King Khufu
Dignified Gentlemen
If we're looking at the truth here, then the first humans of Cushite origin were probably around the southern Great Lakes region moving further along the Nile as territory for civilizing expands.
They shleep. Figures.
If we're looking at the truth here, then the first humans of Cushite origin were probably around the southern Great Lakes region moving further along the Nile as territory for civilizing expands.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genetic_studies_on_Arabs
E1b1b is high in Arabs in North African countries where it was already high, but it is low in all traditionally Arab countries. Despite the proximity, Qatar is 5.6% and Yemen is only 12.9%.
All modern south Arabian languages are considered Semitic. They have the "archaic" Semitic features. The Cushitic substrate business is the conjecture of two authors.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern_South_Arabian_languages
"The Modern South Arabian languages[2][3] (Eastern South Semitic or Eastern South Arabian) are spoken mainly by small populations inhabiting the Arabian Peninsula, in Yemen and Oman. Together with the modern Ethiopian Semitic languages, they form the South Semitic sub-branch of the Afroasiatic family's Semitic branch.
Classification[edit]
In his glottochronology-based classification, Alexander Militarev presents the Modern South Arabian languages as a South Semitic branch opposed to a North Semitic branch that includes all the other Semitic languages.[4][5] They are no longer considered to be descendants of the Old South Arabian language, as was once thought, but instead "nephews".
Grammar[edit]
Modern South Arabian languages are known for their apparent archaic Semitic features, especially in their system of phonology. For example, they preserve the lateral fricatives of Proto-Semitic.
Additionally, Militarev identified a Cushitic substratum in Modern South Arabian, which he proposes is evidence that Cushitic speakers originally inhabited the Arabian Peninsula alongside Semitic speakers (Militarev 1984, 18-19; cf. also Belova 2003). According to Václav Blažek, this suggests that Semitic peoples assimilated their original Cushitic neighbours to the south who did not later emigrate to the Horn of Africa. He argues that the Levant would thus have been the Proto-Afro-Asiatic Urheimat, from where the various branches of the Afro-Asiatic family subsequently dispersed. To further support this, Blažek cites analysis of rock art in Central Arabia by Anati (1968, 180-84), which notes a connection between the shield-carrying "oval-headed" people depicted on the cave paintings and the Arabian Cushites from the Old Testament, who were similarly described as carrying specific shields.[6]
Languages[edit]
- Mehri: the largest Modern South Arabian language, with over 165,000 speakers. Most Mehri speakers, around 76,000, live in Oman, but around 50,000 live in Yemen, and around 40,000 speakers live as guest workers in Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. Mehri people are referred to as Mahra.
- Soqotri: another relatively numerous example, with speakers on the island of Socotra isolated from the pressures of Arabic on the Yemeni mainland. In 2015, there were around 70,000 speakers.
- Shehri: frequently called Jibbali, "of the Mountains", with an estimated 25,000 speakers; it is best known as the language of the rebels during the Dhofar Rebellion in Oman's Dhofar Governorate along the border with Yemen in the 1960s and 1970s.
- Bathari: Under 100 speakers in Oman. Located on the southeast coast facing the Khuriya Muriya Islands. Very similar to Mehri, and some tribespeople speak Mehri instead of Bathari.
- Harsusi: 600 speakers in the Jiddat al-Harasis of Oman.
- Hobyót: 100 speakers est., in Oman and Yemen."
i mean, you could have just agreed to make it simple, cuz what i what i was saying was irrefutable facts
:siilaanyosmile:
Your reference: Pre-historic Nations, or, inquiries concerning some of the great peoples and civilizations of antiquity and their probable relation to a still older civilization of the Ethiopians or Cushites of Arabia. It's by John D. Baldwin AM which I assume is Master of Arts, and it was written in 1874. Nuff said?
The first one is a folklore and mythology site with religion and esoterica thrown in. I really do prefer to see academic papers if you are trying to prove a point. Social camaraderie is another matter altogether.
:siilaanyosmile:
Your reference: Pre-historic Nations, or, inquiries concerning some of the great peoples and civilizations of antiquity and their probable relation to a still older civilization of the Ethiopians or Cushites of Arabia. It's by John D. Baldwin AM which I assume is Master of Arts, and it was written in 1874. Nuff said?
