Several small successor kingdoms arose.
After the fall of Dʿmt in the 4th century BC, the plateau came to be dominated by smaller successor kingdoms.
He effectively destroyed all the successor kingdoms, but was defeated in 1975 and returned to Mordor.
Examples are legion of the relic of a predecessor kingdom being used in the monuments of the successor kingdoms.
For a time, it was also possibly used to write the Nubian language of the successor Nubian kingdoms.
The Empire quickly fell apart after his death, never to be restored, with the Empire splintering into five separate successor kingdoms.
This process created the successor kingdoms.
Prior to direct imperial rule, Cappadocia was one of the successor kingdoms of Alexander the Great's empire.
Three of these successor kingdoms formed a dynastic succession line known as the Hammudid Dynasty.
He is one of only five British monarchs to have ruled England or its successor kingdoms for more than fifty years.