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Posted by Hanni (Member # 14777) on :
 
I've been following this blog for a while and it says that Hannibal was Black? Is this true?


http://retakeyourfame.blogspot.com/


What Color Was Hannibal?


THIS ARTICLE CAN BE POSTED ON OTHER WEBSITES


The true face of Hannibal. This well-preserved coin, circa 208-207 BC, and dated by some at 217 BC., was found in the Chiana (Clanis) valley. This coin was in circulation in the vicinity of Lake Trasimeno and in the Chiana Valley.


Some individuals have thrown aside all available evidence and have incoherently shouted themselves hoarse by claiming that Hannibal who nearly destroyed Rome belonged to the ‘great White race.’

Whites have been in North Africa for centuries but they are not indigenous to that area. They were merely migrants and invaders, not to mention the White slave trade that brought many Whites to that area. The presence of different races in North Africa has been mentioned by ancient writers like Diodorus Siculus and Herodotus. They included Ethiopians or Blacks.

Hannibal has been variously called a Canaanite or Phoenician. The Canaanites were descendants of Ham or Hamites. ‘Hamite’ was a term once used widely by Europeans to denote members of the Black race. ‘Phoenician’ was another term used to describe these Blacks.

The original dwelling place of the Phoenicians was not in the Middle East but more likely in East Africa. According to Herodotus (see The Histories) they lived on the shores of the Eritrean Sea. This area is widely disputed today, but apparently it was located on the shores of East Africa.

The ancient Near East was a melting pot just like modern America. Different races could be found there, but the original race was a Black one. The Elamites, for instance, were Blacks. Later on it was possible to find not only Black Phoenicians, but White and mixed Phoenicians as well.

Carthage on the North African coast was a Phoenician colony. A reading of history makes it clear that many migrants including White Greeks settled in that area and beyond. Thus just like South Africa, it was possible to find different races there, known as Carthaginians.

The clearest evidence of Hannibal being Black is the coin found in the Valley of the Clanis in Italy, not far from where he defeated the Romans at the Battle of Lake Trasimeno. It is believed to have been minted by Hannibal after the battle. The date of the coin corresponds to the era of Hannibal’s early battles with the Romans.

According to White historians/scholars the coin, representing an elephant on one side and a Black man on the other, is not Hannibal but a mere elephant driver, never mind that the various portraits depicting a White Hannibal are those of other individuals.

The idea that the Black man was a mere elephant driver is pure rubbish since Carthaginians often minted coins to portray important personalities or deities. Moreover the words of Polybius are very telling. According to him before the Battle of Trasimeno, Hannibal had lost all his elephants with the exception of one, which he rode.

Thus it is Hannibal and no one else, portrayed in the ancient coin found in the valley of the Clanis in Italy. Indeed, a number of such coins exist.

More detailed information can be found in the ebook: What Color Was Hannibal?
 
Posted by alTakruri (Member # 10195) on :
 
Most likely not in any appreciable sense.
The coins with a black man on one side
and an elephant on the other are not of
Carthaginian mint and were very small
change. This is one time I disagree with
J. A. Rogers' research sources.

By Hannibaal's time Phoenician blood
must have been very thin and the folk
of Khart Haddas' land at it's founding,
the Aurigha (sp) were a black people
but art pieces of the Barca family do
not bear features of the blacks in
contemporaneous or later mosaics,
http://thenile.phpbb-host.com/ftopic2316.php
not even the features of the terra-cotta
 -
statuette of the god Baal currently in
the Bardo Museum in Tunis which has
wide nose, tightly curled hair and thick
lips in contrast to the thin-featured sphinx
attached to the arm of his throne.

Hannibaal could have been anything in
between black and blond as were the
north coastal Africans of his era but
there's no solid evidence of exactly
where in that spectrum he precisely fits.

Carthaginian coins representing Hannibal
really just show the archetype of a hero.
The portrait is nearly indistinguishable
from Herakles or Alexander similarly found
on Phoenician shekel coinage from Tyre.

Other coins with an elephant on one side
and a face on the other are thought by some
to show Hannibaal by others to only be mahouts.
Some of the faces on these coins probably do
in fact depict Punic blacks unless the mahouts
were recruited from elsewhere in Africa where
elephants served as war engines.

Anyway, as can be seen in the quotes ranging in
time from -1000 to the 3rd century, the Greeks
didn't class the Imazighen among peoples like
themselves. They were viewed as the lightest in
complexion of the dark peoples of the world.
Even as late as the 8th century, an Arabic
taxonomist still classes Imazighen alongside the
darks and not among the whites. So, it is very
unlikely Hannibal was white by either ancient
or modern criteria.
 
Posted by osirion (Member # 7644) on :
 
No, just like Cleopetra wasn't Black. However, there were Black warriors he used.
 
Posted by Hanni (Member # 14777) on :
 
Well, since Hannibal spent his formative life out of Carthage (in Spain and Italy) the coins are unlikely to have been minted in Carthge. They were minted in Italy,near Lake Trasimeno,where Hannibal campaigned aginst the Romans. The dating of the coin also corresponds to that era.
 
Posted by JMT (Member # 12050) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by osirion:
No, just like Cleopetra wasn't Black. However, there were Black warriors he used.

You gave a definitive answer without an explanation in regard to Hannibal's ethnicity. How did you arrive at this conclusion?
 
Posted by Djehuti (Member # 6698) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by alTakruri:

Most likely not in any appreciable sense.
The coins with a black man on one side
and an elephant on the other are not of
Carthaginian mint and were very small
change. This is one time I disagree with
J. A. Rogers' research sources.

By Hannibaal's time Phoenician blood
must have been very thin and the folk
of Khart Haddas' land at it's founding,
the Aurigha (sp) were a black people
but art pieces of the Barca family do
not bear features of the blacks in
contemporaneous or later mosaics,
http://thenile.phpbb-host.com/ftopic2316.php
not even the features of the terra-cotta
 -
statuette of the god Baal currently in
the Bardo Museum in Tunis which has
wide nose, tightly curled hair and thick
lips in contrast to the thin-featured sphinx
attached to the arm of his throne.

Hannibaal could have been anything in
between black and blond as were the
north coastal Africans of his era but
there's no solid evidence of exactly
where in that spectrum he precisely fits.

Carthaginian coins representing Hannibal
really just show the archetype of a hero.
The portrait is nearly indistinguishable
from Herakles or Alexander similarly found
on Phoenician shekel coinage from Tyre.

Other coins with an elephant on one side
and a face on the other are thought by some
to show Hannibaal by others to only be mahouts.
Some of the faces on these coins probably do
in fact depict Punic blacks unless the mahouts
were recruited from elsewhere in Africa where
elephants served as war engines.

Anyway, as can be seen in the quotes ranging in
time from -1000 to the 3rd century, the Greeks
didn't class the Imazighen among peoples like
themselves. They were viewed as the lightest in
complexion of the dark peoples of the world.
Even as late as the 8th century, an Arabic
taxonomist still classes Imazighen alongside the
darks and not among the whites. So, it is very
unlikely Hannibal was white by either ancient
or modern criteria.

I agree with Takruri. In that point in time, there is no way of knowing without any actual first-hand descriptions. The Tunisian coast has recieved an influx of populations since the Phoenician colonization including peoples from Europe.
 
Posted by Egmond Codfried (Member # 15683) on :
 
 -

Cleopatra by Giorgio Vasari (1511-1574)
 
Posted by JMT (Member # 12050) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by JMT:
quote:
Originally posted by osirion:
No, just like Cleopetra wasn't Black. However, there were Black warriors he used.

You gave a definitive answer without an explanation in regard to Hannibal's ethnicity. How did you arrive at this conclusion?
I'm patiently waiting for an answer, Osirion. What evidence do you have which suggest Hannibal was not Black? Don't punk out now. Was it not you who once said, "You Afro-nuts need to cut down on the bashing and just give clear, concise and unbias information. If you want to educate people you need to be willing to provide information in a non-confrontational manner."
http://www.egyptsearch.com/forums/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic;f=15;t=000372;p=2
 
Posted by Marc Washington (Member # 10979) on :
 
.
.

Hannibal is in the coin in the first picture: African.

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http://www.beforebc.de/all_africa/02-16-12.html

.
.
 
Posted by Marc Washington (Member # 10979) on :
 
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A discussion of the ethnicity of Hannibal will be helped by seeing images of Semitic and Phoenician populations extant during the centuries before, during, and after him. The concentration of people seen on the page below having unaltered African features speaks to a time before the influx of whites; a time characterized, I'd say, by the historic African population existing in those lands.

The page below doesn't deal exclusively with the ethnicity of Hannibal (bottom left) but, I'd say, is related noting the plethora of names referring to a single people - to which the Phoenicians were a part:

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http://www.beforebc.de/all_europe/700_mediterranean/02-16-700-00-05.html

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Posted by alTakruri (Member # 10195) on :
 
I don't have a scanner and so can't post page 81
from J. A. Rogers' Sex and Race Vol. 1 but here's
a sampling of like coinage.

 -

 -

 -

 -

Use these complete coin photos as a supplement to
images 1 6 7 & 8 of Marc's first post above.
 
Posted by alTakruri (Member # 10195) on :
 
Numismaticists notes on this coin  -

quote:
ETRURIA, Arretium (?), The Chiana Valley. Circa 208-207 BC. Ć
Quartuncia (5.34 gm). Head of an African right / Indian elephant
standing right, bell around neck; M below. SNG ANS 39-41; BMC Italy
pg. 15, 19; SNG Copenhagen 47; Robinson, NumChron 1964, pl. V; SNG
Morcom 45; Laffaille 1. Good VF, well centered, choice dark green
patina. Rare. Exceptionally well preserved and probably one of the
finest known of the type. ($750) This enigmatic issue has been much
discussed. It was Sestini in 1816 who first indicated their area of
circulation in and around the Chiana (Clanis) valley and lake
Trasimeno, dominated by the cities of Arezzo, Chiusi and Cortona. The
traditional attribution of the issue to 217 BC, as representing the
propaganda of Hannibal’s approach to Etruria, was modified by Robinson
(op. cit.), who saw it as a provocative seditious type of Arretium,
which was in a state of high tension with Rome in 209/8, in the hoped
for arrival of Hasdrubal from Spain with reinforcements. However, the
reverse depicts an Indian rather than African elephant with a bell
around its neck reminiscent of the elephant/saw aes signatum issue
(Crawford 9/1) of about 250-240 BC and associated with the battle of
Maleventum (soon to be called Beneventum) in 275 BC when the captured
elephants of Pyrrhus were brought to Rome in triumph. A similar Indian
elephant is also depicted as a symbol on the Tarantine nomos issue
(Vlasto 710-712), indicating the presence of Pyrrhus in the city in
282-276. The Barcid coinage of New Carthage (Villaronga CNH, pg. 65,
12-15) and that of Hannibal in Sicily (SNG Cop. 382) clearly depict
African elephants belonging to the elephant corps from about 220 BC.

As Maria Baglione points out in "Su alcune parallele di bronzo
coniato," Atti Napoli 1975, pg.153-180, the African/elephant issue
shares control marks with other cast and struck Etruscan coins of the
region, she quotes Panvini Rosati in ‘ Annuario dell’accademia Etrusca
di Cortona XII’, 1964, pg. 167ff., who suggests the type is to be seen
as a moneyer’s badge or commemorative issue in the style of Caesar’s
elephant/sacrificial implements issue of 49/48 BC (Crawford 443/1).
The elephant, an attribute of Mercury/Turms, is an emblem of wisdom
and is also a symbol of strength and of the overcoming of evil.

