Are you trying to tell me my ancestors were behind the creation of the Egyptian pyramids?
I'm saying Bantu origin begins along the Nile and they migrated into SE/S Africa.
Are you trying to tell me my ancestors were behind the creation of the Egyptian pyramids?
Yup, it isn't popular to say around these parts...but get ready for a litany of fake websites, charts, colorful graphs and scientific jargon (that they themselves can't even understand) to try to argue you into the ground...people will believe what they want to believe...there's a lot of emotion wrapped in these types of debatesYou think that the real Egyptians were sub-Saharan Africans? Egypt is closer to the Middle East than sub-Saharan Africa
How did all those Arabs get there?
I'm saying Bantu origin begins along the Nile and they migrated into SE/S Africa.
Why the hell didn't the Egyptians exploit it?
Was it because of religion of not going to the underworld if they died outside Kemet? That's what I've read so far as to why they didn't go for an empire more.
I like how modern scholars (euros) like to act like Kemet was a kingdom onto itself without any connection to other African tribes. You gotta tell me more, breh. The only source I read that has said something similar is the OG Chancellor Williams.
Got links? I want to read this.
Did Cheik Anta Diop do work on this? Other scholars?
That's what my forefathers were capable of. Now tell me, does that structure resemble anything close to the great pyramids of ancient egypt?
I came to the same conclusion...although I have to say that Cairo was a pretty cosmopolitan city...it's very diverse and attracts a lot of people from around the continent in much the same way that NYC does in the US. BUT speaking from personal experience...and this was just my observation...you can clearly tell the physical differences between the Arabs and the people who were indigenous to the country. Many of the people that I would consider "natives" had a pretty distinct appearance and they really didn't look too different from many of the relics that I saw in the art there. They clearly weren't "Arabs" but I myself would not have called them "black" either. Again...that's just my personal experience.I went to Cairo Egypt back in October and I was legitimately surprised I didn't see one 'black looking' person (besides one female with her white daddy smh). But ya I was caught off gaurd and how Arabic-ish everyone was.
Regardless I got to see the Prymids so I was satisfied
Iran/Iraq is pretty far from Egypt to control via military.
Egyptians were in Israel though:
Egyptian Tomb in Israel - Archaeology Magazine Archive
Egyptian Artifacts Found in Southern Israel - Archaeology Magazine
Man, your best bet is to simply search The Coli for all the post made by @KidStranglehold (free my nikka!)
Lots of scientific research and what not.
Didn't know the Egyptians considered southern Israel a part of it however.
Damn.
The Shona stone walls were actually bigger than any structure in Egypt.
No, man. Punt was a trading partner.
Ta-Seti in Sudan is their ancestral homeland.
http://www.thecoli.com/threads/arab-conquest-colonization-of-africa-where-show-me.282944/Man, your best bet is to simply search The Coli for all the post made by @KidStranglehold (free my nikka!)
Lots of scientific research and what not.
This nikka is crazy
I bet those Egyptians thought he on crack
Africans are diverse.I came to the same conclusion...although I have to say that Cairo was a pretty cosmopolitan city...it's very diverse and attracts a lot of people from around the continent in much the same way that NYC does in the US. BUT speaking from personal experience...and this was just my observation...you can clearly tell the physical differences between the Arabs and the people who were indigenous to the country. Many of the people that I would consider "natives" had a pretty distinct appearance and they really didn't look too different from many of the relics that I saw in the art there. They clearly weren't "Arabs" but I myself would not have called them "black" either. Again...that's just my personal experience.
Nah i think ur a wrong