Mu-qed
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Mu-Qed was an ancient maritime trade route along the littoral of the Red Sea's northeast African coast.[1] The term Mu-Qed had been in use since the Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt, and typically referred to the trade carried out between ancient Egyptians and Puntites.[2] Mu-Qed in particular refers to the Red Sea starting from the waters off Qosair, the port serving the canal of Ro-henu (Wadi Hammamat).[3]

Etymology
The phrase Mu-Qed has both an ellipsis or shortened form and a longer unabridged form. The transliteration of the unabridged form is "Pa-ym-aa-n-mu-qed" which literally means "The Great Sea of Inverted Water", whilst its ellipsis or shortened form Mu-Qed literally translates as inverted water.[4]
Onshore
Oneshore of the Mu-Qed route from southeast Egypt and eastern Sudan the desert is known is the Atbai. Atbai is an arid terrain that forms the easternmost extremity of the Sahara desert roughly to the south of the Ro-henu or Wadi Hammamat riverbed until Eritrea where it meets the Danakil desert. The Atbai is a hyper-arid plateau that lies between the Nubian desert and Red Sea, has Precambrian rock formations and is primarily inhabited by the Beja.[5]
Engagement
Although ancient Punt lay along the African coast of the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden, Van Sertima proposed that the primary intercultural correspondance ancient Egypt had ocurred along the Nile Valley. This theory later adopted by some Afrocentrism or Pan-Africanism proponents argued there were interrelated and interlocking, regionally distinct cultures that formed along the length of the Nile Valley from its headwaters in Ethiopia, Egypt and Sudan to its mouth in the Mediterranean Sea. Introduced around 1970,[6] it was popularized by Ivan Van Sertima in the 1980s and saw wide use in Afrocentric publications during the 1990s, e.g. Festus Ugboaja Ohaegbulam, Towards an understanding of the African experience from historical and contemporary perspectives, University Press of America (1990); Runoko Rashidi, Introduction to the study of African clasical [sic] civilizations (1992), Walter Arthur McCray, The Black Presence in the Bible: Discovering the Black and African Identity of Biblical Persons and Nations, Urban Ministries Inc, (1995), etc.
Mu-Qedites
A Mu-qedite is someone who lives alng the coast between the wadi hammamat canal and the tip of the horn of africa. Genetic studies show that besides maritime commerce, the people along the coast of the ancient Mu-Qed trade route also share genetic affinities with a shared paternal lineage with both Upper Egyptian males and coastal Cushitic males sharing the E-V12 subclade of the E1b1b haplogroup at a rate of 74.5%[7] and 70.6% respectively.[8] On occasion, people have expressed self-identification of a transnational affinity across northeast african borders, include Egyptian Imaan Hammam who referred to herself as Afro-Arab.[9]