Triton V Sale, 15 Jan 2002, lot 2.

Lot sold for USD 1600.

Used by permission of CNG, www.historicalcoins.com

Undescored text above by me for your analytic attention.
 -
 -
Are these is the Hannibal/Elephant Sicily SNG Cop. 382 type coins mentioned in the above text?
 
Posted by Egmond Codfried (Member # 15683) on :
 
PTOLEMIES IN THE LOUVRE

 -

before 11 September 80
-
before 7 September 58 Ptolemy XII Auletes
Married to: (1) Cleopatra VI Tryphaena; (2) an Egyptian lady
(Louvre, Paris) (???)


http://www.livius.org/ps-pz/ptolemies/ptolemies.htm
 
Posted by Marc Washington (Member # 10979) on :
 
Bro. al Takruri. Tried sending this note to your mailbox, but it's full.

Dynamite pictures. Didn't know these existed (well. 99% of what exists I don't know about). Really nice images, though.

Thanks for sharing them,


Marc
 
Posted by alTakruri (Member # 10195) on :
 
You're welcome Marc. By the way, the day we cease
to uncover that which we did not know existed is the
day we die. I'll put it this way, all that I don't know
would fill up the Library of Congress 99 times over
and then some. Keep up the research.  -
 
Posted by JMT (Member # 12050) on :
 
Marc and Al Takruri thanks for the input. Very informative. BTW, anyone know what museum those coins are hidden away in?

Peace.
 
Posted by osirion (Member # 7644) on :
 
Need to stick with family lineage rather than using art work. The depictions cannot be authenticated via art. If we could use art for identifying clinal adaptive features then what about the Saharan Rock art that shows White people in the Sahara? We would be jumping to conclusions in too many different directions by using art. It is better put this in the area of educated speculation based on probability. It is not likely that on Carthage aristocracy contained many Saharan type Africans. This is coastal North Africa which was primarily inhabited by non-Africans.
 
Posted by JMT (Member # 12050) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by osirion:
Need to stick with family lineage rather than using art work. The depictions cannot be authenticated via art. If we could use art for identifying clinal adaptive features then what about the Saharan Rock art that shows White people in the Sahara? We would be jumping to conclusions in too many different directions by using art. It is better put this in the area of educated speculation based on probability. It is not likely that on Carthage aristocracy contained many Saharan type Africans. This is coastal North Africa which was primarily inhabited by non-Africans.

SPAM! ^^^

This still does not answer my question. The title of the thread ask "Was Hannibal Black"? Simple question, right? You said, "No". I asked you how did you arrive at the conclusion that Hannibal was not Black. And you gave a lame response which was not an answer to my question but a dodge. I don't want your lousy opinion. I WANT TO SEE YOUR EVIDENCE, FACTS, WHICH SUGGEST HANNIBAL WAS NOT BLACK.
 
Posted by Marc Washington (Member # 10979) on :
 
.
.

Hi JMT. I got my first introduction to the Hannibal coins from a post made by Robin Walker. In order to "research" your question, I returned to that post he made and found the following museums mentioned as housing coins on Hannibal: Museo Kircheriano, Lavigerie Museum at Carthage, the British Museum. I hope that helps.


 -


Dear Osirion. You speak about ... the Saharan Rock art that shows White people in the Sahara ...

Here is evidence of African rock art and the African region is witnessed by #'s 3, 4, 5, 8, 9, 10.

 -
http://www.beforebc.de/Made.by.Humankind/Human.Animal.RockArt/01-17-800-00-08.html

Osirion. You speak about "white" rock art. Where is your evidence of white rock art in related region?

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.
 
Posted by Egmond Codfried (Member # 15683) on :
 
JMT is Raymond Djehuti is Doug M etc.
 
Posted by Marc Washington (Member # 10979) on :
 
.
.

Cover the name and one could pass for the other. In a dozen ways, they are the same:

deal with same issues

same affinity to genetics

same use of sarcasm even to identical expressions

same type of hostility towards anyone seeing African prominence

same arguments

same alliances

same carriage of white supremacy and racism

same foibles/behavior/attitude

same allegiances


Doug M is certainly cut in the cloth of Djehuti/Elmer. I'd not be surprised if they were not one-in-the-same; or a schizoid half-a-dozen in-the-same.

.
.
 
Posted by Alive-(What Box) (Member # 10819) on :
 
^No one cares. (about your lame ass trolling - those with a mind are free to check the archives for themselves). no offense though.
 
Posted by Marc Washington (Member # 10979) on :
 
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.

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Posted by Marc Washington (Member # 10979) on :
 
.
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Alive Box says: "^No one cares. (about your lame ass trolling - those with a mind are free to check the archives for themselves). no offense though."

Marc writes: Ahh! Ahh! Now isn't this interesting. You appear out of the blue responding with the same intense anger at the same stimulus.

Now, here is what, er um, Djehuti wrote to me, "Who cares what you profess … You're a nutcase!"

 -

I think we picked-up on another of your schizoid alias' Djehuti with you responding so instantaneously and vehemently to this comment on your many persona.

We see some projectionism going on here, too, as you accuse me of trolling whereas, isn't it "you" (whichever one it is, that is) who is "hiding" and "stalking"?

You need medical attention, friend.

.
.
 
Posted by Marc Washington (Member # 10979) on :
 
.
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Sorry. This thread has unraveled. To get back on the topic of Hannibal:

 -

And from al Takruri:

 -
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.
 
Posted by Marc Washington (Member # 10979) on :
 
.
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And from al Takruri

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.
.
 
Posted by alTakruri (Member # 10195) on :
 
These coins are out on the market. The "cleanest"
one runs for $1600 the dirtiest one for ~$300.


quote:
Originally posted by JMT:
Marc and Al Takruri thanks for the input. Very informative. BTW, anyone know what museum those coins are hidden away in?

Peace.


 
Posted by Mike111 (Member # 9361) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by osirion:
Need to stick with family lineage rather than using art work. The depictions cannot be authenticated via art. If we could use art for identifying clinal adaptive features then what about the Saharan Rock art that shows White people in the Sahara? We would be jumping to conclusions in too many different directions by using art. It is better put this in the area of educated speculation based on probability. It is not likely that on Carthage aristocracy contained many Saharan type Africans. This is coastal North Africa which was primarily inhabited by non-Africans.

osirion: As usual you are dis-ingenious - or just plain ignorant, I am not sure which. For your edification; The Phoenicians were ethnically and culturally Canaanites. Sometime around 1200 B.C. the turmoil caused by the influx of Hapiru caused them to withdraw northward and consolidate in what is now Lebanon. The Phoenicians were active merchants who traded throughout the Mediterranean and established colonies as far away as Spain. The best known of these Phoenician colonies was Carthage. It was founded on the north coast of Africa by the Phoenicians of Tyre, in 814 B.C.

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Posted by Mike111 (Member # 9361) on :
 
 -

On the issue of the coin; though Hannibal was young (age 26) when he came to power in 221 B.C. The image on the coin appears to me, to be that of a boy. Also, it seems to me, that a person so great as Hannibal would have a much more heroic type image on his coin.
 
Posted by Marc Washington (Member # 10979) on :
 
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Could be you're right, Mike. In truth, though, Socrates was phenotypically African as he describes himself but was called ugly; beauty is in the eye of the beholder and there was no greater philosopher than he.

There's no physicist more respected today than Stephen Hawking at Oxford - though he is all but shriveled and hasn't been able to walk for decades. Desmond Tutu is diminutive in stature but it is he that won the Nobel Prize and not more handsome others.

David, though, was a humble sheppard boy when Goliath met his match. In all fairness, kings almost commonly at least wore diadems. It was the Syrians, Selucid kings, white kings for 300 years following Alexander who seldom wore diadems and Alexander himself did not.

Maybe Hannibal would have appeared more heroic. You could be right.

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.
 
Posted by alTakruri (Member # 10195) on :
 
The gifts they bear may very well be Phoenician,
but the porters themselves are not (as I judge by
their boots, cloaks and garments, coiffure, and
head gear). My surmise, though I could well be
wrong, the caption doesn't seem to fit the picture.

quote:
 -

 
Posted by Alive-(What Box) (Member # 10819) on :
 
I know the below is directed at Djehuti and his "aliases", but it is still as I said about the archives.

I didn't respond because it was Djehuti I responded because everyone who actually focuses alot of what they contribute on ancient Egypt gets pegged as having multiple accounts by disruptive trolls plus Marc (I don't think [?] alot of what he does is 'trolling'). It's just ironic.

quote:
you responding so instantaneously and vehemently to this comment on [Djehuti's] many persona.

 
Posted by Marc Washington (Member # 10979) on :
 
.
.

 -

Alive box writes: "^No one cares. (about your lame ass trolling - those with a mind are free to check the archives for themselves). no offense though."

Marc writes: Ahh hah! Well. Now isn't this interesting. You appear out of the blue responding with the same intense anger at the same stimulus.

Now, here is what, er um, Djehuti wrote to me, "Who cares what you profess … You're a nutcase!"

 -

I think we picked-up on another of your schizoid alias' Djehuti with you responding so instantaneously and vehemently to this comment on your many persona.

We see some projectionism going on here, too, as you accuse me of trolling whereas, isn't it "you" (whichever one it is, that is) who is "hiding" and "stalking"?

You need medical attention, friend.

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HANNIBAL THE AFRICAN WARRIOR

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(From Runoko Rashidi’s site)


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Posted by Mike111 (Member # 9361) on :
 
alTakruri - The relief above is generally accepted as depicting Phoenicians. In my own experience; when White people lie, it is generally to replace a Black person with a White person - Such as with the supposed coin of Hannibal below - (they have no shame).

 -

So the fact that the people depicted are Black, leads me to believe that the identification is as accurate as knowledge permits. However, the fact is, that no one is certain of the identifications. Simply because the reliefs at Apadana are not identified in any way. Researchers identify the members of the procession by comparing their garments to the people depicted on the facade of Darius' tomb.


The facade of Darius' tomb is divided into three registers: the bottom register is blank, the middle is sculptured to imitate the front of a palace, and the top shows the monarch at worship on the top of a piece of furniture that is supported by representatives of the nations in his realm.

 -


This top register is adorned with a framed relief panel showing a dais supported by thirty representatives of the nations of the empire. These representatives are identified by cuneiform captions. They are arranged in two tiers of fourteen people with raised arms between the legs, and two people on the outside supporting the feet of the dais.

The inscription reads:
Darius the King says: These are the countries which came to me by the favor of Ahuramazda. I was king of them: Persia, Elam, Babylonia, Assyria, Arabia, Egypt, (those) who are beside the sea, Sardis, Ionia, Media, Armenia, Cappadocia, Parthia, Drangiana, Aria, Chorasmia, Bactria, Sogdiana, Gandara, Scythia, Sattagydia, Arachosia, Maka.


Naturally; White people DO play games with the identifications - what would you expect. And then there are those who no one can identify; Such as below.


 -


And if your point is that the Phoenicians look very much the same as what are identified as Lydians from Anatolia in some sources - I have no answer, its all a guess.



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Posted by Mike111 (Member # 9361) on :
 
For anyone wanting a firmer identification of Phoenicians; perhaps this relief from the palace of Assyrian king Ashurnasirpal II (883-859 B.C.) will suffice.


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Posted by Mike111 (Member # 9361) on :
 
Hanni - Though White people have undoubtedly destroyed all images of Hannibal, and replaced them with fakes - All is not lost. As you have seen, it is possible to cross-reference artifacts and history, in order to get at the truth.
 
