Talk:Race of ancient Egyptians/Draft
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editThe Race of Ancient Egyptians is a subject that has attracted some controversy, especially within Afrocentristc circles. The debate over the racial characteristics of the Ancient Egyptians usually occurs outside the field of Egyptology today.[1] Studies have shown that modern Egyptians have genetic affinities with populations of Europe and the Middle East[2] to East African populations.[3][4] Studies done on dental affinities and cranial characteristics among ancient Egyptians have shown these affinities, and uniformity and homogeneity among the samples taken,[5][6] and egyptologists generally consider the ancient Egyptians to have been a continuum from lighter northern populations of Europe to the darker Nubians and Kushites to the dark brown Nilotic peoples.[7]
Historically there have been differing accounts of the appearance of ancient Egyptians as compared to people of other nations. Herodotus commented that Egyptians had "black" skin and "kinky hair"[8] and Aristotle stated that the hair of Egyptians was curlier than that of other nations.[9] Ammianus Marcellinus described the Egyptians as lighter than the Moors[10] and Strabo compared the complexion of ancient Egyptians to that of northern Indians.[11] Some modern classical scholars such as Frank Snowden, Jr. dispute the reliability of ancient accounts asserting that the terms used have different meanings from modern concepts of racial characteristics[12], while some anthropologists such as Shomarka Keita point out similar dangers in relying on subjective interpretation, yet noting a realistic similarity between ancient Egyptians and the Greek's "Ethiopians" of antiquity.[13] Ancient Egyptians generally noted the difference between themselves and other peoples, however such differences frequently were based on culture or politics opposed to physical characteristics.[7]
Some scholars and authors assert that Egyptians were "black" and contend that modern perceptions of ancient Egyptians are due to racial prejudice on the part of early egyptologists. Some such as Senegalese historian Cheikh Anta Diop assert that early egyptologists knew that ancient Egyptians were black however covered it up.[14] Some fringe theories on the racial characteristics of ancient Egyptians also exist such as the assertion that ancient Egyptians were predominantly "Nordic" and that ancient Egypt was a "Nordic desert empire".[15] Egyptologists contend that such theories are pseudoscientific and there is no evidence supporting them.[7]
Origins
editThis article may be confusing or unclear to readers. (October 2007) |
Genetics
editAnthropology
editSome genetic studies suggest that modern Egyptians don't have very close relations to most tropical Africans. [16] Populations from throughout the world were compared using extensive genetic data. The North African populations grouped with West Eurasian (European, Middle East) populations rather than sub-Saharan Africans.[17] However, extensive studies have also been carried out to determine the origins of the Egyptians.
A 2004 study of the mtDNA of 58 native inhabitants from upper Egypt performed to indicate origins found a genetic ancestral heritage to East Africa, and another study links Egyptians in general with people from modern Eritrea and Ethiopia.[18]
- The mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) diversity of 58 individuals from Upper Egypt, more than half (34 individuals) from Gurna, whose population has an ancient cultural history, were studied by sequencing the control-region and screening diagnostic RFLP markers. This sedentary population presented similarities to the Ethiopian population by the L1 and L2 macrohaplogroup frequency (20.6%), by the West Eurasian component (defined by haplogroups H to K and T to X) and particularly by a high frequency (17.6%) of haplogroup M1. We statistically and phylogenetically analysed and compared the Gurna population with other Egyptian, Near East and sub-Saharan Africa populations; AMOVA and Minimum Spanning Network analysis showed that the Gurna population was not isolated from neighbouring populations. Our results suggest that the Gurna population has conserved the trace of an ancestral genetic structure from an ancestral East African population, characterized by a high M1 haplogroup frequency. The current structure of the Egyptian population may be the result of further influence of neighbouring populations on this ancestral population.[19]
A 2007 study suggests overall population continuity over the predynastic and early dynastic periods with high levels of heterogeneity but concludes that Egyptian civilization was predominantly indigenous in development, with some, but limited migration from elsewhere.[20]
Biological anthropologist Shomarka Keita also believes population variation in Egypt to be primarily indigenous, and not necessarily the result of significant intermingling of widely divergent peoples.[21] He identifies northern and southern patterns in the Egyptian population of the early predynastic period, which he describes as "northern-Egyptian-Maghreb" and "tropical African variant" (overlapping with Nubia/Kush) respectively. He shows that a progressive change in Upper Egypt toward the northern Egyptian pattern takes place through the predynastic period, though the southern pattern continues to predominate in Abydos in Upper Egypt by the First Dynasty:
“ | The predominant craniometric pattern in the Abydos [First Dynasty] royal tombs is "southern" (tropical African variant)... However, lower Egyptian, Maghrebian, and European patterns are observed also, thus making for great diversity... The centroid values of the various upper Egyptian series viewed collectively are seen to vary over time. The general trend from Badari to Nakada times, and then from the Nakadan to the First Dynasty epochs demonstrate change toward the northern-Egyptian centroid value on Function I with similar values on Function 11. This might represent an average change from an Africoid (Keita, 1990) to a northern-Egyptian-Maghreb modal pattern.... This northern modal pattern, which can be called coastal northern African, is noted in general terms to be intermediate, by the centroid scores of Function I, to equatorial African and northern European phenotypes.[22] | ” |
Demographics
editA 2003 Y chromosome study was performed by Lucotte on modern Egyptians, with haplotypes V, XI, and IV being most common.[23] Haplotype V is common in Berbers and has a low frequency outside Africa. [24] Haplotypes V, XI, and IV are all supra/sub-Saharan horn of Africa haplotypes, and they are far more dominant in Egyptians than in Near Eastern or European groups.
- A review of the recent literature indicates that there are male lineage ties between African peoples who have been traditionally labeled as being ‘‘racially’’ different, with ‘‘racially’’ implying an ontologically deep divide. The PN2 transition, a Y chromosome marker, defines a lineage (within the YAPþ derived haplogroup E or III) that emerged in Africa probably before the last glacial maximum, but after the migration of modern humans from Africa (see Semino et al., 2004) This mutation forms a clade that has two daughter subclades (defined by the biallelic markers M35/215 (or 215/M35) and M2) that unites numerous phenotypically variant African populations from the supra-Saharan, Saharan, and sub-Saharan regions based on current data (Underhill, 2001).[25][26]
A 2006 bioarchaeological study on the dental morphology of ancient Egyptians by Prof. Joel Irish shows that a continuity extends from the dynastic to the post-dynastic periods, and that the Egyptians exhibit dental traits characteristic of indigenous North Africans, and Southwest Asians to a lesser extent. A sample from the western desert from Nubia was also compared with the Egyptian samples and were found to be significantly different, with the exception of predynastic and early dynastic samples.[27]
Demographic influences
editThere were several theories regarding the effects and types of demographic influence on ancient Egypt. All of these theories aimed to explain why ancient Egyptians cluster the way they do in regards to genetics, cranial affinities, and languages/culture. One theory is that the ancient Egyptians belong to a primarily African group, with relatively little significant outside influences from the Near East. Other theories postulated that the ancient Egyptians received significant demographic influence from the Near East, and with minor demographic effects from regions further south.[28][29](SeeDynastic Race Theory)
Recent demographic analysis and work done by various anthropologists has led many scholars to conclude that there was in fact overall population continuity stretching from the Neolithic, right into dynastic times with small amounts of possible miscegenation with foreigners, placing Egyptian society with in a localized NorthEast African and Nile Valley context..[30][31][32][33] As University of Chicago Egyptologist Frank Yurco points out:
- Certainly there was some foreign admixture [in Egypt], but basically a homogeneous African population had lived in the Nile Valley from ancient to modern times... [the] Badarian people, who developed the earliest Predynastic Egyptian culture, already exhibited the mix of North African and Sub-Saharan physical traits that have typified Egyptians ever since (Hassan 1985; Yurco 1989; Trigger 1978; Keita 1990; Brace et al., this volume)... The peoples of Egypt, the Sudan, and much of East Africa, Ethiopia and Somalia are now generally regarded as a Nilotic (i.e. Nile River) continuity, with widely ranging physical features (complexions light to dark, various hair and craniofacial types) but with powerful common cultural traits, including cattle pastoralist traditions (Trigger 1978; Bard, Snowden, this volume). Language research suggests that this Saharan-Nilotic population became speakers of the Afro-Asiatic languages... Semitic was evidently spoken by Saharans who crossed the Red Sea into Arabia and became ancestors of the Semitic speakers there, possibly around 7000 BC... In summary we may say that Egypt was a distinct North African culture rooted in the Nile Valley and on the Sahara.
