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European nations established only from Medieval times - whites are very new to Europe
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Stone: [QB] [QUOTE]Originally posted by Marc Washington: [qb] Stone. I can appreciate the pictures you have posted and want to avoid passing judgement on them. I'll share my criteria for art collection with you and when I bend it and why. Then I'll make some comment about the ethnic transition in, for this instance, Grecian art as I see it. And I'm open to being corrected from any corner - my views aren't fixed in stone and I'll alter them if the proof makes sense. DEFINITION: My short definition of African omits color and focues on phenotypes that often exist regardless of color. They are persons with a full nose and mouth with wooly or wiry hair. Whites won't have any of these features unless they have a black parent and then they would be classified as neither white nor African, per se, but mixed. Ancient Near Eastern populations, also called Asians, fall into this category. MY CRITERIA FOR SELECTING AFRICAN ART: Others specialize in whatever they find suitable and all other fields being covered, my choice is the collection of African-featured individuals: full noses and mouths and when it's shown, wooly hair. I go for this "purity" as it can't be disputed except by people who argue for arguments sake (many do) and such pictures form my primary collection. Secondary collection: So, I try to stay away from art showing individuals with African-white parentage. However, I will include some such individuals in my secondary collection as substitutes until I find something better for the category they represent (I know I didn't explain the details here). And, as I intend staying in this line of research for the next fifty or sixty years, my collection should become purer over time. ETHNIC TRANSITION IN GREEK ART and Phase 1: Unfortunately, when the Christian Crusade hit Greece, they destroyed tens of thousands of statues, figurine, everything they could lay their hands on; so, we are left with a paltry remainder of a once flourishing, ubiquitous African art. Still, decimated though it is, there is enough to show that in its earliest phases, Grecian art featured Africans. The tide turns: Now, [b]The Iliad and the Odyessy (The I&O)[/b] recounts the steady influx of whites into the Grecian lands and islands and as they entered, they took servants and slaves (it's all in [b]The I&O[/b]) and part of what happened is that whites started appearing more in art. And when they'd slay all the indigenous African men and take their women, they fathered children who were mixed. Phase 2: So, for a millennium, maybe, we had art shifting from (1) African to (2) African and also appearing pure whites (straight hair), and tons of mulatto (wavy hair). Phase 3: When Alexander the Mass Murderer came in the fourth century, he slaughtered untold tens of thousands of African men and from one day to the next, African art ceased to be produced in, for instance, Athens, after Alexander and just as suddenly there is an appearance of white art. [Note that they had wavy hair showing African mothers. Today, only straight hair is seen in Greece mostly!]. Now, it's this phase of art that I think characterizes some of the pictures you show (I'm not being critical and do support your efforts and will surely add those pictures to my secondary collection and some into the primary). If you are going to begin amassing African art and make it your life-long ambition as I have done, let me suggest focusing on primary art while being diligent as you are widening your secondary art, too. Thank you for this opportunity to see these beautiful pictures you've shared. As I stated, I have downloaded them and will from time-to-time use them. Kind thanks, Marc [/qb][/QUOTE]Holy **** how do you come up with this stuff... Even this stuff is more credible Jesus Never Existed. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jesus_myth_hypothesis Lol. According to your own Photo collage the stuff you posted is younger in date to what I posted. There are plenty of Etruscan coins and Carthage coins that show different motives why not show them also? Carthage, Zeugitana (Tunisia) Most of them pre-date Hannibal's era... http://www.wildwinds.com/coins/greece/zeugitana/carthage/t.html One example of many [IMG]http://www.wildwinds.com/coins/greece/zeugitana/carthage/Jenkins_024.jpg[/IMG] Carthage AV Stater. ca 350-320 BC. Wreathed head of Tanit “Patron goddess at Carthage” left, in triple-pendant earring & necklace / Horse standing right on single ground line, three pellets to right of feet. ETRURIA, Luca. Circa 300-250 BC. AR 5 Asses (11.25 gm). [IMG]http://imagedb.coinarchives.com/img/cng/069/enlarged/690028.jpg[/IMG] [/QB][/QUOTE]
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