Posted by Marc Washington (Member # 10979) on :
 
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Mike. Who can know which if any picture of Hannibal is or isn't authentic. I sure don't. However, the picture I showed on my multi-image page above was presented by Robin Walker and he developed a scholarly argument (I could post the whole letter) making a good case for it being authentic.

I'd add another possible (possible) point for it being authentic. The subject may (may) be wearing a diadem in that portrayal (my observation - and maybe there's none: it's hard to make out clearly). If so, a diadem is undoubtedly king's wear; that and the Indian elephant.

Phoenicians and Snail's shell: It was Bro al Takruri who familiarized me with use of the term (something like) snail's shell for the way the woolly hair of Buddha was portrayed. Interesting is that the above Phoenicians also have the "snail's shell" for portraying woolly hair.

Interesting that Buddha iconography and lineage could harken back to Phoenicians (they who were the traders among the Canaanites where Canaanites are also Semites and Hibaru - ultimately descendents of Ham - and if Hannibal has Phoenician ancestry, he would trace roots to Ham, be African, black) Buddha might through the Phoenicians (e.g. same "snail shell" iconography) be related to Hannibal and them both to Ham.

 -

Mike writes: alTakruri - The relief above is generally accepted as depicting Phoenicians. In my own experience; when White people lie, it is generally to replace a Black person with a White person - Such as with the supposed coin of Hannibal below - (they have no shame).

Marc writes: They've apparently turned black to white dozens of times. The link below has just a few. In my files are twice more I've never gotten around to making a web page on:

http://www.beforebc.de/Made.by.Humankind/Real.People/02-16-800-00-12.html

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Posted by Mike111 (Member # 9361) on :
 
^^Marc – I make no claims as to knowing if the coin is authentic. However, you do make an interesting point on the hair thing; but you attribute it to the wrong people. Phoenicians did not depict themselves like that (Snail's shell hair) Persians did! And yes: that artistic style does have meaning.

Clyde and I have been in disagreement as to where the Persians came from. His belief (as I recall) is that they came from Anatolia or points northward. My belief is that they might have been Mohenjo-daroians/Harappans of the Indus valley civilization who moved northward to avoid the invading Arians. To me, this would explain an artistic style, which was prevalent in India and all of Southeast Asia. My theory is further supported by the fact that when the last Persian Empire was destroyed by the Turks, under Muhammad’s flag. A great many Persians fled south into Black controlled India, (the parts not controlled by Arians). But on the other hand, I have to admit that Persian burial practices are similar to ancient Anatolian burial practices, which tends to support Clyde’s position.

 
Posted by Countess Hermione Heliotrope (Member # 14248) on :
 
Is Hannibal black?

Nope it's a wicked lie.

he was a white guy [Wink]

Hannibal the proof
 
Posted by Mike111 (Member # 9361) on :
 
^^^Update noted: Mr. Lector was indeed White.
 
Posted by Marc Washington (Member # 10979) on :
 
.
.

Mike. You and Clyde each have interesting theories but I'm acquainted with neither side of it.

I do, though, like to plug the fact that the IndoEuropean language is an agri-pastoral one. And that though we say it is spread by the white I-E, the theory does not take into account that James Mellaart's archeological work there (and it was he who introduced the world to Anatolia) found two types of Africans as the originating population and original settlers.

Whites, on the other hand, came from the Caucasus Mountains - with no agro-pastoral history. So, what that means in regard to how whites obtained the so-called I-E language is what it is.

I discuss briefly touch on the subject here:

http://www.beforebc.de/Made.by.Humankind/Gods.MotherGoddeses/02-16g-400-20n-10.html


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But, to get back to the thread...

Hannibal was son of a Punic Father from Carthage - Hamilcar, and was Son of a European(Iberian)- his Mother was Iberian. Hannibal's Ethnicity was African.
 
Posted by Marc Washington (Member # 10979) on :
 
.
.

Oops. The point left out above was that the two African groups settled Anatolia near 10,000 BC (says Mellaart) and it was they who had the world's earliest settlements. They who were some of the earliest pioneers of farming and pastoralism before 7000 BC.

My point being logic suggests that it was they who spoke what we call Indo-European languages before whites arose who later spread the language (while the initial Africans vanish from the face of the earth with no theory attributing any particular cause to their sudden disappearance).

 -


Back to Hannibal

There are two decidedly staunch camps that I've become very familiar with as I worked on and then publicized Pride of Carthage. One camp says that Hannibal was black, an African, and should therefore be considered an African hero. He was based in Africa; therefore he is of Africa. These folks would say that it's our continuing racist society that either wants to 1) deny that Hannibal was African or 2) choose to accept it, but then go on to demonize him because of it.

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Posted by akoben (Member # 15244) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alive-(What Box):
I know the below is directed at Djehuti and his "aliases", but it is still as I said about the archives.I didn't respond because it was Djehuti I responded because everyone who actually focuses alot of what they contribute on ancient Egypt gets pegged as having multiple accounts by disruptive trolls plus Marc (I don't think [?] alot of what he does is 'trolling'). It's just ironic.

The subtotal of your "contribution" to Egyptsearch is to coat-tail posters you have an attraction for and parrot their nonsense. When asked to explain the research you claim to know, predictably, since you're a mere parrot, you simply run. You're in no position to critique anybody, you and the rest of your know-nothing tag-alongs.


 -
 
Posted by Mike111 (Member # 9361) on :
 
Marc – I am not familiar with James Mellaart's or his work, but on its face, what you relate from him sounds a bit dramatic. To begin with, I don’t much care for the term “two types of Africans” because this suggests that they both just came from Africa – that could not be so. Undoubtedly one of the groups in Anatolia were from the line of Grimaldi (we know this because of the Venus figures) – they left Africa 35,000 years previous.

Indications do suggest that the Anatolians were advanced beyond Egypt or Sumer in certain areas (perhaps all). They appear to be the first ones to build monumental structures – note the artifacts from Gobekli Tepe (circa 11,500 B.C.).


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And their artistic skills do appear beyond anything in Egypt or Sumer at the time.


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Whether they invented agriculture, I have no way of knowing, nor does anyone else.

The term “Indo-European” is a trick, designed to confuse racial history. The prefix “Indo” obviously relates to India, and the melding of Black Dravidian and White Arian language and culture. How that got transposed to the other Whites who migrated to Europe is beyond me. Stranger still, is how it came to include Black people from Persia to Anatolia. Perhaps Clyde with his knowledge of languages can shed light on this. But one thing is sure, the term is definitely and purposefully used to obscure the fact that these people were Black.


As to your last point; the Blacks of Anatolia did NOT suddenly disappear.

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They continue to live in every dark-skinned Turk that you see.


Note the Armenian of 500 B.C. – they seem to have gotten a head start on it.

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Posted by TheAmericanPatriot (Member # 15824) on :
 
Mike, Shame on those evil historians who sit around and think of ways to trick poor black people.
 
Posted by Mike111 (Member # 9361) on :
 
TheAmericanPatriot - That should read "Shame on those evil "White" historians who sit around and think of ways to trick poor black people."
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

I was going to edit my post to make the point that even the fascists Whites on the board, could not argue that the Arians who invaded India were from Asia. Therefore the term should logically be "Indo-Asian" yet it is Indo-European. The only reason for that, is to promote the lie that Whites originated in Europe.
 
Posted by TheAmericanPatriot (Member # 15824) on :
 
Poor poor black man, a victim of white lies.
You cannot have it both ways Mike. If the white man is an evil liar then your folks must be ignorant and weak.
 
Posted by argyle104 (Member # 14634) on :
 
Mike111 wrote:
-----------------------------------
Also, it seems to me, that a person so great as Hannibal would have a much more heroic type image on his coin.
-----------------------------------


Mike, why is the image on the coin not heroic?


I told you all Mike111 and his ilk are black american negroes who have had their minds sodomized by whites.
 
Posted by finished (Member # 16076) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Hanni:


What Color Was Hannibal?



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Posted by Mike111 (Member # 9361) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by TheAmericanPatriot:
Poor poor black man, a victim of white lies.
You cannot have it both ways Mike. If the white man is an evil liar then your folks must be ignorant and weak.

Alas - note argyle104s post. But we're working on it.
 
Posted by Mike111 (Member # 9361) on :
 
finished - I do.
 
Posted by argyle104 (Member # 14634) on :
 
Mike, why is the image on the coin not heroic?
 
Posted by Marc Washington (Member # 10979) on :
 
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.

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Robin Walker speaks about Hannibal and Indian Elephant coin at ACH discussion group


Just as in America there is an attempt to rewrite the history of Tutankhamen to remove the Blacks from that history, a television documentary in Britain attempted to rewrite the history of Carthage to remove the Blacks from that history too.

First I present Channel Five's attempt to justify their dishonesty. Secondly, my answer is given below.

Robin

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Dear Sir

Thank you for your recent e-mail regarding Hannibal Of The Alps: Revealed. Hannibal Barca was indeed born in Carthage but his appearance and ethnic background have been an endless source of speculation amongst academic s over the years. There is only one contemporary image of Hannibal. It appears on a coin which is in the possession of the British Museum. However, even that coin is not 100% positively attributed to the period. (A good photographic image of it is available at http://www.barca.fsnet.co.uk/hannibal-command-spain.htm). You will see from the coin that Hannibal has what appear to be Caucasian features. Similarly there is scant documentary reference to his appearance. The only ‘contemporary’ commentator wrote 100 years after Hannibal’s death and gave little regard to a physical description of the man other than his size and strength.

In the present day there is a huge ethnographic variation across the continent of Africa so to say Hannibal would have looked ‘African’ would we believe, have also been misleading. After all, Omar Sharif and Nelson Mandela are both ‘African’ but no-one would think of them as being ethnically related. From the information we have available it is possible that Hannibal’s mother may have been Spanish. This would lead us to believe that it is likely that Hannibal would have be en olive skinned. Hannibal’s army was also made up of a huge variety of races of men he picked up on his travels through Europe. All colours of skin would have been in his army.

Our overriding aim was to provide an accurate historical narrative which would relate the life of an extraordinary general. This we believe we achieved. At no time did we intend to mislead the viewers of this film into thinking Hannibal was anything other than Carthaginian. < /DIV>
Thank you for your interest in Five.

Yours sincerely


VIEWER ADVISOR

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Dear Sir

I am wholly unimpressed with your treatment of the Hannibal issue.

On Hannibal’s Surus
Sir Gavin De Beer, author of Hannibal: The Struggle for Power in the Mediterranean, wrote that:

Hannibal . . . rode the sole surviving elephant, an animal which may have found its way into history, for some years later Cato the Elder recorded that the elephant which fought most bravely in the Second Punic War was called Surus. This name means the Syrian, and Syria was where the Ptolemies had captured Indian elephants, some of which they must have given to Carthage. A bronze coin found in the valley of the Clanis (Chiana), on Hannibal’s route to Lake Trasimene, bears on the obverse a Negro’s head . . . and on the reverse an equally obvious Indian elephant. It is believed to have been minted at just about this time, 217 BC; and as Pyrrhus never came this way with his elephants, the coin probably bears a representation of Hannibal’s sole surviving elephant, the Indian Surus. (UK, Thames and Hudson, 1969, page 191)

From this data, we are specifically told that:
• Hannibal rode the sole surviving elephant
• That elephant was of Indian origin
• A coin exists with this Indian elephant depicted on it

On page 190 of this same book, Sir Gavin reproduces the coin.

(See Picture 1 below)

It was from the British Museum and the caption reads as follows:

Bronze coin from the Chiana valley, c.217 BC, showing (obverse) a Negro’s head, and (reverse) an Indian elephant, perhaps Hannibal’s Surus.