In 2000, spanish geneticist Antonio Arnaiz-Villena ignited a controversy by claiming that Modern Greeks showed genetic affinities to Sub-Saharan Africans. He stated that this admixture could have taken place by interactions with African Egyptians during the pharonic era. However, his study remains controversial and his hypothesis has not been accepted in the scientific community[34].
Material Culture
editLocated in the extreme corner of Northeast Africa, Egyptian society was at a crossroads between African and Near Eastern regions. Over the years, archaeologists and Egyptologists have drawn from a variety of different disciplines in order to shed light on the question of the ultimate origins of ancient Egyptian civilization. Earlier theories such as the "Dynastic race", which proposed an external source from the north, has today generally been disregarded by mainstream Egyptology.[35]
During the Naqada phase, the predynastic Egyptians of Upper Egypt shared an almost identical culture with A-group peoples of the Lower Sudan.[36] In fact, the cultures were so similar, as indicated by royal tombs at Qustul, along with the earliest examples of what was thought to have been distinct Egyptian iconography, some scholars have even proposed an Egyptian origin in Nubia among the A-group.[37][38] Indeed, in 1996, Lovell and Prowse published a paper in the American Journal of Physical Anthropology citing evidence for endogamy. They reported the presence of individual rulers buried at Naqada in what was designated as elite, high status tombs, showing them to be related morphologically to populations in Northern Nubia, more so than those in Southern Egypt.[39] While others find this prospect intriguing, however, many scholars are not swayed by the evidence and cite the presence of royal tombs that are contemporary with that of Qustul and just as elaborate, while also addressing what they see as difficulty with the dating techniques.[40]
Excavations from Nabta Playa, located about 100km west of Abu Simbel, suggest that the Neolithic inhabitants of the region were migrants from Sub-Saharan Africa. There is some speculation that this culture is likely to be the predecessor of the Egyptians, based on cultural similarities and social complexity which is thought to be reflective of Egypt's Old Kingdom.[41][42]
Toby Wilkonson, in his book "Genesis of the Pharaohs", proposes an origin for the Egyptians somewhere in the Eastern Desert.[43] He presents evidence that much of predynastic Egypt was representative of the traditional African cattle-culture, typical of Southern Sudanese and East African pastoralists of today. In addition, Wilkonson cites the iconography on rock art in the region as depicting what he suggests to be the first examples of the royal crowns, even pointing to Qustul in Nubia as a likely candidate for the origins of the white crown, being that the earliest example of it was discovered in this area.
Crania
editA craniofacial study by C. Loring Brace et. al. concluded that "The Predynastic of Upper Egypt and the Late Dynastic of Lower Egypt are more closely related to each other than to any other population. As a whole, they show ties with the European Neolithic, North Africa, modern Europe, and, more remotely, India, but not at all with sub-Saharan Africa [except for Somalia], eastern Asia, Oceania, or the New World."[44]
Keita and Kittles (1997) criticize the study due its alleged contradictions, and selective approach in pigeon holding biohistorical Africans within a fixed archetype, in effect, "deafricanizing" groups such as Egyptians, Nubians, and Somali people. They write:
- Another example of the use of a socially constructed typological paradigm is in studies of the Nile Valley populations in which the concept of a biological African is restricted to those with a particular craniometric pattern (called in the past the 'True Negro' though no 'True White' was ever defined). Early Nubians, Egyptians, and even Somalians are viewed essentially as non-Africans, when in fact numerous lines of evidence and an evolutionary model make them a part of African biocultural/biogeographical history. The diversity of 'authentic' Africans is a reality. This diversity prevents biogeographical/biohistorical Africans from clustering into a single unit, no matter the kind of data.[45]
A 2005 study by Keita of Badarian crania in predynastic upper Egypt in comparison to various European and tropical African crania found that the predynastic Badarian series clusters much closer with the tropical African series.[46]
Body Plans
editAnother reliable source of skeletal data is limb proportions, which tends to vary with different climatic belts. The early Nile Valley populations possessed more tropical body proportions, suggesting that the Egyptian Nile Valley was not primarily settled by cold-adapted peoples, such as Europeans.[13] A 2003 paper appeared in the American Journal of Physical Anthropology by Dr Sonia Zakrzewski entitled 'Variation in Ancient Egyptian Stature and Body Proportions', where she confirmed the results of previous studies, indicating that the Ancient Egyptians had tropically adapted body plans.
