The greatest king of Abyssinia was released
The only picture of the greatest king of Abyssinia is found in Egypt. Ankhi, who was released in exchange for a thousand cows, because Egypt is the maker and owner of human history. All human records exist only in the mother of the world and nothing else.
He was the first king of the Kingdom of Kush in Napata. He was placed on the throne after being elected by the priests, and the Kushite people agreed to install him. This was the case with the Kushite kings after him.
Banakhi ruled from 746 - 716 BC the Kingdom of Kush.
During the 20th year of his reign, Ankhi attacked Egypt from the south until he reached the Delta, and founded the Twenty-Fifth Egyptian Dynasty. The worship of Amun had spread in Nubia, and the kings of Kush embraced it.
His father was the Nubian Pharaoh Kashta, and his mother was called Babatma. He was married to "Beksater" and "Tapiri" (daughter of Alara, Abali), "Kansa" and "Nvruka-Kashta" and his sisters were Shabak, Amen-er-Des I and General Bikartur.
Among his sons were those who later became Pharaohs Shabataka, Taharqa, Shepenupet II, and another daughter, “Arti” (who is the wife of Shabataka), Nepradja, Takahat Amani, and “Tabaken Amun” (who is the wife of Taharqa).
At a time when the Ethiopians praise their king and the founder of their first state (Kush), there is not a single monument, statue or drawing in which the Ethiopians explain to their children the nature and appearance of their first ancestors.
Were it not for the Egyptian human masters, no one would have known anything about the Abyssinian king (Ankhi) or (Pia Atqi bin Kashata), who founded the first state in Abyssinia in the eighth century BC and called it (the Kushite Kingdom).
In this precise Egyptian drawing, the features of the Abyssinian king (Ankhi) become clear. This relic is the only one that testifies that there was an Abyssinian king named Ankhi. But this relic is not in the possession of the Abyssinians, because it is in the possession of the Egyptian masters, just as the owner of the picture himself was in The fist of the Egyptian masters.
Although the drawing is insulting and represents a real shame for the Abyssinians (the heirs of the Kushite Kingdom), as it shows their greatest king kneeling, bound, and submissive under the feet of the Egyptian soldiers, the Abyssinians wish that this relic was present in their museums, as it is their most important symbol.
Ankhi was deceived by the large number of his army that he gathered from all over the continent. In the year 736 BC, he decided to attack the borders of the Egyptian state. He was defeated crushingly at the hands of the best soldiers on earth. Most of Ankhi’s army was killed. Ankhi was captured. He was surrounded in shackles like animals... and was dragged on foot to Thebes (currently Luxor).
The texts attached to the drawing that immortalizes this epic explain that the Abyssinian king begged the Egyptian masters to pardon him and release him... pledging not to think again about insulting his masters... and he offered Ankhi a thousand cows in exchange for his life... so he was actually ransomed with cows.
It was later called (Biya Atqi), meaning the gift of cows or the gift of cows... considering that had it not been for the cows, he would have perished under the feet of the Egyptians.
The Abyssinian king, Ankhi, died in the year 716 BC. He was succeeded by his illegitimate son, Tahraqa. He tried to arouse the honor of the Abyssinians, which the Egyptians had destroyed in the mud of the Nile. He suffered a fate similar to the fate of his mother’s lover (Ankhi)... but he was able to escape and cross the Bab al-Mandab to head across Arabia to Jerusalem to ally with the Jews in the hope that they would help him take revenge on the Egyptians.
But the sword of the Assyrians was closer to him... as he and the Jews were defeated in Jerusalem... in religious (Jewish) conflicts witnessed in the ancient world... and Egypt distanced itself from it because it did not concern it.
Source: websites