There are however three weaknesses in Sir Gavin De Beer’s account
• He is remarkably reluctant to identify the Negro
• He erroneously gave the impression that there is only one such coin
• He did not comment on the Phoenician or Punic character under the elephant

Elsewhere in the same book (pages 104-105) Sir Gavin takes to task those “modern commentators who were ignorant of the differences between the bush and the forest varieties of African elephants.” He continues:
< FONT face="Times New Roman">
Polybius’s account has been completely vindicated; the heights at the shoulder of the three elephants are approximately 7 feet 9 inches for the African forest elephant, 9 feet 6 inches for the Indian elephant, and 11 feet for the African bush elephant. The size of the Indian elephant made it possible to mount howdahs or ‘castles’ on its back, containing archers. The African forest elephant was too small . . . Indian and African elephants have been depicted on coins and mosaics, and the following differences between them are so clear-cut that they can easily be distinguished. The African forest elephant differs from the Indian in the following features: 1, the ear is enormous, whereas the Indian elephant’s ear is small; 2, the back has a concave dip between a high point over the shoulder and a nother high point over the hind quarters, whereas the back of the Indian elephant is an unbroken convex dome from front to rear; 3, the hind quarters are almost flat, whereas the Indian elephant’s hind quarters project backwards at a fairly sharp angle; 4, the head is carried high, while the Indian elephant carries its head low; 5, the forehead is flat, instead of showing the Indian elephant’s concave profile; 6, the trunk is marked by transverse ridges, instead of being smooth; 7, the tip of the trunk has two ‘fingers’ instead of only one as in the Indian elephant; 8, the upper part of the front edge of the hind leg is masked by a fold of skin forming a skirt, whereas the front edge of the hind leg of the Indian elephant is uncovered right up to the groin.

Keith Hart, a veterinarian, wrote a recent article for the journal Amphora: Volume II, entitled On Hannibal and Elephants. Part of the paper reads as follows:

Syria (now Iraq) once harbored the largest Asian subspecies (now extinct) hunted by the pharaohs 3,000 years ago. It is possible that the Ptolemies in Egypt were still able to obtain Syrian elephants in Hannibal’s time, and this may have been the original source of Hannibal’s one surviving animal. In any case, while the majority of Hannibal’s elephants were probably of North African origin, at least one may have been an Asian elephant. It is highly likely that the surviving elephant, emerging from the Apennines with the great Carthaginian on his back, was none other than Surus. Pliny the Elder tells us that he was not only the bravest of the elephants but that he also had one broken tusk. Scullard suggests that this eleph ant, which could have been a large, male, Asian elephant from Syria, was a gift from Ptolemy to his ally, the great Carthaginian general Hamilcar Barca (174). Hannibal was Hamilcar’s son and may have formed a relationship with Surus from childhood . . . I visualize Hannibal riding Surus into Etruria at the head of a bedraggled but victorious army. Scullard sheds one final light on the scene by turning our attention to Etrurian bronze coins issued around 217 B.C. when Hannibal passed through (176). The coin s clearly depict an Asian elephant. As Scullard points out, the coins could have nothing to do with Pyrrhus and his Asian elephants, who failed to reach as far north as Rome. The only other reasonable explanation is that the coins depict Surus, as he passes through Etruria and disappears into the mists of history. (US, American Philological Association, Volume 2, Issue 2, Fall 2003, page 6)

From this data, it is impossible to confuse an Indian with either variety of the African elephant.

Conclusion One: The coin that you claim is of Hannibal has the wrong type of elephant depicted on it. The caption associated with your coin reads:

Coin from Cartago Nova AR quarter shekel, (1.58g) c. 215 BC, Male head (of Hannibal?) left. / African elephant walking to right, dotted border

(See Pictures 2a and 2b below)

On the Carthaginian Origin of the Coins
P. Raffaele Garrucci, author of Le Monete Dell’Italia Antica, reproduces 5 coins found in Italy. O n page 58, he wrote the following:

11-14. Museo Kircheriano. Testa di moro con anello all’orecchio volta a d. R. Elefante asiatico con la squilla al collo stante, volto a destra. I bronzi che portano questi tipi si distinguono fra loro per quattro diverse lettere alfabetiche . . .
15. Nella collezione Strozzi. Questa monetina ha i tipi predetti e per lettera distinctiva . . . (Rome, 1885)

From this data, we are specifically told that:
• Coins 11-14 are in the Museo Kircheriano
• Coin 15 is in a private collection
• The coins are distinguished by different Phoenician or Punic characters written on them (See Appendix)
• The elephants are described as “asiatico” - meaning Indian in origin

On plate T. LXXV of the same book are reproductions of these coins.

(See Picture 3 below)

Conclusion Two: The coin that you claim is of Hannibal does not contain any Phoenician or Punic characters. There is thus nothing to connect your coin with Carthage other than conjecture.


On the Peopling of Carthage
Stephane Gsell, author of the voluminous Histoire Ancienne de L’Afrique du Nord, wrote that:

Plusieurs crânes, recueillis dans les cimetičres, offrent des caractčres propres aux nčgres. (Volume IV, Franc e, Librairie Hachette, 1920, pages 173-4)

In the same book we read that:

On ne paraît pas avoir recontré jusqu’ŕ present ŕ Carthage, non plus qu’ŕ Sidon, le type dit sémitique, fréquent chez les Juifs at les Arabes; face longue, en ovale régulier, nez mince at aquiline, crâne allongé et trčs renflé au-dessus de la nuque. (page 177)

From this data, we are specifically told that:
• Craniometric remains typical of Negroes have been found in Carthaginian cemeteries
• Craniometric remains typical of Semites have not been found in Carthaginian cemeteries
Eugčne Pittard, an anthropology professor, reported in his Race and History: An Ethnological Introduction to History, that:

Other skeletal remains found in Punic Carthage and deposited in the Lavigerie Museum are from specimens discovered in private tombs that very likely belonged to the Carthaginian elite. The skulls are nearly all dolichocephalic. (UK, Kegan Paul reprint edition, 2003, page 335)

As an example:

Those who have visited the Lavigerie Museum at Carthage . . . will remember the magnificent sarcop hagus of the priestess of Tanit discovered by Pčre Delattre. This sarcophagus, the most highly decorated and artistic of those found, and whose outer image probably represents the goddess herself, must have been the coffin of a very great ecclesiastical personage. And the woman it contained exhibited Negroid characters. She was an African by race! (page 334)

From this data, we are specifically told that:
• Craniometric remains typical of the Carthaginian elites were dolichocephalic. Dolichocephaly (i.e. having a long skull) is generally typical of tropically-adapted populations

Conclusion Three: The coin that you claim is of Hannibal contains a Caucasian face. This is not consistent with the known anthropological facts.

In Closing
North Africa today cannot be used to discuss North Africa in ancient times. The Arabians who are there today conquered North Africa after 639 AD. The light-skinned Berbers are descended from the Vandal conquest of the fifth century AD and the Roman conquest of Carthage in 146 BC. As Carthage was founded in 814 BC it therefore contained no Arabians nor White Berbers.

In North Africa today Negro Berbers still exist such as the Harratin and the Chouchen. They are descended from the earliest inhabitants of North Africa. Their ancestors (called “Libyans”) were the numerically dominant population in Carthage from the elite down to the commoners.

The coin that you claim is Hannibal
• Has a face that is inconsistent with the k nown anthropological and historical facts
• Contains an elephant that is of the wrong type
• Lacks Phoenician or Punic writing

On the other hand I have shown that there are six different coins associated with Hannibal and all of them show him to be a Negro.

How did you manage to make a historical documentary and be totally oblivious of the key evidence?


Robin Walker

Appendix 1
It is not at all obvious that the people of Spain two thousand years ago were uniformly olive skinned nor were they uniformly of Caucasian appearance. The Annals of Human Genetics (Volume 67: Issue 4, July 2003) carried an interesting article entitled Joining the Pillars of Hercules: mtDNA Sequences Show Multidirectional Gene Flow in the Western Mediterranean by S. Plaza, F. Calafell, A. Helal, N. Bouzerna, G. Lefranc, J. Bertranpetit and D. Comas. In the article, they revealed the following data:

Out of 23 different L sequences in Iberia, two were also found in NW Africa (as well as in sub-Saharan Africa), and 7 others were found in sub-Saharan Africa (in a dataset comprising 1,158 individuals from 20 populations; Graven et al. 1995, Pinto et al. 1996; Watson et al. 1996; Mateu et al. 1997; Rando et al. 1998; Krings et al. 1999; Pereira et al. 2001; Brehm et al. 2002) but not in NW Africa. Treating the set of L sequences in Iberia as if it were a population reveals genetic distances from some W African populations, such as the Senegalese and Yoruba, that are slightly smaller than those between L sequences in Iberia and NW Africa. Thus, it may be the case that gene flow from NW Africa is not entirely responsible for the presence of L sequences in Iberia.

These authors are surprised by the presence of sub-Saharan genetic material in Iberia that they, of course, cannot comfortably explain. What this evidence implies, however, is that claiming Hannibal to have been Spanish of Half-Spanish is simply not a good enough get-out clause to remove his Negro ancestry.

Museo Kircheriano, Lavigerie Museum at Carthage, the British Museum,
.
.
 
Posted by Alive-(What Box) (Member # 10819) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by akoben:
The subtotal of your "contribution" to Egyptsearch is to coat-tail posters you have an attraction for and parrot their nonsense.

That's nice.
 
Posted by Marc Washington (Member # 10979) on :
 
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.

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Alive box writes: "^No one cares. (about your lame ass trolling - those with a mind are free to check the archives for themselves). no offense though."

Marc writes: Ahh hah! Well. Now isn't this interesting. You appear out of the blue responding with the same intense anger at the same stimulus.

Now, here is what, er um, Djehuti wrote to me, "Who cares what you profess … You're a nutcase!"

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I think we picked-up on another of your schizoid alias' Djehuti with you responding so instantaneously and vehemently to this comment on your many persona.

We see some projectionism going on here, too, as you accuse me of trolling whereas, isn't it "you" (whichever one it is, that is) who is "hiding" and "stalking"?

You need medical attention, friend.

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HANNIBAL THE AFRICAN WARRIOR

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(From Runoko Rashidi’s site)


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Posted by alTakruri (Member # 10195) on :
 
No. The relief in question is known to be of Lydians.
 -
Uncareful fact checkers or a plain old mistake in
scholarship of a webmaster acting in solo may be
those who generally accept it as depicting Phoenicians.

Your source "RealHistory" is confused. Their fuller
presentation labels the tribute bearers as Phoenicians
then turns around and labels a zoom of the lead tribute
bearer as a Lydian.

quote:
Originally posted by Mike111:
alTakruri - The relief above is generally accepted as depicting Phoenicians.

. . . .

And if your point is that the Phoenicians look very much the same as what are identified as Lydians from Anatolia in some sources - I have no answer, its all a guess.



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Posted by alTakruri (Member # 10195) on :
 
My earliest venture into the art came from J. A. Rogers.
Since then I perused numerous art books specifically
devoted to the people, era, or art style under examination.

Buddhist lore tells of snails covering the Buddha's
head to protect him from sunstroke on an occasion when
he was involved in extensive protracted meditation.

I don't call woolly hair snail shells. But as you
pointed out, some claim that what looks like woolly
hair on some Buddha icons are these snails. I leave
that discussion there.