- The raw values in Table 6 suggest that Egyptians had the ‘super-Negroid’ body plan described by Robins (1983). The values for the brachial and crural indices show that the distal segments of each limb are longer relative to the proximal segments than in many ‘African’ populations. [47]
Diop's melanin tests
editCheikh Anta Diop performed a series of the tests on Egyptian mummies to determine melanin levels and concluded that Egyptians were dark-skinned and part of the "Negro race".[48] Diop notes criticisms of these results that argue that the skin of most Egyptian mummies, tainted by the embalming material, are no longer susceptible of any analysis. Diop contends the position that although the epidermis is the main site of the melanin, the melanocytes penetrating the derm at the boundary between it and the epidermis, even where the latter has mostly been destroyed by the embalming materials, show a melanin level which is non-existent in the "white-skinned races".[48] However, Diop does not describe any tests that verify his claims that melanin is "non-existent" among the "white-skinned races", nor provide evidence supporting his assertion that the absence of melanin in the epidermis is due to embalming techniques. Diop innovated the development of the melanin dosage test which was later adopted by forensic investigators to determine the "racial identity" of badly burnt accident victims.[49]
Language
editThe Ancient Egyptian language (a language most closely related to Berber, Semitic, and Beja) is part of the Afro-Asiatic language family. Initially, it was believed that Semitic languages originated in the near east, however, linguists soon began to reveal a connection between them and several African Languages, it was found that they were more related to languages in Africa than to languages in most parts of Asia and Europe. Joseph Greenberg, based on these observations proposed the term Afro-Asiatic(formerly known as Hamito-Semitic) to encompass all of these languages. The origin of Proto-Afro-Asiatic languages is still debated. An African origin is often proposed since five of the six Afro-Asiatic subfamilies are spoken on the African continent and only one in the middle east. Furthermore, some scholars have proposed Ethiopia, because it includes the majority of the diversity of the Afro-Asiatic language family and has very diverse groups in close geographic proximity, often considered a telltale sign for a linguistic geographic origin. Hence, many scholars cite this as evidence of a primarily African origin for the Ancient Egyptians as opposed to a near eastern origin.[50]
Kmt
editkm biliteral | km.t (place) | km.t (people) | |||||||||
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One of the many names for Egypt in ancient Egyptian is km.t (read "Kemet"), meaning "black land". More literally, the word means "something black". The use of km.t in terms of a place is thought generally to be in contrast to the "deshert" or "red land", e.g. the desert west of the Nile valley. Egypt for millennia depended on the flooding of the Nile to bring fertility to the land, and the resulting soil was very black.[51] Likewise, the word kmt could also refer to the people when followed by the people determinatives, as shown on the far right. Raymond Faulkner's Concise Dictionary of Middle Egyptian translates it into "Egyptians", as do most sources.[52] However, scholar Aboubacry Moussa Lam prefers what he considers to be a more literal translation and suggests that Km.t should be translated as meaning, "land of the black/s" or "black nation" when it applies to the country[53], and as meaning "the Blacks" when it applies to the population,[54] a view rejected by most Egyptologists.[55]
Historical perspectives
editAccounts by ancient writers
editMany ancient writers commented of the 'racial affinities' of ancient Egyptians. While some held them to be people with 'black skins and woolly hair' similar to 'Kushites', others described them as 'medium toned' or similar to that of northern Indians. Greek historian Herodotus commented on a perceived relationship between the Colchians (from the modern Republic of Georgia in the Caucasus) and the Egyptians, he justifies this through his observation that these people had "black skins and kinky hair":
- Several Egyptians told me that in their opinion the Colchians were descended from soldiers of Sesostris. I had conjectured as much myself from two pointers, firstly because they have black[dubious – discuss] (melanchros) skins and kinky hair and secondly, and more reliably for the reason that alone among mankind the Egyptians and the Ethiopians have practiced circumcision since time immemorial.[56]
However, some scholars point out that Egyptians were not described as Aethiopes, thus distinguishing between Egyptians and black Africans.[57] According to Classicist Frank M. Snowden, Jr., Herodotus seems to have been following a Graeco-Roman practice of describing people darker than themselves as melanchros, which did not mean that the people they described were black.[58] Other interpretations have pointed out that Herodotus could have been speaking in relative terms, since the Colchians were noted as residing near the Black Sea, close to modern day Russia where there are virtually no dark skinned, woolly haired people today; There are also others who question whether or not Herodotus ever visited the Black Sea region in the first place.[59]
Professor of African Studies at Temple University, Molefi Kete Asante however, cites numerous other examples from Herodotus, one where he asserts that "the flooding of the Nile could not be caused by snow, because the natives of the country (Egypt) are black from the heat".[60] Other ancient writers testify that there indeed was an ancient population of dark skinned, woolly haired people residing in Colchis, giving at least some support to Herodotus' claim that they were left there by the armies of the legendary Sesostris after initial campaigns in the region. Indeed, there is further description from ancient writers describing the populations of Colchis in this fashion. A Greek poet named Pindar described the Colchians, whom Jason and the Argonauts fought, as being "dark skinned". Also around 350 to 400 AD, Church father Saint Jerome and Sophronius referred to Colchis as the "second Ethiopia" because of its 'black-skinned' population.[61]
Aristotle, who some have questioned whether or not he visited Egypt, makes his observation on the physical nature of the Egyptians and Ethiopians, be it through hearsay or actual contact. Here, Aristotle makes claim that skin color is somehow correlated to courage, and also gives his impression on why the Egyptians and Ethiopians are bowlegged and 'curly haired'.
- Too black a hue marks the coward as witness Egyptians and Ethiopians and so does also too white a complexion as you may see from women, the complexion of courage is between the two.
- Why are the Ethiopians and Egyptians bandy-legged? Is it because the bodies of living creatures become distorted by heat, like logs of wood when they become dry? The condition of their hair supports this theory; for it is curlier than that of other nations, and curliness is as it were crookedness of the hair.[62]
Ammianus Marcellinus (325/330-after 391) was a Greco-Roman historian who also gave his own brief observations.
In fact, Ammianus Marcellinus described the Egyptians as lighter than the Moors, saying "the land of Egypt, flooded by the Nile, darkens bodies more mildly owing to the inundation of its fields."[65] Shavit's attribution to Ammianus Marcellinus for this reference however, is generally disputed. Frank Snowden instead attributes this statement to Marcus Manilius, author of Astronomica.[66]
Ancient writers have also made comparisons between ancient Egyptians and northern Indians of the time.
Strabo (c. 64 BC – AD 24):
- As for the people of India, those in the south are like the Aethiopians in colour, although they are like the rest in respect to countenance and hair (for on account of the humidity of the air their hair does not curl), whereas those in the north are like the Aegyptians.[67]
Arrian (c. 86 - 146 AD) (Indica 6.9):
- The appearance of the inhabitants is also not very different in India and Ethiopia: the southern Indians are rather more like Ethiopians as they are black to look on, and their hair is black; only they are not so snub-nosed or woolly-haired as the Ethiopians; the northern Indians are most like the Egyptians physically.[68]
The above writings of Strabo and Arrian were drawn from the earlier accounts of Nearchus (c. 360 - 300 BC), Megasthenes (c. 350 - 290 BC) and Eratosthenes (276 - 195 BC).[69]
According to Yaacov Shavit of Tel Aviv University, "[t]he evidence clearly shows that those Graeco-Roman authors who refer to the skin color and other physical traits distinguish sharply between Ethiopians (Nubians) and Egyptians, and rarely do they refer to the Egyptians as black, even though they were described as darker than themselves.... [in addition,] Egyptians and Nubians were both clearly distinguished from the black Africans."[70] However, late professor of classics, Frank Snowden has not made note of any distinction between Nubians, Ethiopians, or modern conceptions of "black African". He concedes that "both Egyptians and Ethiopians were described as black, but only Ethiopians were described as having exceedingly woolly hair".[66]
Classical scholar Frank Snowden cautions us that terms used by ancient Greek and Roman writers to describe the physical characteristics of other ancient peoples were different in meaning from modern-day racial terms in the West. He writes:
....the Afrocentrists are mistaken in assuming that the the terms Afri (Africans) and various color adjectives for dark pigmentation as used by Greeks and Romans are always the classical equivalents of Negores or blacks in modern usage.... Not all the peoples described by such color terms were blacks or Negroes in the modern sense, but only the inhabitants of the Nile Valley south of Egypt and of the southern fringes of northwestern Africa.... That the pigmentation of the Egyptians was seen as lighter than that of Ethiopians is also attested by the adjective subfusucli {"somewhat dark") which Ammianus Marcellinus (22.16.23) chose to describe the Egyptians.... There was also a mixed Egyptian-Nubian element in the population of Egypt at least a early as the middle of the third millennium B.C.E....[71]
Keita and Boyce confront this issue in a 1996 article entitled, "The Geographical Origins and Population Relationships of Early Ancient Egyptians". As anthropologists, they point out the danger in relying on ancient interpretation to reveal for us the biological make up of a population. In any case they contend, the relevant data indicates greater similarity between Egyptians and Ethiopians than the former group with the ancient Greeks.
