Samori Toure

Veteran
Supporter
Joined
Apr 23, 2015
Messages
19,985
Reputation
6,251
Daps
100,161
Eh.... Stuyff I read on Yoruba seems to hint they are recent. Proto-Mande and Fulani groups were living on the edges of West Africa in North Africa since the holoscene and archaeology seems to back that up. As for the Yoruba they seemed to have entered West Africa around 3000 BC from Chad. Some people actually argue from the Sudan.


The Hausa speak a Chadic language which is Afro-Asiatic however the Hausa people are technically a Nilo-Saharan people like most Chadic speakers. Not Nilo-Saharan in the same sense of Dinka speakers or Nilotic people from Kenya and the Great lakes but Saharan people of Chad, Niger, Sudan, etc. Me and others have theories that Niger-Congo people split from Nilo-Saharan people from the Sahara. And yea I read Egyptian language is most similar to Chadic.



Book: Egypt in its African Context


However with the bolded I'd wait till more solid evidence comes out.


Igbo and Yoruba seem to share a common ancestor based on genetics. I doubt they are semi-Bantu.



You mean Ancestry.com is confusing people and I agree.


I don't know if you utilize this website Tracing African Roots but it has some very good information. It address all of the West African ethnic groups and regions.

I don't think that AncestryDNA is the preferred test that spells out ancestry, so it was 23andme that I was addressing.
 

SmarkMero

Veteran
Joined
Jun 9, 2012
Messages
51,430
Reputation
17,658
Daps
245,753
Reppin
NULL
61599649_2212774052368395_6824853213045023419_n.jpg
69061912_2562009977193581_2033268825394650868_n.jpg
71216356_383808679215678_4463427023969147407_n.jpg


 
Top