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As for wooly hair representations in Persian art
some is natural woolly hair and some is wooly by
artifice. Looking at the root tells which one is
depicted. In the pics Mike posted notice that the
the Lydian's beard is straight and the roots of
his hair is wavy(?) unlike that of the "unknown"
individual who has natural woolly hair. The other
examples Mike posted also have artificially woolly
hair as revealed in the details I pointed out about
the Lydian.


quote:
Originally posted by Marc Washington:

Phoenicians and Snail's shell: It was Bro al Takruri who familiarized me with use of the term (something like) snail's shell for the way the woolly hair of Buddha was portrayed. Interesting is that the above Phoenicians also have the "snail's shell" for portraying woolly hair.

Interesting that Buddha iconography and lineage could harken back to Phoenicians (they who were the traders among the Canaanites where Canaanites are also Semites and Hibaru - ultimately descendents of Ham - and if Hannibal has Phoenician ancestry, he would trace roots to Ham, be African, black) Buddha might through the Phoenicians (e.g. same "snail shell" iconography) be related to Hannibal and them both to Ham.



 
Posted by Mike111 (Member # 9361) on :
 
Al Takruri - The Oriental Institute - University of Chicago, also identifies them as Syrian aka Phoenicians. Since, I believe, The Oriental Institute was the original lead researcher at the site, I have to go with them on this one - sorry. But I find your work on the hair thing fascinating, can you give a source for the Buddha quote?


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Posted by alTakruri (Member # 10195) on :
 
Syrian does not equal Phoenician. Though parts of
Phoenicia included what's now the nation state of
Syria, our Lebanon best represents Phoenicia. You
may want to look into Lydia's location and a people
identified in ancient times as Leuco-Syrians.

http://z.about.com/d/ancienthistory/1/0/9/9/2/Reference-Map-of-Asia-Minor-under-the-Greeks-and-Romans-.jpg

I don't have time to look for it now and GOOGLE doesn't
have the thread I may have posted it to in their cache
but try a net search on the words Buddha and snails.
I was very young when a lady friend nicknamed Buddha
told me about the snails after I told her the Buddha
had nappy hair.
 
Posted by Mike111 (Member # 9361) on :
 
alTakruri - I apologize for once again correcting you; But if you would go to an encyclopedia - even Wiki will do - and look-up the Etymology of the words Syria and Phoenicia, I am sure that you will see your mistake. Note should also be taken, that ALL researchers by convention; equate ancient references to Syria, as referencing Phoenicia. The Etymology of the words will explain why that is. Additionally, as you can see from the map below, Lydia is not even close enough to Syria to be a part of the discussion.


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Posted by Mike111 (Member # 9361) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by argyle104:
Mike, why is the image on the coin not heroic?

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Congratulations argyle104, a civilized question deserves a civilized answer.

The current style of modern Black men (especially AAs) of unkempt hair, is new. Probably as the result of the ignorant belief that the rudiments of civilized behavior and grooming are a White invention. (That is why I had no answer for TheAmericanPatriot above - he had me and I knew it).

But the facts are quite the opposite; Black people are the inventors of civilization, and the rudiments therein. Ancient Black elites were fastidious about grooming. Their hair was always either completely cut off or carefully coiffured.

The Phoenicians were amount the ancient worlds wealthiest, most civilized, and most cosmopolitan people - please note the other reliefs of Phoenicians. Therefore, the suggestion that one of Phoenicia's greatest kings, would be depicted on his coin with unkempt hair, is to me preposterous, and not in keeping with other depictions of Phoenicians.

Please note how other Black kings (in this case, Persian kings) of similar times depicted themselves on their coins. As you can see, there is an effort to make the subject appear noble and heroic.


Bahram I 273 to 276

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Narseh 293 to 302

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Posted by alTakruri (Member # 10195) on :
 
No need to apologize for what you haven't done.

Have it your way but you're quite mistaken
in conflating two separate nations as one.

The distance between Syria/Phoenicia on the
one hand and Lydia on the other adds to the
proofs of the people in the contested relief
being other than Syrian. That however has
nothing to do with distinguishing Syrians
from LeucoSyrians. And if Lydians are going
to be mistaken for Syrians then LeucoSyrians
are the only kind they could remotely be.

Again, Phoenicia is now Lebanon and was once Canaan.


quote:
Originally posted by Mike111:
alTakruri - I apologize for once again correcting you; But if you would go to an encyclopedia - even Wiki will do - and look-up the Etymology of the words Syria and Phoenicia, I am sure that you will see your mistake. Note should also be taken, that ALL researchers by convention; equate ancient references to Syria, as referencing Phoenicia. The Etymology of the words will explain why that is. Additionally, as you can see from the map below, Lydia is not even close enough to Syria to be a part of the discussion.


 -


 
Posted by alTakruri (Member # 10195) on :
 
There are numerous depictions of ancient world blacks
with what you call unkempt hair. Far from the shame
you see in naturally nappy hair Africans who carefully
develop and tend their twisted strands of hair are
quite proud of it, from then until now. See The Image
of the Black in Western Art Vol 1
for example after
example of this style of hair written of in ancient
texts as twisted and curled (many a noble "Punic" Afer,
 -
like the emperor Juba of Numidia, sported it.

quote:
Originally posted by Mike111:
quote:
Originally posted by argyle104:
Mike, why is the image on the coin not heroic?

 -


Congratulations argyle104, a civilized question deserves a civilized answer.

The current style of modern Black men (especially AAs) of unkempt hair, is new. Probably as the result of the ignorant belief that the rudiments of civilized behavior and grooming are a White invention. (That is why I had no answer for TheAmericanPatriot above - he had me and I knew it).

But the facts are quite the opposite; Black people are the inventors of civilization, and the rudiments therein. Ancient Black elites were fastidious about grooming. Their hair was always either completely cut off or carefully coiffured.

The Phoenicians were amount the ancient worlds wealthiest, most civilized, and most cosmopolitan people - please note the other reliefs of Phoenicians. Therefore, the suggestion that one of Phoenicia's greatest kings, would be depicted on his coin with unkempt hair, is to me preposterous, and not in keeping with other depictions of Phoenicians.

Please note how other Black kings (in this case, Persian kings) of similar times depicted themselves on their coins. As you can see, there is an effort to make the subject appear noble and heroic.


Bahram I 273 to 276

 -


Narseh 293 to 302

 -



 
Posted by Mike111 (Member # 9361) on :
 
alTakruri - you will recall that I did suggest that you go to an encyclopedia and look-up the Etymology of the words Syria and Phoenicia to see your mistake. But since you didn't do that, then perhaps this map of ancient Syria - from The Oriental Institute - University of Chicago - will help you.


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Posted by alTakruri (Member # 10195) on :
 
I didn't become aware of this yesterday. I've
studied these things for years upon years.

The mistaken Greek etymolgy of Syria from Tsur(Tyre)
has no bearing on the fact that Syrians (Aramaics) were
not Phoenicians (Canaanitics).

Pay attention to the map you just posted and see the
difference between Lebanon and Syria. Where are the
famous Phoenician cities of Byblos, Sidon, and Tyre
located?
 
Posted by akoben (Member # 15244) on :
 
^ i have to agree with great black jew here mike.
 
Posted by Mike111 (Member # 9361) on :
 
alTakruri - You seriously compare Phoenicians with rabble in Algeria?? But to your point, that head appears tied and arranged - possibly with some sort of head gear. "Civilized" people groom themselves; low-life do not. That is irrespective of race.
 
Posted by alTakruri (Member # 10195) on :
 
It's not a matter of agreeing with whom I assume
you mean to mean myself. It's a matter of recognized
factual nomenclature of historical geography and
ethnology.

It is only well after the collapse of Phoenicia that
Syrians from the northernmost Levantine shore took
Canaan by conquest making it a Syrian province many
a century after the era under discussion.

The Persian relief depicts Lydians not Phoenicians
and should such Lydians be monikered Syrian it can
be due to their proximity of the habitation of the
people dubbed LeucoSyrian who were Anatolians not
any kind of Arabian Plate/Mesopotamian/Levantine
folk.

quote:
Originally posted by akoben:
^ i have to agree with great black jew here mike.


 
Posted by Mike111 (Member # 9361) on :
 
^^^Have you BOTH lost it???? The TITLE OF THE MAP IS ANCIENT SYRIA!!!! The MODERN names of countries is to provide reference - the ENTIRE AREA WAS SYRIA. There was no Lebanon, Jordan, Iraq, Turkey etc. etc. in those days!!!!!! DAMN!
 
Posted by Mike111 (Member # 9361) on :
 
alTakruri - If you intend to continue with this silliness, then please provide material to support your positions. So far, you have been generous with your opinions, but provided nothing else - it has become tedious.
 
Posted by alTakruri (Member # 10195) on :
 
Stop distracting. This part of the discussion centers
on woolly hairstyles, that of the presumed Carthaginian
Punic Afer on the one coin and that of the known Numidian
emperor Juba.

Your point of view on the hair of the man on the coin
with the elephant as uncivilized speaks to your racism.

Your ignorance of ancient texts and images and your
anti-African bias cause your prejudiced eyes to
see as as unkempt what is a carefully tended hairstyle
and one which suits a military man quite well.

You introduction of Persian coins is the butt of ridicule.
Rather than recognize the valuable civilizations of
Africa you introduce non-African non-black Persians
as the heroic idea.


quote:
Originally posted by Mike111:
alTakruri - You seriously compare Phoenicians with rabble in Algeria?? But to your point, that head appears tied and arranged - possibly with some sort of head gear. "Civilized" people groom themselves; low-life do not. That is irrespective of race.


 
Posted by Doug M (Member # 7650) on :
 
Mike Canaan was part of the Egyptian sphere of power well up until the late period in about 800 BC. The Egyptians identified Syria as being North of Canaan. So greater Syria as you call it did not exist. The reliefs in question are part of a palace built in 500 B.C. when Persia ruled much of what is now Syria into Egypt proper. So, whatever maps exist now can only be called generalizations of what was considered as the extent of Syria, which is why the map you posted has no precise boundaries. This only reflects that there isn't enough information to place exact boundaries on the map for that time period. The region between Syria and Canaan was ruled by various empires from the Egyptians to the Persians, the Greeks and then Romans after that came various Islamic empires, including the Ottomans.
 
Posted by alTakruri (Member # 10195) on :
 
Your total presentation is irrational. You haven't
presented a thing that backs your position which
is totally destroyed by a simple school child's
knowledge of the people period and place being
discussed.

I've shown how you arrived at error due to reliance
on "RealHistory" to start with, nothing personal about.

Should you chose to adhere to a fictitious history
and identification, go ahead, knock yourself out, but
I won't allow you to confuse surfers coming here for
factual accuracy.

quote:
Originally posted by Mike111:
alTakruri - If you intend to continue with this silliness, then please provide material to support your positions. So far, you have been generous with your opinions, but provided nothing else - it has become tedious.


 
Posted by Mike111 (Member # 9361) on :
 
I am having a hard time digesting the ignorance on what I though to be, common knowledge. More so that some would presume to know more than the Oriental Institute of Chicago University. But knowing that Wiki is the Bible for those too lazy to research - Perhaps this will put an end to this foolishness.

From Wiki - Syria

The name Syria derives from the ancient Greek name for Syrians, Σύριοι Syrioi, which the Greeks applied without distinction to various Assyrian people. Modern scholarship confirms the Greek word traces back to the cognate Ἀσσυρία, Assyria, ultimately derived from the Akkadian Aššur.

The area designated by the word has changed over time. Classically, Syria lies at the eastern end of the Mediterranean Sea, between Egypt and Arabia to the south and Cilicia to the north, stretching inland to include Mesopotamia, and having an uncertain border to the northeast that Pliny the Elder describes as including, from west to east, Commagene, Sophene, and Adiabene, "formerly known as Assyria".