The descriptions and terms of ancient Greek writers have sometimes been used to comment on Egyptian origins. This is problematic since the ancient writers were not doing population biology. However, we can examine one issue. The Greeks called all groups south of Egypt "Ethiopians." Were the Egyptians more related to any of these "Ethiopians" than to the Greeks? As noted, cranial and limb studies have indicated greater similarity to Somalis, Kushites and Nubians, all "Ethiopians" in ancient Greek terms.[13]
Great sphinx
editOver the centuries, numerous writers and scholars have recorded their impressions and reactions upon seeing the Great Sphinx of Giza. French scholar Constantin-François de Chassebœuf, Comte de Volney visited Egypt between 1783 and 1785 . He is one of the earliest known Western scholars to remark upon what he saw as its "typically Negro" countenance.
"...[The Copts] all have a bloated face, puffed up eyes, flat nose, thick lips; in a word, the true face of the negro. I was tempted to attribute it to the climate, but when I visited the Sphinx, its appearance gave me the key to the riddle. On seeing that head, typically negro in all its features, I remembered the remarkable passage where Herodotus says: 'As for me, I judge the Colchians to be a colony of the Egyptians because, like them, they are black with woolly hair. ...'".[72]
Upon visiting Egypt in 1849, French author Gustave Flaubert echoed de Volney's observations. In his travel log chronicling his trip, he wrote:
We stop before a Sphinx; it fixes us with a terrifying stare. Its eyes still seem full of life; the left side is stained white by bird-droppings (the tip of the Pyramid of Khephren has the same long white stains); it exactly faces the rising sun, its head is grey, ears very large and protruding like a negro’s, its neck is eroded; from the front it is seen in its entirety thanks to great hollow dug in the sand; the fact that the nose is missing increases the flat, negroid effect. Besides, it was certainly Ethiopian; the lips are thick….[73]
In his work The Negro, published in 1915, W.E.B. Du Bois observed:
The great Sphinx at Gizeh, so familiar to all the world, the Sphinxes of Tanis, the statue from the Fayum, the statue of the Esquiline at Rome, and the Colossi of Bubastis all represent black, full-blooded Negroes and are described by Petrie as "having high cheek bones, flat checks, both in one plane, a massive nose, firm projecting lips, and thick hair, with an austere and almost savage expression of power."
and:
Blyden, the great modern black leader of West Africa, said of the Sphinx at Gizeh:"Her features are decidedly of the African or Negro type, with 'expanded nostrils.' If, then, the Sphinx was placed here—looking out in majestic and mysterious silence over the empty plain where once stood the great city of Memphis in all its pride and glory, as an 'emblematic representation of the king'--is not the inference clear as to the peculiar type or race to which that king belonged?"[74]
However, according to professor of Jewish history, Yaacov Shavit, most of the European travelers and scholars rejected Volney's views, including British Egyptologist E. A. Wallis Budge who wrote that '...all attempts to prove that the Egyptians are of the Negro race are overthrown at the outset by facts which cannot be controverted... the fact, however, remains that the Egyptian fellah is exactly what he was in the earliest dynasties.'"[75] In general however, Budge is usually considered to be an unreliable source in concern to Egyptology.[4] Later in his career, Budge dismissed earlier views of a "dynastic race" from the north and himself believed that Egyptians in general were descended from native Africans, having ancestral and cultural relationships with contiguous populations in the Nile valley.[76] Though Budge considered Egyptians to be indigenous Nilotic Africans, sometimes a false dichotomy was created between certain indigenous Africans, and groups formerly designated as "Negro". Such tendencies are addressed by archaeologist, Bruce Trigger, who notes such views in early Egyptology as being "marred by a confusion of race, language, and culture and by an accompanying racism". He writes:
all of these people are Africans. To proceed further and divide them into Caucasoid and Negroid stocks is to perform an act that is arbitrary and wholly devoid of historical or biological significance.[77]
In addition, Shavit notes that several other writers described the Egyptian populace, along with the Sphinx as "big lipped", including 19th-century traveler Baldensperger, who described the the Egyptian fellahin who settled Palestine as having "semi-Ethiopian" features.[78] In his notes, Shavit also adds, "While Afrocentrism regards Volney as a non-racial observer, one may wonder whether his portrait of the Egyptian was not based on racial prejudice against the modern Egyptians."[79] To the contrary, Afrocentrists do not view de Volney in the light of someone who harbored racial prejudice against modern Egyptians, and he is in fact described as having been a starch opponent of French involvement in the region (of Egypt), as well as a staunch libertarian.[80][81]
In 1992, the New York Times published a letter to the editor submitted by then Harvard professor of Orthodontics[82] Sheldon Peck in which he commented on a study of the Giza sphinx conducted by New York City Police Department senior forensics artist Frank Domingo. Peck Wrote:
The analytical techniques…Detective Frank Domingo used on facial photographs are not unlike methods orthodontists and surgeons use to study facial disfigurements. From the right lateral tracing of the statue's worn profile a pattern of bimaxilliary prognathism is clearly detectable. This is an anatomical condition of forward development in both jaws, more frequently found in people of African ancestry than in those from Asian or Indo-European stock. The carving of Chephren in the Cairo Museum has the facial proportions expected of a proto-European.[83] New York Times
Mummy reconstructions
editKing Tutankhamun
editKing Tutankhamun is one of the most famous pharaohs, and his mummy is estimated to be about 3000 years old. In 2005, three teams of scientists (Egyptian, French and American), in partnership with the National Geographic Society, developed a new facial likeness of Tutankhamun. The Egyptian team worked from 1,700 three-dimensional CT scans of the Pharaoh's skull. The French and American teams worked plastic molds created from these – but the Americans were never told whom they were reconstructing.[84] All three teams created silicone busts of their interpretation of what the young monarch looked like. In the end, they identified the skull as:
that of a male, 18 to 20 years old, with Caucasoid features.[84]
Terry Garcia, National Geographic's executive vice president for mission programs, said, in response to criticism of the King Tut reconstructions:
- The big variable is skin tone. North Africans, we know today, had a range of skin tones, from light to dark. In this case, we selected a medium skin tone, and we say, quite up front, 'This is midrange.' We'll never know for sure what his exact skin tone was or the color of his eyes with 100 percent certainty. ... Maybe in the future, people will come to a different conclusion.[85]
The French team's reconstruction specifically however, has sparked considerable criticism. Afrocentrists criticize the French team's claim that they selected the skin tone by taking a color from the middle of the range of skin tones found in the population of Egypt today.[86] They claim that these features do not reflect the prevalent eye or skin color of either ancient dynastic Egypt or present-day Egyptians . They further argue that many representations of Tut portray him with red-brown to dark-brown skin and dark eyes, and that the teams should have used these as references in assigning eye and skin color[87]. In comparison to the 2005 reconstruction, some have commented that the earlier 2002 Discovery Channel reconstruction showed a darker skin tone, among other differences.[88]
Egyptologist Zahi Hawass has stated that: "Tutankhamun was not black, and the portrayal of ancient Egyptian civilisation as black has no element of truth to it,". Hawass made this statement in light of calls from U.S. black activists demanding egyptologists to recognize that King Tut was black. Hawass also stated that "Egyptians are not Arabs and are not Africans despite the fact that Egypt is in Africa,". Hawass was responding to several demonstrations in Philadelphia where protesters demanded a bust of King Tut be removed because it portrayed him as white.[89]
Difficulties of forensic reconstruction
editAlthough their methodologies are objective, forensic anthropologists agree that attempts to apply criteria from craniofacial anthropometry sometimes can yield seemingly counterintuitive results, depending upon the weight given to each feature. For example, their application can result in finding some East and South Indians to have "Negroid" cranial/facial features and others to have "Caucasoid" cranial/facial features. While many East Africans for instance, have "Caucasoid" skulls[90], and many of the Khoisan who inhabit southwestern Africa have cranial/facial traits that are distinct from many other sub-Saharan Africans and resemble "Mongoloid" characteristics.[91] A recent study of ancient Nubian crania was critical of assigning the traditional racial labels to skeletal remains. The study concluded:
- "The assignment of skeletal racial origin is based principally upon stereotypical features found most frequently in the most geographically distant populations. While this is useful in some contexts (for example, sorting skeletal material of largely West African ancestry from skeletal material of largely Western European ancestry), it fails to identify populations that originate elsewhere and misrepresents fundamental patterns of human biological diversity.[92]"
These seeming contradictions, however, are related to the vagaries of racial classification, particularly of ethnically diverse or miscegenated populations, as exist in Africa and the Indian subcontinent. Cranial analysis is still used by some forensic scientists to determine the identity and geographic ethnic origin of human remains, even though the accuracy of ethnicity-related conclusions drawn from cranial analysis is not absolute -- particularly when treating populations possessing varying degrees of "racial", or ethnic, admixture. Though modern technology can reconstruct Tutankhamun's facial structure with a high degree of accuracy based on CT data from his mummy, but due to lack of facial tissue and embalming issues, correctly determining his skin tone, nose width, and eye color is nearly impossible.[93] The problem is not a lack of skill on the part of Ancient Egyptians. Egyptian artisans distinguished accurately among different ethnicities, but sometimes depicted their subjects in totally unreal colors, the purposes for which aren't completely understood. Thus no absolute consensus on the skin tone and various other features of reconstructed mummies such as Tutankhamun is possible.
