The Destruction of Black Civilization: Great Issues of a Race from 4500 B.C. to 2000 A.D. |
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Page 73
... writers will not flatly state this . They generally designate these dynasties as " Thinite , " " Memphite " or " Followers of Seth . " One has to know that the First Dynasty was African and " Memphite " or " Thinite , " so called after ...
... writers will not flatly state this . They generally designate these dynasties as " Thinite , " " Memphite " or " Followers of Seth . " One has to know that the First Dynasty was African and " Memphite " or " Thinite , " so called after ...
Page 85
... writers have made it by the simple expedient of omitting salient facts . Among these are the following : ( 1 ) The collapse of centralized authority from Memphis not only enabled Lower Egypt to become independent again , but it also ...
... writers have made it by the simple expedient of omitting salient facts . Among these are the following : ( 1 ) The collapse of centralized authority from Memphis not only enabled Lower Egypt to become independent again , but it also ...
Page 384
... writers on Africa , referred to above , where one must wade through a mass of irrelevant matter to find the bits and pieces of data scattered throughout large vol- umes . Yet these fragments are often of the highest importance , as they ...
... writers on Africa , referred to above , where one must wade through a mass of irrelevant matter to find the bits and pieces of data scattered throughout large vol- umes . Yet these fragments are often of the highest importance , as they ...
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Destruction of Black Civilization: Great Issues of a Race from 4500 B.C. to ... Chancellor Williams No preview available - 2018 |
Common terms and phrases
achievements African constitution African history Afro-Asian all-black ancient Angola Arabs areas armies Asia Asian became become began Black civilization Black world called capital city Cataract Caucasian centuries chiefdoms chiefs Christian Coloureds conquered conquest continued Council destruction developed Dynasty early economic Egyptian enslavement Ethiopia Ethiopian empire European expanded fact forces Funj greatest Greek groups Hatshepsut historians Hyksos important independent invaders invasions Islam kingdoms kings Kongo Kuba land leaders Lower Egypt Makuria masses matter meant Memphis Menes Meroe migrations Mogho Naba Mossi Mulattoes Muslim Naba names Napata Negro Nekheb never Nile North Nubia Nzinga organization period pharaohs political Portuguese pyramids Queen race racial record region religion role rule rulers scholars slave slavery society South South Africa Southern southward spread Sudan temples Thebes thousand Thutmose III tion trade traditional tribes United unity Upper Egypt various vast Western white Asians writers