By Pliny's time, however, this larger Syria had been divided into a number of provinces under the Roman Empire (but politically independent from each other): Judaea, later renamed Palaestina in AD 135 (the region corresponding to modern day Palestine, Israel, and Jordan) in the extreme southwest, Phoenicia corresponding to Lebanon, with Damascena to the inland side of Phoenicia, Coele-Syria (or "Hollow Syria") south of the Eleutheris river, and Mesopotamia.

 
Posted by Marc Washington (Member # 10979) on :
 
.
.

Unkempt hair seems to have spanned the ages:

 -

.
.
 
Posted by Mike111 (Member # 9361) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by alTakruri:
Stop distracting. This part of the discussion centers
on woolly hairstyles, that of the presumed Carthaginian
Punic Afer on the one coin and that of the known Numidian
emperor Juba.

Your point of view on the hair of the man on the coin
with the elephant as uncivilized speaks to your racism.

Your ignorance of ancient texts and images and your
anti-African bias cause your prejudiced eyes to
see as as unkempt what is a carefully tended hairstyle
and one which suits a military man quite well.

You introduction of Persian coins is the butt of ridicule.
Rather than recognize the valuable civilizations of
Africa you introduce non-African non-black Persians
as the heroic idea.

alTakruri - Once again, I have to ask you: ARE YOU SERIOUS?????


Non-African non-black Persians ??????????????


I have a suggestion for you - First look at the pretty pictures - then take a pill and go back to sleep. That is appearently what you have been doing all along anyway.



 -


 -


 -
 
Posted by Mike111 (Member # 9361) on :
 
Marc - If you wish to look like a San Bushman - that is your right. Personally - I prefer the Sassanian look.
 
Posted by Mike111 (Member # 9361) on :
 
alTakruri - You are right - I AM RACIST - not because I want to be "White". But rather, because I want the low-life that can't be bothered to groom themselves, to be "White". That way, they don't disgrace the Black race or Me!!

Additionally - the poor San in the bush, have neither access to water or grooming aids. They do the best that they can. That a person in the middle of plenty and civilization, would want to emulate them in their poor circumstance - is truly bizarre. And speaks to the ignorance and confusion common to so many.
 
Posted by Marc Washington (Member # 10979) on :
 
.
.

Mike, you write, "Marc - If you wish to look like a San Bushman - that is your right. Personally - I prefer the Sassanian look."

Honestly, I think we can have it both ways as the San (and Pygmy) were the foundation for all later peoples including the Sassian. Nice picture, by the way. I'll add it to the collection!

TOPIC OF THIS POST: Snail's Shell hair, the San, and the Lydians

The snail's hair has some interesting ramifications as it seems it could ultimately be stylized peppercorn (cabbage patch) hair. And if so, that could / would mean that the Lydians are San. The following discusses that.

The Ancient Pygmy: There seem to be two main types of Paleolithic Africans that form the base of the huge diversity of Africans today. They being the Pygmy who have pronounced African features (full nose and lips). Consider: http://www.beforebc.de/Made.by.Humankind/Gods.MotherGoddeses/02-16-500-20.html

The Ancient San: The San are described as having peppercorn (cabbage patch – so single tufts) hair and less pronounced African features. From the link below, I’d consider Ur Nammu (#1) and Shulgi to be San. And note how Ur Nammu resembles the San (#s 2, 3, 4) who seem to number among the Babylonians. Consider:
http://www.beforebc.de/Related.Subjects/Hammurabi.&.10.C/02-16-500-00-03.html

[Note: the San, with hairless bodies, high cheekbones, and broad foreheads are the forerunner of the Chinese and other Asians. It’s whites mixing with San in the Steppes that produced the straight hair of today’s Asians turning originally dark skin light as we now see it.]

With the San so widespread many thousands of years before whites radiated from the Steppes and entered the Ancient Near East, San and Pygmy were ubiquitous. And, their intermixture would produce greater varieties of Africans.

Stylized snail shell hair – the roots?

Being African (in my case, Afro-American, black), my own hair is woolly, kinky. A single strand naturally spirals like a snail's shell. Could be that the Lydians being San who’d evolved a fuller head of hair sytlized it was the snail’s shell. The hair of Jess has been compared to lamb’s wool and it’s interesting to note that in the New Kingdom in the Avenue of the Ram’s its wool was exactly like stylized snail shells as seen in Buddha’s hair (just an aside).

Other points

1. I agree that there is a mixture in Achaemean / Persian / Darius age art of those who naturally had woolly hair (below: #6, 8, 9, 10) sometimes wearing wigs on top of it (see #6 and 9 below)

2. and those wearing snail's shell wigs with wavy or else straight hair underneath as pictures shown earlier in this thread have shown. I'd say that the straight/wavy hair was due to an influx of whites from the Steppes who'd begun to dilute and produce progeny with the initial African population (a population now nearly non-existant in those regions).

 -
http://www.beforebc.de/400_neareast/02-16-400-00-02.html

.
.
 
Posted by Marc Washington (Member # 10979) on :
 
.
.
Hi Mike. I hear the way you speak of the San. However, Gerald Massey for one, and back in 1914, spoke with lamentation about the San. He said something like this:

"They who started at the mountain top of civilization when the western world was still in caves, and gave us Egypt and the other great civilizations, have tragically been marching the long and ever downward trek from their illustrious past having given the world all it possesses and those nations and the West which have become great taking their greatness from them should intercede in their pathetic descent and save them the honor they are due but which has been taken from them.

By some counts, it was the Bushman, the San, who was the basal Egyptian 4000 BC. The San who gave the early hymns and religion and earliest grandest Egypt.

It is documented that the San were once plentiful throughtout Africa and only starting near 1800 BC slowly pushed ever further South by the Bantu agricultural migration. And before the whites came to South Africa and forced them into their arid, dusty environs of today, they thrived back then. They were a culturally advanced and gracious people.

In fact, when the first whites arrived in South Africa, it is documented that a 100 person orchestra of flutes came to the shores to welcome them. After that, they were slaughtered and their lands taken. The San you see today came from that history.

.
.
 
Posted by alTakruri (Member # 10195) on :
 
I never assumed you want to be white.
I, since my very first response to you
months ago, presume that you are white.
Nothing about your topics or your writings
strike me as anything other than originating
and authored by the mind of a white person.

quote:
Originally posted by Mike111:
alTakruri - You are right - I AM RACIST - not because I want to be "White". But rather, because I want the low-life that can't be bothered to groom themselves, to be "White". That way, they don't disgrace the Black race or Me!!



 
Posted by Mike111 (Member # 9361) on :
 
alTakruri - You are doing it again - THINKING. It always gets you in trouble. It is far better for you to go back to sleep and dream of your mythical "White" Persians.

BTW - doesn't that suggest that it is YOU who are not quite of a Black mind? I mean, I think of "Black" Persians - which was reality. And then, why would Black people invent those civilized behaviors, if it was not a good thing? All that I am saying is that Blacks should always wash and comb their hair. You on the other hand, encourages the indolent in their behavior. Seems to me, that is the kind of thing that an "evil White person" would want for Black people - is that what you REALLY are??

 
Posted by Marc Washington (Member # 10979) on :
 
.
.

Mike. There is no need for you to be rude to al Takruri like that.

.
.
 
Posted by Mike111 (Member # 9361) on :
 
^^^Yes there is: Start it, and I will finish it.
 
Posted by Marc Washington (Member # 10979) on :
 
.
.

So that's the kind of person you are. I didn't know that.

.
.
 
Posted by alTakruri (Member # 10195) on :
 
Don't sweat it Marc. Mike makes the typical loser
response when wrong on a topic. Speculation, no
one can judge its validity. Facts on the other
hand. He just proves he's unaware of all the
ancient texts and art of blacks with twisted
hair which is not unkempt but actually a well
tended hairstyle as the coin reveals. Nor does
he seem willing to invest the time to research
the matter by perusing the book I suggested (to
which I can add the works of Frank Snowden).
 
Posted by Hanni (Member # 14777) on :
 
i don't think the hair should be a great issue. First of all Hannibal was in a war situation and moreover the hairstyle may be in vogue at that time. What matters is that all the evidence points to the image on the coin as being that of Hannibal. marc Washington has explained the situation well.

1. Some say that the coin is that of Pyrrhus but the dating of the coin proves it was minted several decades after Pyrrhus' arrival in Italy.

2. the ptolemies of Egypt did have access to Indian elephants which they otained from ancient Syria. According to Cato the Elder, Hannibal's favourite elephant was called Surus, which means "syrian." Thus Hannibal's elephant was Indian and not African.

3. According to Polybius at the time of the Battle of Trasimene (or Trasimeno) there was only one elephant left, which Hannibal rode.
the coin in question dates from that era.

Also,
 
Posted by Hanni (Member # 14777) on :
 
i don't think the hair should be a great issue. First of all Hannibal was in a war situation and moreover the hairstyle may be in vogue at that time. What matters is that all the evidence points to the image on the coin as being that of Hannibal. Marc Washington has explained the situation well.

1. Some say that the coin is that of Pyrrhus but the dating of the coin proves it was minted several decades after Pyrrhus' arrival in Italy.

Also, according to ancient writers like Diodorus Siculus, the Phoenicians did mix with the locals among whom were Moors. In the index of his "Wars" Procopius described Moors as "A Black African race." Thus even if the Phoenicians were Whites, mixing for centuries with the local Black inhabitants would have made them Black.


2. The ptolemies of Egypt did have access to Indian elephants which they otained from ancient Syria. According to Cato the Elder, Hannibal's favourite elephant was called Surus, which means "Syrian." Thus Hannibal's elephant was Indian and not African.The elephant portrayed on the coin is Indian.

3. According to Polybius at the time of the Battle of Trasimene (or Trasimeno) there was only one elephant left, which Hannibal rode.
The coin in question dates from that era.

Hannibal was Black.
 
Posted by Egmond Codfried (Member # 15683) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mike111:
 -

On the issue of the coin; though Hannibal was young (age 26) when he came to power in 221 B.C. The image on the coin appears to me, to be that of a boy. Also, it seems to me, that a person so great as Hannibal would have a much more heroic type image on his coin.

Dear Mike111, you were absent and missed. This is a valid remark, to show that we cannot fly blindly on images alone. He could be a boy or a boyish young man. Those kinds of men which never seem to age. Perhaps the image was made in an 'Amarna-type' of style with exaggerated features. From my BLUE BLOOD IS BLACK BLOOD research I became aware of 'beautifying' of people to make their looks conform to the Greek ideal, which is seldom seen in real people, and reserved for gods and godlike heroes. Snowden shows images of mixed race Blacks or Blacks with Nilotic looks, to proof that the Classical Greeks were aware of those types as well.
 
Posted by Egmond Codfried (Member # 15683) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Marc Washington:
.
.

Cover the name and one could pass for the other. In a dozen ways, they are the same:

deal with same issues

same affinity to genetics

same use of sarcasm even to identical expressions

same type of hostility towards anyone seeing African prominence

same arguments

same alliances

same carriage of white supremacy and racism

same foibles/behavior/attitude

same allegiances


Doug M is certainly cut in the cloth of Djehuti/Elmer. I'd not be surprised if they were not one-in-the-same; or a schizoid half-a-dozen in-the-same.

.
.

Raymond Djehuti is Alive (What Box) is JMT is Doug M. THE ENEMY OF THE NEGRO IS THE NEGRO HIMSELF. He shows great disdain for Blacks by playing us for fools. I wish for god to curse him. For god to curse his name and his house. For god to curse all that he undertakes. I wish for god to cut him down for the harm he does to the few Blacks on this site who think independently. He shows the ridiculing behaviour which is the same as racist Whites toward Black people who do not want to toe the White supremacist line. Raymond Djehuti is a sicko, he makes a mockery of Afrocentrism with his twenty or more nicks on egyptsearch. He is not a Philipino but a Surinamese con-artist living in Amsterdam, and he has a ugly high pitched voice.
 