Controversies
editAfrocentric view
editEgyptology performed during the colonial eras is regarded by some Egyptologists today as having had a racial prejudice against dark-skinned Africans. In his book Nations Nègres et Culture, Senegalese historian Cheikh Anta Diop, denounced colonial Egyptology as prejudiced against black historical accomplishments. Diop himself has come under criticism by mainstream scholars for having distorted some of his sources and as a result falsifying history.[94][95] Diop claims that Egyptologists "knew" that ancient Egyptians were "black", But the fact that Africans were colonized, he argued, made it difficult to admit that they were the creators of the Egyptian civilization. He quoted, for example, Champollion-Figeac who said that “black skin and wholly hair don’t make someone to belong to the Black race”.[96] In his book, Egitto e Nubia, Maurizio Damiano-Appia wrote that for many Egyptologists of the past, and even of today, Egypt was the creation of a "white race." Appia alleges that Eurocentrism, mainly of Anglo Saxon orientation, was at the base of this false idea. [97] Aboubacry Moussa Lam, in his book L’affaire des momies royales. La vérité sur la reine Ahmès-Nefertari, argued that Egyptian mummies were falsely described as being caucasian.[98]
Ancient Egyptian view
editThe Egyptians considered themselves part of a distinct group, separate from their neighbors.[99] The ancient Egyptians thought of themselves simply as Egyptian people. In their wall paintings, they distinguished themselves from Nubian, Lybian, Semitic, Berber, and Eurasian peoples. Egyptologist Ann Macy Roth[100] writes:
As we know from their observant depictions of foreigners, the ancient Egyptians saw themselves as darker than Asiatics and Libyans, and lighter than the Nubians, and with different facial features and body types than any of these groups. They considered themselves, to quote Goldilocks, "just right." These indigenous categories are the only ones that can be used to talk about race in ancient Egypt without anachronism. Even these distinctions may have represented ethnicity as much as race: once an immigrant began to wear Egyptian dress, he or she was generally represented as Egyptian in color and features.[101]
According to Senegalese Egyptologist[102] Aboubacry Moussa Lam, the Egyptians considered the Land of Punt as being their ancestral homeland.[103] Punt, was an ancient land south of Egypt accessible by way of the Red Sea. Its exact location has not been identified, but it is thought to have been somewhere in eastern Africa, probably including northern Somalia, Djibouti, and east-northeast Sudan (southern Beja lands).[104] Temple reliefs at Deir el Bahari in W Thebes depict an Egyptian expedition to Punt in the reign of Hatshepsut. As noted by some scholarly interpretations, the Egyptians depicted Puntites to be similar in appearance to themselves, as opposed to black.[105]
Egyptian view
editEgyptians have occasionally voiced their opinion regarding some of the controversies that have erupted over the origins of the ancient Egyptian. A 1993 anthropological study by Brace et al. on Egyptians made reference to such a response:
“ | In 1989 the Dallas Museum of Natural History sponsered an exhibit at the Texas State Fair Grounds depicting Egyptian culture at the time of Ramses the Great. When the Blackology Speaking Committee in Dallas threatened to boycott the exhibit unless Ramses II was represented as "black," Mr. [Latif] Aboul-Ela [the Director of the Cultural Office in the Egyptian Embassy] justifiably complained that the point of the exhibit was being distorted by what we might call a peculiarly American form of "racial politics". As he put it, "Rameses II was neither black nor white but Egyptian.... This is an Egyptian heritage and an Egyptian culture 100 percent.... We cannot say by any means we are black or white. We are Egyptians."[106] | ” |
Academic view
editAncient Egypt was thought by many scholars to have been a melting pot of various Saharan, Nilotic, and Levantine peoples since earliest times,[107][108] but some scholars in Egyptology today believe that there weren't any pre-Hellenic Egyptians who looked anything like modern Europeans.[109] The archaeologist Bruce Williams commented that few Egyptians, ancient or modern, would have been able to get a meal at a white lunch counter in the American South during the 1950s. Archaeologist, Bruce trigger cites what he saw as a deliberate obfuscation of racial politics, asserting that the early nile valley populations (including Egyptians) were all Africans and need not be defined by arbitrary constructs of race, devoid of any contextual significance.[110] Egyptologist, Frank Yurco shared a similar semtiment, identifying AE civilization as comprising a mix of North and sub-Saharan African elements that typified Egypt ever since, and that such peoples were generally coextensive with other Africans in the nile valley, and should be seen in this context. [111] Finally, professor of anthropology, S.O.Y. Keita referrs to early ancient Egyptians (mainly southerners, noting more variability in the north) as "Saharo-tropical African variants", which subsumes the basic variation that arose independently in Africa; variation that need not be sought elsewhere.[112]
Other hypotheses
editWhite Egypt
editWhite Egypt is a controversial hypothesis, which is based on the assertion that the ancient civilization of Egypt was predominantly white or ethnic European. Books have been written on the subject, and there are Egyptologists, anthropologists, historians and researchers in favor of both sides of the argument. All though consensus has not been reached in the scientific community, many regard the hypothesis to be only partially true, and attribute the conflicting evidence to a mixed racial background of ancient Egypt, which is often interpretated as a combination of light and dark-skinned Egyptians due to the early Nubian, Syrian and Libyan influence and intermixing, and northern influence from Europe and Turkey.[113]
Hamitic hypothesis
editComplications have also cropped up in the use of linguistics as a basis for racial categorization. The demise of the famous "Hamitic Hypothesis", which purported to show that certain African languages around the Nile area could be associated with "Caucasoid" peoples is a typical case. Such schemes fell apart when it was demonstrated that so-called 'Negroid' tribes far distant also spoke similar languages, tongues that were supposedly a reserved marker of 'Caucasoid' presence or influence.[114] For work on African languages, see Wiki article Languages of Africa and Joseph Greenberg. Older linguistic classifications are also linked to the notion of a "Hamitic race", a vague grouping thought to exclude 'Negroes', but accommodating a large variety of dark skinned North and East Africans into a broad-based 'Caucasoid' grouping. This "Hamitic race" is sometimes credited with the introduction of more advanced culture, such as certain plant cultivation and particularly the domestication of cattle. This has also been discredited by the work of post WWII archaeologists such as A. Arkell, who demonstrated that predynastic and Sudanic 'Negroid' elements already possessed cattle and plant domestication, thousands of years before the supposed influx of 'Caucasoid' or 'Hamitic' settlers into the Nile Valley, Nubia and adjoining areas.[115] Modern scholarship has moved away from earlier notions of a "Hamitic" race speaking Hamito-Semitic languages, and places the Egyptian language in a more localized context, centered around its general Saharan and Nilotic roots.(F. Yurco "An Egyptological Review", 1996)[116] Linguistic analysis (Diakanoff 1998) places the origin of the Afro-Asiatic languages in either Southwest Asia or northeast Africa, with older strands south of Egypt, and newer elements straddling the Nile Delta and Sinai.[117]
