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Ancient and Medieval Africa

 

 

African History

African Kingdoms

1. Ghana

2. Mali

3. Songhay

4. Kongo

5. Zimbabwe

6. Swahili

7. Bornu

8. Benin

9. Ethiopia in the Middle Ages

10. Ancient Nubia

11. Ancient Aksum

Ancient and Medieval Attitudes:

12. Black and White Morality

13. Black and White Intelligence

14. Blacks in Greece and Rome

15. Power and Origins of Blacks

16. African Architecture

17. Wealth: Africa and Europe

18. Philosophy: Africa and Europe

19. Rise of Africa and Europe

20. Was Egyptian Culture African

21. Fall of Africa

 

Was Egyptian Culture African?

The question of Egypt's Africaness is no longer in question. In fact, Egypt was considered an African culture until the 1800s when white supremacist decided it was to their advantage to claim otherwise. Since that time the general public has presumed that Egypt was a culture that derived its roots from the Middle East, although scholars know otherwise.

Much of Egypt's religious beliefs, philosophy, traditions, kingship, architecture, musical instruments, totemism, art and circumcision rights were undeniably African.1

Diodorus (63BC-14AD), an ancient Greek historian, recorded the popular belief that Egypt was an Ethiopian colony:
"The Ethiopians (black people), as history relates, were the first of all men…They also say that the Egyptians are colonists sent out by the Ethiopians, Osiris having been the leader of the colony…And the larger part of the customs of the Egyptians are, they hold, Ethiopian, the colonists still preserving their ancient manners. For instance, the belief that their kings are gods, the very special attention which they pay to their burial, and many other matters of a similar nature are Ethiopian practices, while the shapes of their statues and the forms of their letters are Ethiopian."2

Diodorus agreed with the tradition. He wrote that the Egyptians, "are colonists sent out by the Ethiopians….and the larger part of the custom of the Egyptians, these historians hold, are Ethiopian colonists still preserving their ancient manners."3

The Greek globe-trotter Herodotus, (480?BC-425), often called, "The Father of History," recorded some cultural similarities between Egypt and Ethiopia in order to explain why he believed the black Colchidians in Russia were colonist from Egypt:
"…among mankind the Egyptians and the Ethiopians have practiced circumcision since
time immemorial. The Phoenicians and Syrians of Palestine themselves admit that they learnt the practice from the Egyptians while the Syrians in the river Thermodon and Pathenios region and their neighbors the Macrons say they learnt it recently from the Colchidians. These are the only races which practice circumcision and it is observable that they do it in the same way as the Egyptians. As between the Egyptians themselves and the Ethiopians I could not say which taught the other the practice, for among them it is quite clearly a customs of great antiquity."4

Even the 5000-year-old Narmer palette: Egypt's first monument, has signs that, "are essentially African," as reported by G. Mokhtar and J. Vercoutier.5

Basil Davidson wrote, "Egypt was not born into a void; it emerged from a Neolithic womb, and this womb was African. The peasants of the Fayum Lake, those who laid the foundations of old Egyptian society, were not without their own ideas about like and the cosmos; the provenance of these ideas, or of most of them, was undoubtedly more African than Asian. "God's Land" with all it great ancestral spirits lay, for dynastic Egypt, neither in the east nor in the north, but far to the south and west. There is nothing to show that the earliest forms of ram and sun worship or of other cults made famous along the Nile did not take their rise in this obscure "God's Land" of "upper Africa."6

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1Ancient civilizations of Africa/ UNESCO International Scientific Committee for the Drafting of a General History of Africa; editor, G. Mokhtar (London; Heinemann Educational Books; Berkeley: University of California Press, 1981), 49

 

2Poe, Richard. Black Spark White Fire. Rocklin, CA: PRIMA, 1997. 352

 

3Davidson, Basil. "The Ancient World and Africa: Whose Roots?" Race and Class. A Journal for Black and Third World Liberation. 29.2, 1987, 6

 

4Poe, 53

 

5Ancient civilizations of Africa/ UNESCO International Scientific Committee for the Drafting of a General History of Africa; editor, G. Mokhtar (London; Heinemann Educational Books; Berkeley: University of California Press, 1981), 15

 

6Davidson, Basil. The Lost Cities of Africa. Boston: Little Brown, 1959, 75

 

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