Posted by Egmond Codfried (Member # 15683) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Marc Washington:
.
.

Alive Box says: "^No one cares. (about your lame ass trolling - those with a mind are free to check the archives for themselves). no offense though."

Marc writes: Ahh! Ahh! Now isn't this interesting. You appear out of the blue responding with the same intense anger at the same stimulus.

Now, here is what, er um, Djehuti wrote to me, "Who cares what you profess … You're a nutcase!"

 -

I think we picked-up on another of your schizoid alias' Djehuti with you responding so instantaneously and vehemently to this comment on your many persona.

We see some projectionism going on here, too, as you accuse me of trolling whereas, isn't it "you" (whichever one it is, that is) who is "hiding" and "stalking"?

You need medical attention, friend.

.
.

Good going Marc Washington, you show yourself to be a real researcher using common sense. We do not have to agree on everything but I highly respect you.

There are only three of us who use our real names on this site. So I still wonder what the others have to hide. I publish under my own name and I operate under my own name. Are we like criminals who need aliases for speaking our own minds?


A con-artist like Raymond Djehuti does not have to be clever, he just preys on the goodwill of Blacks.
 
Posted by Egmond Codfried (Member # 15683) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mike111:
Hanni - Though White people have undoubtedly destroyed all images of Hannibal, and replaced them with fakes - All is not lost. As you have seen, it is possible to cross-reference artifacts and history, in order to get at the truth.

Dear Mike111, this complaint also goes for the images of the European Black Nobility and Black Kings (1500-1789) in my research. But there are other more convincing images on paper, not in Google. I will find a way to scan and publish online. A few have already disappeared from sites which sell old prints and engravings, after I discussed them online. So the hiding of images goes on, even today by these civilized, friendly smiling curators. I have relied on your research about Whites arriving only 5000 years ago in Europe. So my BLUE BLOOD IS BLACK BLOOD research is probably also about autochthonous European Blacks as well. Not all of them confirmed to the Classical African type, but they were Blacks all right: a intermarrying, fixed Mulatto race. To preserve the black and brown colour because this stood for Blue blood.
 
Posted by Egmond Codfried (Member # 15683) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mike111:
alTakruri - You seriously compare Phoenicians with rabble in Algeria?? But to your point, that head appears tied and arranged - possibly with some sort of head gear. "Civilized" people groom themselves; low-life do not. That is irrespective of race.

 -

[Moorish Warrior with dreadlocks and even a dreadlocked beard: A Garamante? Found in England]


 -

[Snailshell's?]

 -

[Dreads on Eric Benet]


Now mind you, this is not an attack because I respect you and your research. Some races, according to Coon's ‘The races of Europe,’ (1961) will use headgear and head shaving to emphasise their peculiar traits. I see young Moroccans in Holland today shaving their temples just like their ancestors did, to make the head look narrower. They appear fierce and in a group, they resemble an army of unsettling look-alikes.
As a proud Surinam Black who for many years had dreadlocks, I do not follow you in calling dreadlocks 'unkempt.' To me they were initially a fashion statement, as I would combine them with classic cashmere coats, Italian suites, silk ties, formal shoes and fine kid leather gloves. The casualness of the hair: washed, creamed, greased with a drop of baby oil and perfumed by Chanel or Guerlaine or Dior. My dreads balanced the severe formality of my formal drag. Later, when I discovered afro centricity through J.A. Rogers, my frizzled hair became a source of pride and defiance. The most amazing thing with Black hair is its versatility, how it can be sculpted. I have read Mike Nassau about the Garamantes (50 BC), and then found out they wore their hair in a 'crest' meaning dreadlocks. It made them look fierce and powerful, not 'unkempt.' Did you see this movie with Governator Schwarzenegger, about this alien who hunts earth people. The name eludes me for now, but the alien has great, fierce dreadlocks and was created by a Black artist.
 
Posted by Egmond Codfried (Member # 15683) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mike111:
alTakruri - You are right - I AM RACIST - not because I want to be "White". But rather, because I want the low-life that can't be bothered to groom themselves, to be "White". That way, they don't disgrace the Black race or Me!!

Additionally - the poor San in the bush, have neither access to water or grooming aids. They do the best that they can. That a person in the middle of plenty and civilization, would want to emulate them in their poor circumstance - is truly bizarre. And speaks to the ignorance and confusion common to so many.

You are doing okay, but keep Pan-Africanism in mind and desist from being so extreme judgemental on cultural practices, which appear strange to you. In my PASTORAL YES, BUT DRINKING COW'S BLOOD thread we touched on unusual food practices like feasting on animal blood and eating live beetles with rice. I have read that Eskimo women use (or used) urine to style their hair. Is it true? Baby Suggs used Sethe’s urine to clean her babies’ eyes! A Winti healer would sometimes pee on a patient to drive a demon away.
 
Posted by Pulp (Member # 15591) on :
 
Hmm, I you look at the big time Carthage coinage aka silver and gold coins you can get a different impression. lol

“Small change”
 -


“Big gold change” showing the Tanit the Phoenician lunar goddess, worshiped as the patron goddess at Carthage.310/270 B.C.
http://www.coinarchives.com/a/results.php?results=100&search=Tanit
 -


Carthage silver coinage from Zeugitana “Tunisia” Second Punic War
http://www.coinarchives.com/a/lotviewer.php?LotID=229145&AucID=329&Lot=20061
 -

Silver Zeugitania, Carthage
http://www.coinarchives.com/a/lotviewer.php?LotID=229144&AucID=329&Lot=20060
 -
 
Posted by Egmond Codfried (Member # 15683) on :
 
I say: they are a goddess, who does not have a body but represents an idea, and he is a Nilotic Black!
 
Posted by Mike111 (Member # 9361) on :
 
Egmond - My ire, thou unpleasant, was multifaceted, and I think, justified. First there was the foolishness with Syria - I got ticked because during the course of that ridicules exchange, nobody even bothered to Wiki it, to see if I was right - all they wanted to do was argue. After all these years, of what was suppose to be information exchange, that's where we are? Black people seem intent on finding the LOWEST common denominator.

On the hair thing - When I first saw the movie "The Brother from Another Planet" (1984) - starring Joe Morton - Interesting movie - not good, just interesting; I had the feeling that it would only be a matter of time before a "historical culture starved" AA clientele would latch onto the look - it took twenty years, but sure enough, there it was.


 -


As I watched the movie back then, I recall thinking; why is the brothers hair not combed? And as I watched the movie, I looked for a reason in the plot why his hair was not combed - there was none.

Stranger still - how odd that an advanced creature, capable of traveling to Earth from a distant planet, wouldn't know to groom himself.

The mystery was solved by noting the writer/director - John Sayles. A White man, this is HIS concept of what advanced Black people look like. And of course AAs, being the Sheep that they are, had to pickup on it. BTW - Have you ever noticed how much of AA behavior and mannerisms is based on what White people expect, rather than what they would normally do.


 -


I had occasion to witness that very thing, many years ago, and it has stuck with me. I was in a large room filled with mostly young White men. A young Black man entered the room, and immediately went into a "Huggy Bear" type routine; Antonio Fargas (mid-'70s television series Starsky and Hutch). It struck me, because I was thinking at the time - Blacks don't really talk or act like that with each other, that's a show for White people - It was a gathering of Military personnel.


Fast forward to the present - As I travel about on public transit, I am continually offended by mostly young Black men, with short hair, who obviously have never put brush or cream to head - It is unsightly! And an embarrassment - just because your hair is short, doesn't mean that you don't have to groom it - how mindless!

But I hasten to add; DREADS are definitely NOT included in my criticism. First off, good Dreads require a good bit of maintenance, and on some they look very good. I would of course, prefer that they be styled more similar to the way the inventors of Dread locks - the Minions (the original Greeks) styled theirs. As you can see below - they were quite beautiful.



 -
 
Posted by Egmond Codfried (Member # 15683) on :
 
 -

Wonderful old pictures: http://ian.macky.net/secretmuseum/masai_buffalo_headdress.jpg

[Masai with animal fat and red mud hairdo]


Well Mike, thank you for responding in the way you did. I remember this movie, but it’s not the one I’ am thinking about. The movie I mentioned is Predator I, II, III. I was alone with a White stranger in the cinema and could not contain myself when I saw Dee Dee Bridgewater. Who I had met in Paris a week earlier, with some family I used to have living and dancing in Paris. I had to tell this stranger! A poor and simple man, as I am, usually does not meet these fancy people, however. But I think you are a bit old-fashioned. At that time dreadlocks for middle class Blacks, nice mainstream folks, who did not smoke this evil stuff which the Dutch government gives to the youth to keep them away from politics; was still new. He came across as a Race-Man, modern, conscious, urban, good. I usually look with great horror and dismay at the sagging pants young man wear these days. The more it sags, the more imbecile they seem! But I try to ignore or accept, depending how strong I feel that day. Knowing well that this is an argument I cannot win. Now some Africans put mud on their hair to fashion some type of helmet. There is no telling what people like and find useful.

 -

[ The main attraction of Predator, not a beauty, though. I remember a young man shouting out in wonder in the darkened cinema in Surinam: 'He is a Rastaman!' Somehow we felt more connected to the story. Perhaps because a 'Black man' was in the lead? At least Blacks were not ignored or presented as 'second class.']
 
Posted by Mike111 (Member # 9361) on :
 
Egmond - I would remind you, that we are talking about people in the middle of the worlds greatest civilization - in material terms. And as I said, Dreads are exempt.
 
Posted by Mike111 (Member # 9361) on :
 
Pulp - Please note my quote above: Quote "In my own experience; when White people lie, it is generally to replace a Black person with a White person."

So I ask you; how do you know that the coins that you posted, are what you and they, say they are? What manner of proof can you supply? We know that the Romans conquered Carthage - and the coins appear to feature Romans - and are in the Roman style.

But more to the point:

The Oriental Institute - University of Chicago, says that these people are Phoenicians.


 -


The British Museum, says that these people are Phoenicians.

 -


As you can clearly see, these people are obviously Black people. As you should know, Carthaginians (Hannibal's people) are ethnically Phoenicians. So please explain how Hannibal's kin could be Black, but he be White. Now please go back to my quote above, and memorize it. And always remember that in all things related to ancient history - which is necessarily Black history - "White people lie".

 
Posted by DevilNegrokiller_Wolofi (Member # 15898) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mike111:
Marc - If you wish to look like a San Bushman - that is your right. Personally - I prefer the Sassanian look.

Whoa!!!

I told yall Mike is Wally. Only Wally says racist shiit against blacks he doesn't see as "civilized".

Btw Civilized is a Eurocentric concept Mike

quote:
alTakruri - You are right - I AM RACIST - not because I want to be "White". But rather, because I want the low-life that can't be bothered to groom themselves, to be "White". That way, they don't disgrace the Black race or Me!!

Additionally - the poor San in the bush, have neither access to water or grooming aids. They do the best that they can. That a person in the middle of plenty and civilization, would want to emulate them in their poor circumstance - is truly bizarre. And speaks to the ignorance and confusion common to so many.

Holy shiit this is one self hating AFro American ni gger [Eek!]
 
Posted by Marc Washington (Member # 10979) on :
 
.
.

