... worked with precolonial Africa as a theme in my art for over a year. I have, as a mind experiment, made a map of what Africa could have looked like ...
... real historical precolonial African nations, and I have tried to form a map of the most prominent of those that existed between the 15th and mid 19th century, by looking at historical maps like the one found in UNESCO's “A General History of Africa”, linguistic regions and natural boundaries.
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On the same website rounding up interesting maps, Wikipedia has a map out supposedly showing African empires circa 500bc to 1500AD.
But it completely misses the kingdom of Meroe/Kush..
How could any list of African empires supposedly spanning 2000 years leave out Kush/Meroe?
-------------------- Note: I am not an "Egyptologist" as claimed by some still bitter, defeated, trolls creating fake profiles and posts elsewhere. Hapless losers, you still fail. My output of hard data debunking racist nonsense has actually INCREASED since you began.. Posts: 5905 | From: The Hammer | Registered: Aug 2008
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quote:Originally posted by ausar: [QB] ... by a Swede no less!
[QUOTE]Nikolaj Cyon Alkebu-lan 1260 AH
what is the origin of the name Alkebulan?
a claim on assatashakur:
quote: As we show in Part 3 of our book, the name Alkebulan (Alkebulam) was addressed briefly by Leo Africanus in his 'History of Africa' over 500 years ago. This is where Dr. Ben got the term. Leo Africanus was unaware of the actual origins of the name Alkebulan however. We address this fully in our book:
AFURAKA/AFURAITKAIT - The Origin of the term 'Africa'
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R. Morden, on a map dated 1688 CE, attributes Alkebu-lan to the Æthiopians and Moors while John Pory in one of the works he attached to his 1600 CE translation of Leo Africanus credits the Arabians and Ethiopians with the use of Alkebulam.
I can't say who either Morden or Pory explicitly means by Ethiopians, Moors, or Arabians because these ethnonyms were used generically by Europeans at that time. Also, Morden differs from Pory in the spelling of the word. Morden ends it in an "N" while Pory ends it with an "M."
Arabic and "Ethiopic" are both Semitic AfroAsiatic languages but so far, to the best of my research, no historian or linguist has uncovered Alkebu-lan nor Alkebulam in any Arabic or Amharic (or other Ethiopian language) primary source document.
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I gave links which show a medieval era Chinese map of Africa and talk about orientation in ancient Egypt. The only AE map I know about is just short "road map" looking thing w/no compass.
BTW look at the From: parm, I'm not Ausar.
Posts: 8675 | From: Tukuler al~Takruri as Ardo since OCT2014 | Registered: Feb 2003
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posted
But the map is written in Swahili,i know because i happen to be a fluent swahili speaker..In ancient times, swahili was written in arabic,but nowdays it is written in Latin
Posts: 306 | From: Kenya | Registered: Dec 2013
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