Mauritanian Royal Mausoleum
Mauritanian Royal Mausoleum 1-726
Just as the Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan built the white marble “Taj Mahal Palace” in India, to commemorate his wife Arjmandbanu, called “Mumtaz Mahal,” an Algerian king from Numidia (ancient Algeria) preceded him and built a great pyramid for his Pharaonic wife, which is still a witness to that story to this day. .
This pyramid in Algeria is officially known as the “Mauritanian Royal Mausoleum,” built in the Numidian style. UNESCO has classified it as a protected world heritage... It relates to King Yuba II, the son of King Yuba I. Who was kidnapped by Rome as an infant from his father's palace in retaliation for his resistance to her for years. The infant Yuba II was raised in its palaces and schools, learning philosophy, various sciences, and literature, until he became known as the “Cultured King.”
Juba II was not raised alone in the palaces of Rome. Rome also kidnapped the infant Cleopatra Selene, the daughter of the famous Pharaonic queen Cleopatra, after killing her. From the palaces of Rome, the story and acquaintance of Juba II and Cleopatra Selene began.
Before their marriage, Selene stipulated that her lover, Yuba II, “transfer Egypt to Numidia for her.” Egypt has the Nile and the pyramids, and he actually achieved what she wanted.
Yuba II made the Mazaffran Valley (saffron water) an image of the Nile. Mazaffran is a valley that passes through the Algerian Sidi Rashid region. Trees line its sides, and ships pass through it, so the scene hardly differs from the Nile. The Queen Bride introduced Pharaonic rituals in her palace, so they were The palaces of Cherchell (western Algeria) as if they had never left Egypt... After his death, Yuba II was buried next to his beloved Selene, who died years before him after contracting an infectious disease, inside the “Tomb of Love”, which he built for her, after he ruled for 50 years... in the Cherchell region, state. Tipaza, Algeria


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