Mike. You call Africans presenting themselves in ways you find offensive uncivilized? I’d like to remind you that it was Africans who established the first civilizations in Europe as the Celts variously called (according to the population, place, and way of life) people of Gaul, Halstaat, La Tene, Moors). Look at the way white historians portray the incoming Germanic tribes that would become today’s white population of Europe. A hint. They don’t use the word civilized.

Here is Britain before Caesar came and bestowed a fate on the (by phenotype) Africans there where over a million would either be killed or taken as slaves. He destroyed thousands of their villages.

Who was the more civilized? Those who made the villages or the one who destroyed them? (Picture 3 shows women depicting the original black population of Rome and the newly incoming white population)

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http://www.beforebc.de/Made.by.Humankind/Pottery.Boats.Ruins/59-10-6-10.html

And the population of Etrusca was African and civilized before. Well. You know history so I will let you fill in the blanks. Would you call what happened civilized? Then Appius Claudius Caecus constructed the Apian Way where over 50,000 (by Phenotype) Africans were crucified to make room for migrating whites.

Mike. You speak with offense about an African hairstyle you find, I’d say, barbaric. You wrote, Marc - If you wish to look like a San Bushman - that is your right. I happen to find the Bushman dear. My sympathies lie with them.

And what of the white South Africans who took their lands and committed genocide on them. The early white homesteaders used to keep chained a baboon and also at least one San woman. That’s civilized?

The hairstyle you see of the Bushman you’ve villified is a hair style as al Takruri said is like a twisted plait that is as historical as any of these that existed before the founding of "modern" Europe (Hitler and Mussolini were civilized?:

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http://www.beforebc.de/Made.by.Humankind/StyledHair3000BC/03-10-02-01.html

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And the Bushman Style of twisted hair is not far from that worn by the warrior who to me does look heroic. I find him handsome and stately.

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Hughley of CNN earns over a million yearly from CNN and the hairstyle he has like the Bushman is a style by choice and class and worn even in ancient Egypt.

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You write of blacks who imitate whites? Where does rock and roll come from? or the rap you hear white rappers parroting? or the the bustle, getting tans, or even Western religion?

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Posted by Marc Washington (Member # 10979) on :
 
.
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You speak of blacks imitating whites? Let's not forget where writing, religion, or even the name Europe arose. Each a case of whites copying, taking possession, of or imitating things inspired by Africans, blacks.

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http://www.beforebc.de/all_europe/02-16-500-00-07.html

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Posted by Marc Washington (Member # 10979) on :
 
.
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Mike. You speak of what blacks imitate from whites? Where do whites get their courts of law? From the (by phenotype) African, blacks.

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http://www.beforebc.de/Related.Subjects/Hammurabi.&.10.C/02-16-500-00-03.html

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[b]Where do clothes arise? whites copied them from Africans, from blacks


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http://www.beforebc.de/Related.Subjects/The.Gold.Age/51-10-60-01.html


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Where does the Semitic language arise? whites copied them from Africans, from blacks

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http://www.beforebc.de/400_neareast/02-16-500-SM.akk-57-050-08.html

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Mike. You write of what blacks imitate from whites. Imitation is not a one-way street.

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Posted by Mike111 (Member # 9361) on :
 
Yo Devil Negro – sounds like you’re still in the joint – how did you get your hands on a computer?
But damn – I never realized that washin up and combing hair could be so politically incorrect. I guess, getting an education is totally out of the question – Bet I would really be in trouble if I were to ever suggest that – so I won’t. But I gotta tell you, that ancient Blacks highly valued both of those things; cleanliness/grooming and knowledge.

Since you are here, I have to assume that you have some interest in ancient Egypt. Here is what Herodotus had to say about the ancient Egyptians:

They wear linen garments, which they are specially careful to have always fresh washed. They practice circumcision for the sake of cleanliness, considering it better to be cleanly than comely. The priests shave their whole body every other day, that no lice or other impure thing may adhere to them when they are engaged in the service of the gods. Their dress is entirely of linen, and their shoes of the papyrus plant: it is not lawful for them to wear either dress or shoes of any other material. They bathe twice every day in cold water, and twice each night.

 
Posted by argyle104 (Member # 14634) on :
 
Mike111, why is the image on the coin not heroic?


Mike111, running from the question makes it all the more clear that you suffer from self-hate.
 
Posted by argyle104 (Member # 14634) on :
 

 
Posted by argyle104 (Member # 14634) on :
 
You know I actually went back and skimmed through this thread and it occurs to me that Mike111 is just another Powder in the form of Vida/Wolofi/Bettyboo. I'll even wager that that all four of them is the same person.


Its the same adolescent trolling, the characters just change the variables in their posts.


And the nutty thing is the loon actually has the characters talking to each other. In essence he talks to himself. LOL LOL Double LOL
 
Posted by akoben (Member # 15244) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mike111:
Yo Devil Negro – sounds like you’re still in the joint – how did you get your hands on a computer?
But damn – I never realized that washin up and combing hair could be so politically incorrect. I guess, getting an education is totally out of the question – Bet I would really be in trouble if I were to ever suggest that – so I won’t. But I gotta tell you, that ancient Blacks highly valued both of those things; cleanliness/grooming and knowledge.

Since you are here, I have to assume that you have some interest in ancient Egypt. Here is what Herodotus had to say about the ancient Egyptians:

They wear linen garments, which they are specially careful to have always fresh washed. They practice circumcision for the sake of cleanliness, considering it better to be cleanly than comely. The priests shave their whole body every other day, that no lice or other impure thing may adhere to them when they are engaged in the service of the gods. Their dress is entirely of linen, and their shoes of the papyrus plant: it is not lawful for them to wear either dress or shoes of any other material. They bathe twice every day in cold water, and twice each night.

 -

LOL
 
Posted by Marc Washington (Member # 10979) on :
 
.
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Posted by Egmond Codfried (Member # 15683) on :
 
 -

[THE RWANDAN KILLING FIELDS]


THIS FORUM IS LIKE SOME GODDAM GHETTO WITHOUT A MODERATOR. AS IF THEY WITHDREW NORMAL ENFORCEMENT OF THE RULES, AND LEFT THE NIGGERS TO KILL EACH OTHER OFF. WITH PREDATORY BLACK ELEMENTS HELL BENT ON DISTROYING THIS OPPORTUNITY FOR NEGRITUDE AND PANAFRICANISM: HAVING A FIELD DAY.
 
Posted by Mike111 (Member # 9361) on :
 
akoben - Dreads, and of course Dead people, are exempt from my critizisms. I mean, how can we expect a dead person to comb his hair - fair is fair, they must be exempt.
 
Posted by alTakruri (Member # 10195) on :
 
Exactly the idea. Glad someone else finally picked up on it.
quote:
Originally posted by Egmond Codfried:

THIS FORUM IS LIKE SOME GODDAM GHETTO WITHOUT A MODERATOR. AS IF THEY WITHDREW NORMAL ENFORCEMENT OF THE RULES, AND LEFT THE NIGGERS TO KILL EACH OTHER OFF. WITH PREDATORY BLACK ELEMENTS HELL BENT ON DISTROYING THIS OPPORTUNITY FOR NEGRITUDE AND PANAFRICANISM: HAVING A FIELD DAY.


 
Posted by alTakruri (Member # 10195) on :
 
Bumped up for TaSeti's Revenge.
Please start with the first page.
 
Posted by Djehuti (Member # 6698) on :
 
What I find interesting is right after the defeat of Carthage by the Romans, it was succeeded by the kingdom of Mauretania (not to be confused with the modern country of Mauritania). Mauretania was ruled by by a dynasty of the indigenous tribe called Maure (black) by the Romans.
 
Posted by alTakruri (Member # 10195) on :
 
^
 
Posted by Tukuler (Member # 19944) on :
 
^

Begin on p.1
 
Posted by Mighty Mack (Member # 17601) on :
 
the history channel depicted hannibal as an indigenous african.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hfIe9P13X8s
 
Posted by the lioness, (Member # 17353) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mighty Mack:
the history channel depicted hannibal as an indigenous african.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hfIe9P13X8s

As noted in this recent thread:

http://www.egyptsearch.com/forums/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic;f=8;t=009453
 
Posted by Mighty Mack (Member # 17601) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by the lioness,:
quote:
Originally posted by Mighty Mack:
the history channel depicted hannibal as an indigenous african.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hfIe9P13X8s

As noted in this recent thread:

http://www.egyptsearch.com/forums/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic;f=8;t=009453

thank you. didn't know it was already posted.
 
Posted by Tukuler (Member # 19944) on :
 
Bumping as companion to the thread
THEY HAVE HANNIBAL BARCA AS BLACK


quote:
Originally posted by alTakruri:

Numismaticists notes on this coin
[IMG] http://www.wildwinds.com/coins/greece/etruria/SNGANS_39.th.jpg [/IMG]

quote:
ETRURIA, Arretium (?), The Chiana Valley. Circa 208-207 BC. Ć
Quartuncia (5.34 gm). Head of an African right / Indian elephant
standing right, bell around neck; M below. SNG ANS 39-41; BMC Italy
pg. 15, 19; SNG Copenhagen 47; Robinson, NumChron 1964, pl. V; SNG
Morcom 45; Laffaille 1. Good VF, well centered, choice dark green
patina. Rare. Exceptionally well preserved and probably one of the
finest known of the type. ($750) This enigmatic issue has been much
discussed. It was Sestini in 1816 who first indicated their area of
circulation in and around the Chiana (Clanis) valley and lake
Trasimeno, dominated by the cities of Arezzo, Chiusi and Cortona. The
traditional attribution of the issue to 217 BC, as representing the
propaganda of Hannibal’s approach to Etruria, was modified by Robinson
(op. cit.), who saw it as a provocative seditious type of Arretium,
which was in a state of high tension with Rome in 209/8, in the hoped
for arrival of Hasdrubal from Spain with reinforcements. However, the
reverse depicts an Indian rather than African elephant with a bell
around its neck reminiscent of the elephant/saw aes signatum issue
(Crawford 9/1) of about 250-240 BC and associated with the battle of
Maleventum (soon to be called Beneventum) in 275 BC when the captured
elephants of Pyrrhus were brought to Rome in triumph. A similar Indian
elephant is also depicted as a symbol on the Tarantine nomos issue
(Vlasto 710-712), indicating the presence of Pyrrhus in the city in
282-276. The Barcid coinage of New Carthage (Villaronga CNH, pg. 65,
12-15) and that of Hannibal in Sicily (SNG Cop. 382) clearly depict
African elephants belonging to the elephant corps from about 220 BC.

As Maria Baglione points out in "Su alcune parallele di bronzo
coniato," Atti Napoli 1975, pg.153-180, the African/elephant issue
shares control marks with other cast and struck Etruscan coins of the
region, she quotes Panvini Rosati in ‘ Annuario dell’accademia Etrusca
di Cortona XII’, 1964, pg. 167ff., who suggests the type is to be seen
as a moneyer’s badge or commemorative issue in the style of Caesar’s
elephant/sacrificial implements issue of 49/48 BC (Crawford 443/1).
The elephant, an attribute of Mercury/Turms, is an emblem of wisdom
and is also a symbol of strength and of the overcoming of evil.

Triton V Sale, 15 Jan 2002, lot 2.

Lot sold for USD 1600.

Used by permission of CNG, www.historicalcoins.com

U

Undescored text above by me for your analytic attention.
[IMG] http://ancient-coins.com/articles%5Ccarthage%5C046.jpg [/IMG]
[IMG] http://ancient-coins.com/articles/carthage/066.jpg [/IMG]

Are these is the Hannibal/Elephant Sicily SNG Cop. 382 type coins mentioned in the above text?


 


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