Kingdom Of Israel (The Ancient Lives On)

The Kingdom Of Israel was a Judeo-Christian country in the Levant.

Formation
It was created on August 11th, 356, as a consequence of the "2 traitor egyptians", Uhur and Sebek, deposing Nieta Of Egypt in 342. After that they forced both Jews and Christians out of Israel, and were named egyptian co-pharaohs. This caused a mass revolt of not only Israelites, but also Syriacs, Libyans and Assyrians.

Eventually, on August 11th, 356, a treaty was signed, giving independence to Israel (along with Syriaca). Judaism was made co-official religion of the kingdom, and after its independence, Egypt never tried to conquer Israel again, until the late 9th century.

Height of power and decline
After independence, the kingdom was ruled by mostly weak rulers. However, this changed in 465, with the reign of king Ayat II., also known as Ayat the great of Israel. Ayat has led military campaigns against the egyptians, when he conquered both Sinai and Phillistia, the arabs, where a vassal state was formed, and the syriacs, where some kingdoms were vassalized and some resisted. The Sinai region was at the time inhabited by the "Sareceni" tribes of arabs, and thus the vassal state that formed there was named Sarecenia. But in 490, Ayat died, and with his death came a quick decline. In 494, Saracenia declared independence, followed by the egyptian re-conquest of Sinai and Phillistia in 498, and the independence for the Syriac kingdoms in 503.