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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 Mike111: [QB] I will now bring this admittedly ridicules exchange to an end. I allowed it to go on because Sundjata is representative of much of today’s Black youth. They don’t know, and won’t be told, consequently they go into the outside world completely unprepared and doomed to failure. Note to Sundjata: Courtesy is not your option in the outside world; it is a requirement. You will no doubt find that failure to give it has harsh penalties. [b]As a reminder: This is what the disagreement is about…[/b] Mike111 - Xyyman – While your hypothesis is fine, you may have compromised your argument by using incorrect examples. The ones that you feature represent racial melting in Egypt over a thousand years later. Sundiata - ^^Actually, those people represent Roman and Greek settlers Mike. This is widely established as the portraitures were created using Greco-Roman techniques and style by Greco-Roman artisans who have no reason to spend their time painting pictures of their Egyptian subordinates. Actually, the majority of people of the area during that period clearly identified themselves as Greek. Eurocentrists have in the past tried to use these pictures as evidence of what Egyptains looked like during the Roman era, which is ridiculous, and which is why few use that as an argument anymore. Mike111 - The Portraits represent the ELITES of the ruling class, regardless of racial affinity. Britannica has become just as racist and bull sh1t as the rest. [b]Touregypt The Life of Ancient Egyptians Marriage and the Standing of Women No obstacles seem to have been put in the way of marriage between people of different racial background. An Egyptian could marry a Syrian or Nubian girl, and an Egyptian woman could become a foreigner's wife. The kings themselves might take princesses from abroad as secondary wives. Ramesses II, for example, wed the Hittite princess Maathornefrerure and granted her the same title of 'Great King's Wife' as he did to his principal wife Nefertari. From the Late Period on, Egyptians were regularly intermarrying with Greek colonists in some of the Delta towns, just as in the Roman Period they did with Latins, especially in the Faiyum.[/b] [URL=http://www.touregypt.net/historicalessays/lifeinEgypt8.htm]web page[/URL] [/QB][/QUOTE]
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