The first one is a folklore and mythology site with religion and esoterica thrown in. I really do prefer to see academic papers if you are trying to prove a point. Social camaraderie is another matter altogether.
:siilaanyosmile:
Your reference: Pre-historic Nations, or, inquiries concerning some of the great peoples and civilizations of antiquity and their probable relation to a still older civilization of the Ethiopians or Cushites of Arabia. It's by John D. Baldwin AM which I assume is Master of Arts, and it was written in 1874. Nuff said?
The first one is a folklore and mythology site with religion and esoterica thrown in. I really do prefer to see academic papers if you are trying to prove a point. Social camaraderie is another matter altogether.
:siilaanyosmile:
Your reference: Pre-historic Nations, or, inquiries concerning some of the great peoples and civilizations of antiquity and their probable relation to a still older civilization of the Ethiopians or Cushites of Arabia. It's by John D. Baldwin AM which I assume is Master of Arts, and it was written in 1874. Nuff said?
The first one is a folklore and mythology site with religion and esoterica thrown in. I really do prefer to see academic papers if you are trying to prove a point. Social camaraderie is another matter altogether.
since you deny the "esoteric site" here is something you would read.
Origin and Identity of the Arabs: http://islamicapologetics1.blogspot.com/2013/11/arabia-under-name-of-kush-and-its.html
We spawned out of thin air. We've been living here since the dawn of time.
That's better! Now check your link:
"3) Arabia:
The Arabian peninsula is undoubtedly the Arabs' homeland, and the peoples that inhabited it in ancient times are to be regarded as the ancestors of the modern Arabs. Now, the query consists in establishing how much Semitic these peoples were and up to what amount the Ishmaelites have contributed to the formation of the Arab identity.
In the most ancient records the whole Arabia was commonly designed under the generic name of "Kush", which was extended throughout the entire region comprised between Southern Mesopotamia in the north and the White Nile Basin in the south, that is, including both sides of the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden. Subsequently, there has been a clear distinction between Northern and Southern Arabia since early times, distinction that endured for centuries. The Arabs are the result of the progressive fusion of both entities developed over the original Kushite background.
·Southern Arabian peoples:
Seven Kushite peoples: Seba, Havilah, Sabtah, Ra'mah, Sabtekha, Sheba and Dedan.
Twelve Semitic tribes (Yoqtanites): Almodad, Shelef, Hatzarmawt, Yerah, Hadoram, Uzal, Diqlah, Obal, Abima'el, Shaba, Hawilah and Yobab.
·Northern Arabian peoples:
Early Kushite population: Kûsh, Mušuri, Hawilah, Makkan.
Eight Semitic tribes (Midyanites/Lihyanites): Zimran, Yoqshan, Medan, Midyan, Yishbaq, Shuwah, Sheba and Dedan.
Twelve Ishmaelite tribes: Nebayot, Qedar, Adbe'el, Mibsam, Mishma, Dumah, Massa, Hadar, Teyma, Yetur, Nafish and Qedmah.
The characteristics of these peoples are exposed under the next title.The Arabian Kush and the Ishmaelite Myth
Even though the name Kush is usually associated with Ethiopia because of the Greek translation of that name, Kushite peoples were in early times the inhabitants of the whole Arabia, Southern Mesopotamia, Elam and a branch of them reached India as well. Indeed, in ancient records the termKush may have different meanings and often it can be understood only by the context, and it is possible to distinguish at least four different lands which in some periods were known as "Kush": Sumer, the Horn of Africa, India and Arabia. The same happens with the term Havilah, that was a Kushite tribe -they should not be mistaken for the Semitic Havilah, that is identified with ...."
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It goes significantly on, but you get the flavor. "Kush" then included all of Arabia and as far south as the White Nile Basin. The division of the "Kushes" came later. The issue for today is that the most typical Cushitic markers are rarely found in traditionally Arab countries and have been shown to have arrived later..
https://genome.cshlp.org/content/early/2016/01/11/gr.191478.115.full.pdf
"Indigenous Arabs are descendants of the earliest split from ancient Eurasian populations". Nearly all the Bedouins are J1.
