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The New Rosetta Stone - Nubian hieroglyphics as source of Western alphabets
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Clyde Winters: [QB] The ancient African inscriptions make it clear that outside Egypt, Africans preferred to use syllabic writin as indicated by the Thinite inscriptions, and Oued Mertoutek and Gebel Shiekh Suleiman inscriptions. This fact is also made clear by the Seth Inscription. It appears that in ancient times before the rise of Egypt, Seth was worshiped by people in the Sahara. Recently a very interesting inscription has been found that relate to this worship. The symbols on the engraving are written in the so-called Libyco-Berber writing which is really made up of Mande signs. Using the Vai signs we are able to read the inscriptions in the Malinke-Bambara language. On the left side we see a figure of a cannine and on the right we have a figure of Seth. Reading the inscriptions from right to left I will decipher the writing. Under the cannine figure we have: Be tu a ka na or "To exist obedient to the order in joy [with the] Mother". Reading the inscriptions under the Seth figure we have reading the inscription from right to left: i lu i gyo fa yo gyo, or " Thou hold upright this divinity of the cult, [our] Father, the vital spirit of the society consecrated to (Seth's) cult". This figure is important in relation to the Western Sahara and the Seth cult. Michael Rice, in Egypt's Making: The Origin of Ancient Egypt 5000-2000 BC, makes it clear that Seth was the god of the Southern people and that Anubis (the canine god) was the protector of the people of the South. [/QB][/QUOTE]
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