Dynastic race theory
editThe Dynastic Race Theory was the earliest thesis to attempt to explain how predynastic Egypt developed into the Pharonic monarchy. It argued that the presence of many Mesopotamian influences in Egypt during the late predynastic period and the apparently foreign graves in the Naqada II burials indicated an invasion of Mesopotamians into Upper Egypt, who then conquered both Upper and Lower Egypt and founded the First Dynasty
The Dynastic Race Theory is no longer the dominant thesis in the field of Predyanstic Archaeology, and has been largely replaced by the theory that Egypt was a Hydraulic empire, on the grounds that such contacts are much older than the Naqada II period,[118] the Naqada II period had a large degree of continuity with the Naqada I period,[119] and the changes which did happen during the Naqada periods happened over significant amounts of time.[120] However, most scholars still note that while the Dynastic Race Theory was exaggerated, the evidence upon which it was based does still indicate significant predynastic Mesopotamian/Eurasian influence.[121]
Cleopatra
editThe claim that Cleopatra, the last Pharaoh of Egypt, was of Black African origin has been espoused by a few Afrocentric academics.[122] Cleopatra, however, was of Hellenistic origin. Mary Lefkowitz argues that Afrocentric scholars are to blame for the proliferation of this myth. According to Professor of African American Studies at Temple University, Dr. Molefi Kete Asante, the idea that Cleopatra was black is not a major aspect of Afrocentrists arguments and asserts that afrocentricists do not spend a lot of time arguing such. [123] Lefkowitz disagrees and cites examples of Afrocentric scholars who have made such claims. One such example she supplies is a chapter entitled "Black Warrior Queens" published in 1984 in Black Women in Antiquity, part of the Journal of African Civilization series. It draws heavily on the work of J.A. Rogers.
References
edit- ^ Macy Roth, Ann. "Building Bridges to Afrocentrism". UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA. Retrieved 2007-10-03.
- ^ Luca Cavalli-Sforza, Luigi (1996-08-05). The History and Geography of Human Genes. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0691029054.
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suggested) (help) - ^ Kivisild T, Reidla M, Metspalu E; et al. (2004). "Ethiopian mitochondrial DNA heritage: tracking gene flow across and around the gate of tears". Am. J. Hum. Genet. 75 (5): 752–70. doi:10.1086/425161. PMID 15457403.
{{cite journal}}
: Explicit use of et al. in:|author=
(help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Stevanovitch A, Gilles A, Bouzaid E; et al. (2004). "Mitochondrial DNA sequence diversity in a sedentary population from Egypt". Ann. Hum. Genet. 68 (Pt 1): 23–39. PMID 14748828.
{{cite journal}}
: Explicit use of et al. in:|author=
(help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Irish, J.D. (2006). "Who were the ancient Egyptians? Dental affinities among Neolithic through postdynastic peoples". Am J Phys Anthropol. 129: 529–543. doi:10.1002/ajpa.20261.
- ^ Keita, S. (1992). "Further Studies of Crania From Ancient Northern Africa: An Analysis of Crania From First Dynasty Egyptian Tombs, Using Multiple Discriminant Functions". American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 87: 245–54. doi:10.1002/ajpa.1330870302.
- ^ a b c Yurco, Frank. ""Were the Ancient Egyptians Black or White?"" (PDF). BAR magazine. Retrieved 2007-10-03.
- ^ Herodotus, Book II, 104
- ^ Physiognomics, Vol. VI, 812a - Book XIV, p. 317
- ^ Astronomica, 4.722-30; qtd. in Shavit, p. 153
- ^ Strabo Book XV, Chapter 1
- ^ Snowden, Jr., Frank M. (1996). Mary R. Lefkowitz and Guy MacLean Rogers (eds.) (ed.). Black Athena Revisited. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. pp. 113–14.
....the Afrocentrists are mistaken in assuming that the the terms Afri (Africans) and various color adjectives for dark pigmentation as used by Greeks and Romans are always the classical equivalents of Negores or blacks in modern usage.... That the pigmentation of the Egyptians was seen as lighter than that of Ethiopians is also attested by the adjective subfusucli ("somewhat dark") which Ammianus Marcellinus (22.16.23) chose to describe the Egyptians....
{{cite book}}
:|editor=
has generic name (help) - ^ a b c S.O.Y. Keita & A. J. Boyce. Egypt in Africa, (1996), pp. 25-27 "The descriptions and terms of ancient Greek writers have sometimes been used to comment on Egyptian origins. This is problematic since the ancient writers were not doing population biology. However, we can examine one issue. The Greeks called all groups south of Egypt "Ethiopians." Were the Egyptians more related to any of these "Ethiopians" than to the Greeks? As noted, cranial and limb studies have indicated greater similarity to Somalis, Kushites and Nubians, all "Ethiopians" in ancient Greek terms." Cite error: The named reference "Keita" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- ^ Cheikh Anta Diop, Nations Nègres et Culture. De l'antiquité nègre égyptienne aux problèmes culturels de l'Afrique Noire d'aujourd'hui, Tome I, Paris: Présence Africaine, 1979, pp. 62, 70.
- ^ MARCH OF THE TITANS - A HISTORY OF THE WHITE RACE
- ^ Cavalli-Sforza, L.L., P. Menozzi, and A. Piazza. 1994, The History and Geography of Human Genes. Princeton:Princeton University Press.
- ^ [Hammer, M. et al. 1997.]
- ^ Kivisild T, Reidla M, Metspalu E, Rosa A, Brehm A, Pennarun E, Parik J, Geberhiwot T, Usanga E, Villems R (2004). "Ethiopian mitochondrial DNA heritage: tracking gene flow across and around the gate of tears". Am J Hum Genet. 75 (5): 752–70. PMID 15457403.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=pubmed&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=14748828
- ^ American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 2007. © 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [1]
- ^ Keita SOY and Rick A. Kittles. The Persistence of Racial Thinking and the Myth of Racial Divergence. American Anthropologist, New Series, Vol. 99, No. 3 (Sep., 1997), pp. 534-544
- ^ S.O.Y. Keita, American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 87: 245-254 (1992)
- ^ http://www.homestead.com/wysinger/haplotypes_in_egypt.pdf
- ^ [http://www.homestead.com/wysinger/keita6.pdf
- ^ http://mbe.library.arizona.edu/data/1994/1105/4hamm.pdf
- ^ http://www.homestead.com/wysinger/Northeast_african_analysis.pdf
- ^ http://www.homestead.com/wysinger/who_were_egyptian.pdf
- ^ Bosch et. al, 1997
- ^ Newman 1995
- ^ Frank Yurco, "An Egyptological Review" in Mary R. Lefkowitz and Guy MacLean Rogers, eds. Black Athena Revisited. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1996. p. 62-100
- ^ [Zakrzewski, et al. 2007.]
