Guek Ngundeng Bong (Sept 1890 – Feb 1929) - Lich Research Institute". 2022-12-22. Retrieved 2024-06-25.
  3. ^ "Dan Hicks on X". Pinterest. Retrieved 2024-06-25.
  4. ^ "The pyramid of Deng Kur". -: The pyramid of Deng Kur, -: - -. Retrieved 2024-06-25.
  5. ^ "Sudan Notes and Records Volume 23 — Sudan Open Archive". sudanarchive.net. Retrieved 2024-06-25.
  6. ^ "Пирамида Nuer — Ngundeng pyramid". megalithica.ru. Retrieved 2024-06-25.
  7. ^ "Sudan Notes and Records Volume 18 — Sudan Open Archive". sudanarchive.net. Retrieved 2024-06-25.
  8. ^ "Sudan Notes and Records Volume 1 — Sudan Open Archive". sudanarchive.net. Retrieved 2024-06-25.
  9. ^ "Percy Coriat - Sudan Memory". www.sudanmemory.org. Retrieved 2024-06-25.
  10. ^ Coriat, Percy (April 9, 2018). Governing the Nuer. Africa World Books Pty Limited. ISBN 978-0994363152.
  11. ^ a b Coriat, P. (1939). "Gwek, the Witch-Doctor and the Pyramid of Denkgur". Sudan Notes and Records. 22 (2): 221–237. ISSN 0375-2984. JSTOR 41716333.
  12. ^ a b c Johnson, Douglas H. (1979). "Colonial Policy and Prophets: The 'Nuer Settlement'". Journal of the Anthropological Society of Oxford. 10 (1): 1–20.
  13. ^ a b Johnson, Douglas H. (1981). "Percy Coriat on the Nuer". Journal of the Anthropological Society of Oxford. 12 (3): 199–206.