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[QUOTE]Originally posted by dana marniche: [QB] As I mentioned I think the Misra/Lehaba or Lehabim groups are the NW Arabian people that were called Meluhha in Assyrian texts and they gave the name Misra to the lower Nile kingdom. I believe these Mehluhha had to have come up from Yemen where were the early Canaanites and their kings (Anak or Nakhi, Sheshi names found on Hyksos scarabs) mentioned in Genesis. Tradition has it that Egypt was invaded by Himyarite kings of the Amalekites also called Adites. Even the name of Himyar/Humayr (donkey) of the Yemenites is identical to that of Hamor "king of Canaan". According to Salibi and in fact African (including Tuareg) tradition Canaan was a part of Yemen extending into the Asir region. I think it is very possible that these people were ancestral to the Tuareg Iforas and Nafusa groups (Zenata) who claim descent from individuals of "Canaan" which are confirmed on Hyksos scarabs(Canaanite/Yemenite chiefs). Some of this may be resolved when the chronology of the Bronze Age and Egypt's Middle Kingdom is rectified. But I think it plausible that their remnant were represented in the painting of the "Lebou" men wearing blue and yellow above in bas relief with - again - the brown paint fading away. There is also confusion because it either Hyksos rulers in Misra, a south Arabian region or native Egyptian Pharaohs were in control of these regions during certain periods. [/QB][/QUOTE]
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