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African history

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Les langues bantu sur le Net. Africa History And Photo Gallery. FullHDMovies - Regarder des films complets en ligne. Introduction à la médecine traditionnelle africaine | Noir, Fier et Conscient. Africa-map-true-size. Africa You Will Never See in HIS-STORY books (crucial info) Ancient African Writing. Ancient African Writing Ancient Africa has the world's oldest and largest collection of ancient writing systems. Evidence of such dates to pre-historic time, and can be found in various regions of the continent. By contrast, continental Europe's oldest writing, Greek, was not fully in use until c. 1400 BC (a clay tablet found in Iklaina, Greece) and is largely derived from an older African script called Proto-Sinaitic. The oldest Asian writing, Proto-Cuneiform, dates to around 3000 BC (clay texts found at Jemdet Nasr). Proto Saharan (5000 - 3000 BC) Perhaps the world's oldest known from of writing are inscriptions of what some archaeologists and linguists have termed, "Proto Saharan" near the Kharga oasis west of so-called "Nubia" that date to at least 5,000 BC.

Nsbidi (5000 BC - present) Nsibidi is an ancient script used to communicate in various languages in West Central Africa. Medu Neter or Ta Merrian "Hieroglyphs" (4000 BC - 600 AD) Kemetic "Hieratic" (3200 BC - 600 AD) Read more: Black African Moors of The Great Senegal Empire Pt 1– by Jide Uwechia – Rasta Livewire. A True Moor “Zenaga/Sanhaja tribe: Berber tribe of southern Morocco, Mauritania and Senegal who gave their name to modern Senegal, their original homeland.

They formed one of the sub-saharan tribes of Berbers which, uniting under the leadership of Yusef bin Tashfin, crossed the Sahara and gave a dynasty to Morocco and Spain, namely, that of the Almoravides. The Zeirid dynasty which supplanted the Fatimites in the Maghrib built the city of Algiers was also of Zenaga origin . Zenaga: dialect of Berber spoken in southern Morocco and on the banks of the lower Senegal, largely by the negro population.”

African Moors: The Sanhajalese Empire – by Jide Uwechia Sanhaja is the name of a group of Africans who live on the Saharan fringes of the present day Senegal. Reference is made to their phenotype so that it is immediately obvious that we are re-visiting the great history of an unambiguously so-black nation in West Africa. LES BANTU. Je vous propose une reconstruction faite par D.W Phillipson, qui semble être approuvé par nombre d'auteurs (il a utilisé à la fois l'archéologie, la linguistique, les traditions orales, les données ethnographiques et les documents écrits) : Phase I: aux environs de 1000 BC Développement initial de la langue bantu, au Cameroun, au sein d'une population qui utilisait encore des outils lithiques mais qui, à une date relativement ancienne, avait déjà domestiqué les chèvres et peut-être inventé quelque forme d'agriculturePhase 2a: 1000-400 BC Quelques uns de ces bantuphones se dispersèrent vers l'est, le long des franges septentrionales de la forêt équatoriale.

C'est ainsi qu'ils entrèrent en contact avec les agriculteurs, qui pourraient bien avoir été des locuteurs de langues archaïques du Soudan central. Phase 2b: 1000-200 BC Une autre population parlant les langues bantu émigra vers le sud, du Cameroun au sud du Bas-Congo. Phase 4: 300-100 BC Phase 5: 100 BC Phase 6: 100-200 AD. Moorish Rulers - Black Kings / White Slaves pt 1. THE KUSHITES OF KEMET pt.2. Mali Empire. The Mali Empire (Manding: Nyeni;[4] English: Niani), also historically referred to as the Manden Kurufaba[1] was a Mandinka empire in West Africa from c. 1230 to c. 1600. The empire was founded by Sundiata Keita and became renowned for the wealth of its rulers, especially Mansa Musa. The Mali Empire had many profound cultural influences on West Africa, allowing the spread of its language, laws and customs along the Niger River. It extended over a large area and consisted of numerous vassal kingdoms and provinces. The Mali Empire[edit] The name Mālī (مالي) was recorded as the name of the empire by Ibn Battuta (d. 1368/9).

According to Battuta's contemporary Chihab al-Umari (d. 1384), the name of the empire was Nyeni (Niani), after its capital. Alternative variants of the name Mali included Mallel, Mel, and Melit. Pre-Imperial Mali[edit] There are a few references to Mali in written literature of roughly contemporary age. The Kangaba Province[edit] The Two Kingdoms[edit] Battle of Kirina[edit] Moorsplayingchess. African Kings and Kingdoms of India.