- ^ [Irish, et al. 2006.]
- ^ http://www.homestead.com/wysinger/keita6.pdf
- ^ HLA genes in Macedonians and the sub-Saharan origin of the Greeks
- ^ Toby Wilkinson. Early Dynastic Egypt, 2001, Routledge, pp. 15
- ^ Hunting for the Elusive Nubian A-Group People - by Maria Gatto, archaeology.org
- ^ Egypt and Sub-Saharan Africa: Their Interaction - Encyclopedia of Precolonial Africa, by Joseph O. Vogel, AltaMira Press, (1997), pp. 465-472
- ^ Journal of Near Eastern Studies, Vol. 46, No. 1 (Jan., 1987), pp. 15-26
- ^ Tracy L. Prowse, Nancy C. Lovell. Concordance of cranial and dental morphological traits and evidence for endogamy in ancient Egypt, American Journal of Physical Anthropology, Vol. 101, Issue 2, October 1996, Pages: 237-246
- ^ Wegner, J. W. 1996. Interaction between the Nubian A-Group and Predynastic Egypt: The Significance of the Qustul Incense Burner. In T. Celenko, Ed., Egypt in Africa: 98-100. Indianapolis: Indianapolis Museum of Art/Indiana University Press.
- ^ Ancient Astronomy in Africa
- ^ Wendorf, Fred (2001). Holocene Settlement of the Egyptian Sahara. p. 525. ISBN 0306466120.
{{cite book}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ Genesis of the Pharaohs: Genesis of the ‘Ka’ and Crowns? - Review by by Timothy Kendall, American Archaeologist
- ^ Brace et al., 'Clines and clusters versus "race"' (1993)
- ^ S.O.Y. Keita and Rick A. Kittles,' The Persistence of Racial Thinking and the Myth of Racial Divergence', American Anthropologist (1997)
- ^ S.O.Y. Keita, Journal of Black Studies, Vol. 36 No. 2, pp. 191-208 (2005)
- ^ http://www.homestead.com/wysinger/egyptian_body_proportions.pdf
- ^ a b http://www.africawithin.com/diop/origin_egyptians.htm
- ^ http://www.webzinemaker.com/admi/m7/page.php3?num_web=27310&rubr=3&id=290477
- ^ The Afroasiatic Language Phylum: African in Origin, or Asian?
- ^ [2]
- ^ Raymond Faulkner, A Concise Dictionary of Middle Egyptian, Oxford: Griffith Institute, 2002, p. 286.
- ^ Aboubacry Moussa Lam, "L'Égypte ancienne et l'Afrique", in Maria R. Turano et Paul Vandepitte, Pour une histoire de l'Afrique, 2003, p. 50.
- ^ Aboubacry Moussa Lam, "L'Égypte ancienne et l'Afrique", in Maria R. Turano et Paul Vandepitte, Pour une histoire de l'Afrique, 2003, p. 51; Aboubacry Moussa Lam, De l'origine égyptienne des Peuls, Paris: Présence Africaine / Khepera, 1993, p. 181.
- ^ Bard, Kathryn A. "Ancient Egyptians and the Issue of Race". in Lefkowitz and MacLean rogers, p. 114
- ^ Herodotus, Book II, 104
- ^ Shavit, pp. 154-55
- ^ "Bernal's 'Blacks' and the Afrocentrists" in Lefkowitz and MacLean Rogers. 1996, pp. 113-114
- ^ Did Herodotus Ever Go to the Black Sea? JSTOR
- ^ Molefi Kete Asante. Egypt in Africa, (1996), pp. 116-117
- ^ Cushites, Colchians, and Khazars JSTOR
- ^ Physiognomics, Vol. VI, 812a - Book XIV, p. 317
- ^ Ammianus Marcellinus, Book XXII, para 16 (23)
- ^ The Peoples of the Nile Valley - BBC World Service
- ^ Astronomica, 4.722-30; qtd. in Shavit, p. 153
- ^ a b Snowden, Frank. Egypt in Africa, (1996), pp. 106-108
- ^ Strabo Book XV, Chapter 1
- ^ Indica 6.9
- ^ Radhakumud Mookerji (1988). Chandragupta Maurya and His Times (p. 4). Motilal Banarsidass Publ. ISBN 8120804058.
- ^ Shavit, p. 154
- ^ "Bernal's 'Blacks' and the Afrocentrists" in Lefkowitz and MacLean Rogers. 1996, pp. 113-114
- ^ Cheikh Anta Diop argues that many Ancient Egyptians were Black Africans; the Greek debt to Egypt
- ^ The Sphinx of Giza
- ^ William Edward Burghardt Du Bois, The Negro (New York: Henry Holt and Company, 1915)
- ^ qtd. in Shavit, p. 148
- ^ EW Budge, Hieroglyphic Dictionary, pp lxvii-lxix
- ^ Bruce Trigger, 'Nubian, Negro, Black, Nilotic?', in Sylvia Hochfield and Elizabeth Riefstahl (eds), Africa in Antiquity: the arts of Nubia and the Sudan, Vol. 1 (New York, Brooklyn Museum, 1978).
- ^ qtd. in Shavit, p. 333
- ^ op cit.
- ^ Constantin-François Chasseboeuf, marquis de Volney
- ^ “Orientalism revisited” - by Keith Windschuttle
- ^ Abstract Sheldon Peck, Department of Orthodontics at Harvard
- ^ Sphinx May Really Be a Black African
- ^ a b
Handwerk, Brian (May 11, 2005). "King Tut's New Face: Behind the Forensic Reconstruction". National Geographic News. Retrieved 2006-08-05.
{{cite news}}
: Check date values in:|date=
(help) - ^
Henerson, Evan (June 15, 2005). "King Tut's skin color a topic of controversy". U-Daily News - L.A. Life. Retrieved 2006-08-05.
{{cite news}}
: Check date values in:|date=
(help) - ^ King Tut: African or European
- ^ King Tut Exhibit Prompts Debate on His Skin Color
- ^ Galiana, Sonia Morgan. "Whitewashing King Tut". National Newspaper Publishers Association, Inc. Retrieved 2007-10-03.
- ^ "Tutankhamun was not black: Egypt antiquities chief". AFP. Retrieved 2007-09-27.
{{cite news}}
: Cite has empty unknown parameter:|coauthors=
(help) - ^ Jean Hiernaux, "The People of Africa", 1975 p.147
- ^ Department of Anatomy, University of the Witwatersrand, Medical School, Johannesburg, South Africa 2001[3]
- ^ Forensic Misclassification of Ancient Nubian Crania: Implications for Assumptions about Human Variation
- ^ King Tut's New Face: Behind the Forensic Reconstruction National Geographic News
- ^ Snowden, p.119
- ^ Schuh, Russell G. "The Use and Misuse of Language in the Study of African History." (1997), in: Ufahamu 25(1):36-81.
- ^ Cheikh Anta Diop, Nations Nègres et Culture. De l'antiquité nègre égyptienne aux problèmes culturels de l'Afrique Noire d'aujourd'hui, Tome I, Paris: Présence Africaine, 1979, pp. 62, 70.
- ^ Maurizio Damiano-Appia, Egitto e Nubia, Con la collaborazione di Francesco L. Nera, Milano: Arnoldo Mondadori Editore, 1995, p. 8.
