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Writing and the wheel in Africa
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Clyde Winters: [QB] Precolonial this is a great topic. I am sorry to tell you this but you have been lied yoo. Africans invented writing and the use of the wheel. The horse period is dated between 2000 and 1200 BC. These dates correspond to the archaeological research.There were two horses common to Africa. A horse introduced to Africa by the Hysos and a native small size horse common to much of North and West Africa.Most researchers believe the horse was introduced to Africa/Egypt by 1700BC. This is an interesting date, and far to late for the introduction of the horse given the archaeological evidence for horses at Maadi and the Saharan zone.Saharan Africans used the donkey and later horses as beast of burden. A domesticated Equus was found at Hierakonpolis dating to around the 3600 BC at Maadi in the Sahara (Fekri A Hassan, The predynastic of Egypt, Journal of World Prehistory,2(2) (1988) .145; J. McArdle, Preliminary report on the predynastic fauna of the Hierkonpolis, Project Studies Association, Cairo. Publication No.1 (1982), p.116-120.) The archaeological evidence of horses in the Sahara at this early time make it clear that horses were in Africa years before the Hysos arrived on the Continent, and that a horse native to Saharan Africa was already in existence before this time as well. Secondly we have Kushites horsebackriding at Buhen in 4th millennium BP. This shows that while Asians used the horse for chariots Africans had long recognized that they could ride the horse. As a result, the presence of writing and Saharans horseback riding support a probably much earlier origin than the late horse period (e.g., 700 BC) assigned these inscriptions by some researchers. Read more: http://bafsudralam.blogspot.com/2008/07/horse-rock-inscriptions-and-writing-in.html . [IMG]http://www.suppressedhistories.net/Gallery/northafrica/wcharioteer_acacus.jpg[/IMG] The fact that the chariots found in West Africa resemble those of Crete does not mean that the riders of these chariots had to have come from Crete. In fact Greek traditions make it clear that the ancient Cretans, called Minoans came from Africa [IMG]http://www.the153club.org/charriot.gif[/IMG] [IMG]http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_v4u38bXMfLY/TK5j_B7lupI/AAAAAAAAAAU/wLQznywMOAM/s200/thumbnailCAHHZBT1.jpg[/IMG] [IMG]http://farm1.static.flickr.com/214/456438599_0ad557609a_s.jpg[/IMG] The Dravidian and African languages share similar names for the wheel. For example: Galla makurakura Tulu gali, tagori Swahili guru, dumu Mande koli, kori, muru-fe Tamil kal, ari, urul , tikiri Ka. gali tiguri, tigari It would appear that the proto-African-Dravidian term for wheel was *-ori / *-uri *go/uri and *ko/uri. The proto-South Dravidian term for wheel *tigu/ori . The linguistic evidence suggest that in the proto- language the speakers of proto-African-Dravidian used either the vowels o/u or a/i after the consonants. It is also evident that the l and r, were interchangeable in the construction of the term for wheel. It is clear that African people employed chariots in aadition to boats to travel long distances in many parts of Africa. [IMG]http://i45.tinypic.com/205pk74.jpg[/IMG] [IMG]http://olmec98.net/horses1.png[/IMG] Horseback riding did originate in Africa. At Buhen, one of the major fortresses of Nubia, which served as the headquarters of the Egyptian Viceroy of Kush a skeleton of a horse was found lying on the pavement of a Middle Kingdom rampart (W.B. Emery, A master-work of Egyptian military architecture 3900 years ago" Illustrated London News, 12 September, pp.250-251). This was only 25 years after the Hysos had conquered Egypt.The Kushites appear to have rode the horses on horseback instead of a chariot. [IMG]http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_FjT7y6fAvkE/R90E9cZ_28I/AAAAAAAAAAM/1p66xTrSOJQ/s320/dsadsa.jpg[/IMG] This suggest that the Kushites had been riding horses for an extended period of time for them to be able to attack Buhen on horseback. This supports supports the early habit of Africans riding horses as depicted in the rock art.This tradition was continued throughout the history of Kush. The Kushites and upper Egyptians were great horsemen, whereas the Lower Egyptians usually rode the chariot, the Kushite calvary of the Twenty-Fifth Dynasty usually rode on horseback (W.A. Fairservis, The ancient kingdoms of the Nile (London,1962) p.129). [IMG]http://olmec98.net/horses2.png[/IMG] . [/QB][/QUOTE]
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