That's better! Now check your link:
"3) Arabia:
The Arabian peninsula is undoubtedly the Arabs' homeland, and the peoples that inhabited it in ancient times are to be regarded as the ancestors of the modern Arabs. Now, the query consists in establishing how much Semitic these peoples were and up to what amount the Ishmaelites have contributed to the formation of the Arab identity.
In the most ancient records the whole Arabia was commonly designed under the generic name of "Kush", which was extended throughout the entire region comprised between Southern Mesopotamia in the north and the White Nile Basin in the south, that is, including both sides of the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden. Subsequently, there has been a clear distinction between Northern and Southern Arabia since early times, distinction that endured for centuries. The Arabs are the result of the progressive fusion of both entities developed over the original Kushite background.
·Southern Arabian peoples:
Seven Kushite peoples: Seba, Havilah, Sabtah, Ra'mah, Sabtekha, Sheba and Dedan.
Twelve Semitic tribes (Yoqtanites): Almodad, Shelef, Hatzarmawt, Yerah, Hadoram, Uzal, Diqlah, Obal, Abima'el, Shaba, Hawilah and Yobab.
·Northern Arabian peoples:
Early Kushite population: Kûsh, Mušuri, Hawilah, Makkan.
Eight Semitic tribes (Midyanites/Lihyanites): Zimran, Yoqshan, Medan, Midyan, Yishbaq, Shuwah, Sheba and Dedan.
Twelve Ishmaelite tribes: Nebayot, Qedar, Adbe'el, Mibsam, Mishma, Dumah, Massa, Hadar, Teyma, Yetur, Nafish and Qedmah.
The characteristics of these peoples are exposed under the next title.The Arabian Kush and the Ishmaelite Myth
Even though the name Kush is usually associated with Ethiopia because of the Greek translation of that name, Kushite peoples were in early times the inhabitants of the whole Arabia, Southern Mesopotamia, Elam and a branch of them reached India as well. Indeed, in ancient records the termKush may have different meanings and often it can be understood only by the context, and it is possible to distinguish at least four different lands which in some periods were known as "Kush": Sumer, the Horn of Africa, India and Arabia. The same happens with the term Havilah, that was a Kushite tribe -they should not be mistaken for the Semitic Havilah, that is identified with ...."
-------------------------------------------------------------------
It goes significantly on, but you get the flavor. "Kush" then included all of Arabia and as far south as the White Nile Basin. The division of the "Kushes" came later. The issue for today is that the most typical Cushitic markers are rarely found in traditionally Arab countries and have been shown to have arrived later..
https://genome.cshlp.org/content/early/2016/01/11/gr.191478.115.full.pdf
"Indigenous Arabs are descendants of the earliest split from ancient Eurasian populations". Nearly all the Bedouins are J1.
i will tell you this again, j1 does not = Semitic in origin.
The issue for today is that the most typical Cushitic markers are rarely found in traditionally Arab countries and have been shown to have arrived later..
ok, tell me this. if you believe arabs are j1 in "origin", then why is there more j1 lineagesYemenemen?
pre-Islam ancient middle east was Cushitic, we see it today in the ancient architects built it Yemen and Arabia. the Ishmaelites are Semitic and Hamitic. Abraham's wife couldn't conceive a child so Abraham had kids with Egyptian women(Hagar). In ancient yemen, women would rule, cuz it was a Cushitic kingdom, it was a Cushitic culture to let women rule(an example is the many queens in Ethiopia), the concept of letting women rule goes back to the SEMBRITES of ancient Ethiopia. In Egypt, there was the ROYAL SON and in Ethiopia it was female. Son of Kish(kush) was the nimrod. the ancient Babylonians spoke of Ethiopia many times in their writings, that anthropologists believe that they could actually be from there. Ancient south Yemen was SEBA(lion). They worshipped the 3 headed lion god. The 3 headed lion worship started in meroe, the people of meroe are said to be also the Sabaeans. Lions are still used as symbolic in Ethiopia today.