- ^ Aboubacry Moussa Lam, L'affaire des momies royales. La vérité sur la reine Ahmès-Nefertari, Paris: Khepera / Présence Africaine, 2000.
- ^ "Were the Ancient Egyptians Black or White?"
- ^ Ann Macy Roth New York University, Arts & Science
- ^ Building Bridges to Afrocentrism. By Ann Macy Roth
- ^ Aboubacry Moussa Lam, Eléments Biographiques et Bibliographie
- ^ Aboubacry Moussa Lam, De l'origine égyptienne des Peuls, Paris: Présence Africaine / Khepera, 1993, p. 345
- ^ Where was Punt? Maat-ka-Ra Hatshepsut
- ^ Finally in Africa? Egypt, from Diop to Celenko by Aaron Kamugisha (2003)
- ^ qtd. in Brace et al. 1993.
- ^ [Irish, et al. 2006.]
- ^ [Zakrzewski, et al. 2007.]
- ^ http://www.africa.upenn.edu/Articles_Gen/afrocent_roth.html
- ^ Bruce Trigger, 'Nubian, Negro, Black, Nilotic?', in Sylvia Hochfield and Elizabeth Riefstahl (eds), Africa in Antiquity: the arts of Nubia and the Sudan, Vol. 1 (New York, Brooklyn Museum, 1978).
- ^ Were the Ancient Egyptians black or white
- ^ S.O.Y. Keita, History in Africa, 20: 129-154 (1993)
- ^ University College London (2003). "The Question of Race in ancient Egypt - A disputed terrain".
- ^ Greenberg, Joseph H. (1963) The Languages of Africa. International journal of American linguistics, 29, 1, part 2
- ^ Encyclopedia Britannica, Macropedia, 1984 ed, Vol 13, "Nilotic Sudan, History Of", p. 108
- ^ Yurco, op. cit.
- ^ M.Diakonoff, Journal of Semitic Studies, 43,209 (1998)
- ^ Redford, Donald B., Egypt, Israel, and Canaan in Ancient Times (Princeton: University Press, 1992), p. 13.
- ^ Gardiner, Alan. Egypt of the Pharaohs (Oxford: University Press, 1961), p. 392.
- ^ Shaw, Ian. and Nicholson, Paul, The Dictionary of Ancient Egypt (London: British Museum Press, 1995), p. 228.
- ^ Redford, Egypt, Israel, p. 17.
- ^
- ^ Race in Antiquity: Truly Out of Africa By Molefi Kete Asante
Bibliography
edit- James P. Allen. "Middle Egyptian : An Introduction to the Language and Culture of Hieroglyphs". Cambridge University Press (November 4, 1999). ISBN 0521774837
- Borgognini-Tarli, S. M., and G. Paoli, 1982. Survey on Paleoserological studies. Homo 33(2), 69-85
- Bosch, E. et al. 1997. Population history of North Africa: evidence from classical genetic markers. Human Biology. 69(3):295-311.
- Brace, C. L., D. P. Tracer, L. A. Yaroch, J. Robb, K. Brandt, and A. R. Nelson. 1993. Clines and Clusters Versus "Race": A Test in Ancient Egypt and the Case of a Death on the Nile. Yearbook of Physical Anthropology 36:1-31. Also appears in Lefkowitz and Rogers, 129-164.
- Brothwell, D. R. and B. A. Chiarelli, B. A., eds. 1973. Population Biology of the Ancient Egyptians. New York.
- Cavalli-Sforza, L.L., P. Menozzi, and A. Piazza. 1994. The History and Geography of Human Genes. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
- Raymond Faulkner. "Concise Dictionary of Middle Egyptian". Griffith Institute; Rep edition (January 1, 1970) ISBN 0900416327
- Froment, A. 1992. Origines du Peuplement de l'Egypte Ancienne: l'Apport de l'anthropobiologie. Archéo-Nil 2:79-98.
- Froment, A. 1994. Race et Histoire: La recomposition ideologique de l'image des Egyptiens anciens. Journal des Africanistes 64:37-64.
- Howells, W. W. 1989. Skull Shapes and the Map. Craniometric Analyses in the Dispersion of Modern Homo. Cambridge: Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard University.
- Howells, W. W. 1995. Who's Who in Skulls. Ethnic Identification of Crania from Measurements. Cambridge: Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard University.
- Howe, Stephen 1998. Afrocentrism: Mythical Pasts and Imagined Homes. London: Verso.
- Hrdy, D. B. 1978. Analysis of hair samples of mummies from Semma South (Sudanese Nubia). American Journal of Physical Anthropology 49(2):277-82.
- Irish, J. D. 1997. Characteristic high- and low-frequency dental traits in sub-Saharan African populations. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 102(4):455-67.
- Irish, J. D. 1998a. Ancestral Dental Traits in Recent Sub-Saharan Africans and the Origin of Modern Humans, Journal of Human Evolution 34:81-98.
- Irish J. D. 1998b. Diachronic and synchronic dental trait affinities of late and post-Pleistocene peoples from North Africa. Homo. 49(2) 138-155.
- Krings M, et al. 1999. mtDNA Analysis of Nile River Valley Populations: A Genetic Corridor or a Barrier to Migration? American Journal of Human Genetics 64(4):1166-1176
- Lefkowitz, Mary, and G. M. Rogers, eds. 1996. Black Athena Revisited. Chapel Hill, NC.
- Lam, Aboubacry Moussa, Les chemins du Nil. Les relations entre l’Egypte ancienne et l’Afrique Noire, Paris : Présence Africaine / Khepera, 1997
- Noguera, Anthony (1976). How African Was Egypt?: A Comparative Study of Ancient Egyptian and Black African Cultures. Illustrations by Joelle Noguera. New York: Vantage Press.
- Parks, Lisa. 2000. Ancient Egyptians Wore Wigs. Egypt Revealed Magazine (www.egyptrevealed.com), May 29.
- Shavit, Yaacov (2001). History in Black: African-Americans in Search of an Ancient Past. London: Frank Cass Publishers.
- Snowden, Jr., F. Bernal's "Blacks," Herodotus and Other Classical Evidence. Arethusa, Special Issue: The Challenge of Black Athena. Fall, 1989: 97-109.
- Titlbachova, S., and Z. Titlbach. 1977. Hair of Egyptian mummies. Zeitschrift für Ägyptische Sprache und Altertumskunde, 104:79-85
- Vercoutter, Jean. 1976. The Iconography of the Black in Ancient Egypt. In J. Vercoutter, J. Leclant, F. Snowden and J. Desanges (eds.) The Image of the Black in Western Art, vol. 1. Cambridge, MA.
- Yurco, F. J. 1996. Two Tomb-Wall painted reliefs of Ramesses III and Seti I and Ancient Nile Valley Population diversity. In Theodore Celenko (ed.) Egypt in Africa , Indiana University Press.
See also
editExternal links
edit- "The evolution of human skin coloration",Department of Anthropology, California Academy of Sciences
- American Anthropological Association Statement on "Race"
- Ann Roth: "Building Bridges to Afrocentrism"
- Professor Ibrahim Sundiata: "Afrocentrism: The Argument We're Really Having"
- Online Videos by Historian Basil Davidson
- BBC World Service Audio: Africa & the Nile Valley
Category:Ancient Egyptian Category:Egyptology Category:Ancient Egypt in the Western imagination Category:Controversies Category:Pan-Africanism|Egypt