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RACE WAR Among Muslims in Al-Andalus: How Berbers were treated in Spain due to color
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Troll Patrol: [QB] [QUOTE]Originally posted by melchior7: [qb] [QUOTE]Originally posted by Brada-Anansi: [qb] Melchior [QUOTE] [b]But let me ask you, if Blacks lived all the way up to the Delta region then what was the geographic limit for Blacks, and where did Middle Eatern types begin? Also why as it a limit?[/b] [/QUOTE]Who said there was any geographic limits for Blacks, Blacks live all way out in the pacific the ancients certainly did not believe that,nor do genetics and again Kemet for most of it's history was oriented towards inner Africa,only with the arrival of powerful states did they even bothered taking the Med and beyond seriously,namely the Hyksos and the Hittites at first. [/qb][/QUOTE]There were early neolithic populations in the Delta area early on. Also Blacks in the Pacific have nothing to do with Blacks in Africa. [/qb][/QUOTE]lol, are you serious? Ancient finds in the Western Desert of Egypt at Gebel Ramlah circa 5,000 BC show culture closely linked with indigenous tropical Africans of both the Saharan and sub-Saharan regions, not Europe or the Middle East. Dental studies put the inhabitants of Gebel Ramlah, closest to indigenous tropical African populations. "During three seasons of research (in 2000, 2001 and 2003) carried out by the Combined Prehistoric Expedition at Gebel Ramlah in the southern part of the Egyptian Western Desert, three separate Final Neolithic cemeteries were discovered and excavated. Skeletal remains of 67 individuals, comprising both primary and secondary interments, were recovered from 32 discrete burial pits. Numerous grave goods were found, including lithics, pottery and ground stone objects, as well as items of personal adornment, pigments, shells and sheets of mica. Imports from distant areas prove far-reaching contacts. Analysis of the finds sheds important light on the burial rituals and social conditions of the Final Neolithic cattle keepers inhabiting Ramlah Playa. This community, dated to the mid-fifth millennium B.C. (calibrated), was composed of a phenotypically diverse population derived from both North and sub-Saharan Africa. There were no indications of social differentiation. The deteriorating climatic conditions probably forced these people to migrate toward the Nile Valley where they undoubtedly contributed to the birth of ancient Egyptian civilization." -- Burial practices of the Final Neolithic pastoralists at Gebel Ramlah, Western Desert of Egypt Michal Kobusiewicz, Jacek Kabacinski, Romuald Schild, Joel D. Irish and Fred Wendorf British Museum Studies in Ancient Egypt and Sudan 13 (2009): 147–74 "Despite the difference, Gebel Ramlah [the Western Desert- Saharan region] is closest to predynastic and early dynastic samples from Abydos, Hierakonpolis, and Badari.." [the Badarians ]are a "good representative of what the common ancestor to all later predynastic and dynastic Egyptian peoples would be like" --(Joel D. Irish (2006). Who Were the Ancient Egyptians? Dental Affinities Among Neolithic Through Postdynastic Peoples. Am J Phys Anthropol. 2006 Apr;129(4):529-43.) [/QB][/QUOTE]
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