• This website is being upgraded. Theme is temporary.

Evidence of somali pharaonic tradition from xiis grave goods

I was rereading the Spanish archaeologists excavation of the xiis tombs and this part stood out to me. Inlays,plaques, and tiles in glass which were embedded in ither objects probably wooden boxes. I know we talked about it on here that this was likley a sign that these 1st century somalis had high purchasing power. But I think there is something bigger going on here.

Screenshot_20251013_154017_Samsung Internet.jpg



Merotic royal tombs were heavily eygptianized.
by this i mean they copied literally everything to the dot. Just consider a few hundred years ago they ruled eygpt.

Screenshot_20251013_154608_Adobe Acrobat.jpg




Here's what the inside of a merotic royal tomb looks like.


Screenshot_20251013_163116_Samsung Internet.jpg





So doesnt it seems strange that you'd find grave goods reserved for merotic royal tombs which followed the ancient eygptian pharaonic cult ?
@The alchemist @NidarNidar @Shimbiris @Idilinaa @Barkhadle1520 @Emir of Zayla
 

Araabi

Awdalite
I think it's extremely lazy, racist and outdated to attribute Sudanese history as just as 'Egyptianized', or 'heavily influenced by Egypt.'

The Pharaonic culture originated in southern Egypt and northern Sudan. It IS their culture.

Europeans are desperate to portray Africans as unoriginal and uncreative. This culture you're speaking about belongs to Sudan. It is not copied. Refrain from using loaded language.
 
I think it's extremely lazy, racist and outdated to attribute Sudanese history as just as 'Egyptianized', or 'heavily influenced by Egypt.'

The Pharaonic culture originated in southern Egypt and northern Sudan. It IS their culture.

Europeans are desperate to portray Africans as unoriginal and uncreative. This culture you're speaking about belongs to Sudan. It is not copied. Refrain from using loaded language.
I think your a bit confused. The merotic royalty ruled over eygpt and they themselves claim these eygptian traditions.
 
Anyways.

The most key aspect here is that "wooden boxes" could mean small boxes like you would normally think. But I there is another hypothetical possibility. Especially since they said they found "large quantities of glass inlay,tiles, and plaques" in a single tomb


Which is that is wasn't "wooden boxes" but a Coffin.
 
Those Spanish archaeologists were fucking retarded wallahi . Not putting two and two together.

How can you have "merotic inlays" and not realize that your obviously looking at a pharaonic tradition. Or the fact that "wooden boxes" obviously meant that this was a coffin considering how small the tomb is.
 
Kermans sure loved their faience too. Very interesting stuff. I've actually recently come across recently papers mentioning the parallels in burial rituals between our Neolithic and Bronze Age ancestors and contemporary populations. With the onslaught of aDNA linking Cushitic-speaking peoples with the Middle Nile (Kadruka and Nuwayrat Pastoral Neolithic figure) and osteological papers making it clear that there was mass population replacement along the Nile beginning in the Neolithic, both linguists and archaeologists are following suit. We're like the single biggest victims of the post-WWII anti-migration-theory hysteria but slowly we are getting paid our dues.

Imagine my frustration coming across a paper yesterday about a certain king of Kerma called "Nedjeh" mentioned on a stela found in Buhen, where they discussed the name's uncertain linguistic origins, only to only mention Cushitic languages in passing (Cushitic words have non-NS phonemes in name that baffled scholars along with other Afroasiatic), rather resolving to invoke Hyksos loanwords in Nilo-Saharan pre-Meroitic. They didn't even make it clear that Cushitic languages were Afroasiatic lol. Only calling it "African". So weird. Wish I had a knack for linguistics, I'd try to find a proto-EC cognate that would make sense.
 
Kermans sure loved their faience too. Very interesting stuff. I've actually recently come across recently papers mentioning the parallels in burial rituals between our Neolithic and Bronze Age ancestors and contemporary populations. With the onslaught of aDNA linking Cushitic-speaking peoples with the Middle Nile (Kadruka and Nuwayrat Pastoral Neolithic figure) and osteological papers making it clear that there was mass population replacement along the Nile beginning in the Neolithic, both linguists and archaeologists are following suit. We're like the single biggest victims of the post-WWII anti-migration-theory hysteria but slowly we are getting paid our dues.

Imagine my frustration coming across a paper yesterday about a certain king of Kerma called "Nedjeh" mentioned on a stela found in Buhen, where they discussed the name's uncertain linguistic origins, only to only mention Cushitic languages in passing (Cushitic words have non-NS phonemes in name that baffled scholars along with other Afroasiatic), rather resolving to invoke Hyksos loanwords in Nilo-Saharan pre-Meroitic. They didn't even make it clear that Cushitic languages were Afroasiatic lol. Only calling it "African". So weird. Wish I had a knack for linguistics, I'd try to find a proto-EC cognate that would make sense.
My main theory has been for a while now that the lower eygptians who are 80% of the eygptian pouplation actually descended from north african farmers pouplations. Wheras rhe upper eygptianss actually descended from e-v12 proto somalis who arrived in upper eygpt through the red sea. It would explain why over 75% of the people in upper eygpt share the same haplogroup with somalis. They're obviously descended from a single pouplation and after whatever bottlenecks they went through essentially remained unchanged for the last several millenia
 
But anyway my point is way more direct than that. We seem to now have evidence for somalis burying their dead in coffins and that the coffins were somehow designed in the same way as the meoritic royal tombs. These merotic guys were also the last kingdom to follow the ancient eygptian relegion. Especially in their funerary practices.

The question we should be asking is why would somalis in the 1st century a.d who live thousands of miles away in the red sea somehow be using pharaonic funerary traditions. When the the traditional eygptian relegion had been in decline for centuries and nobody has ever seen pharaonic stuff outside eygpt since the bronze age collapse in 1177 b.c
 
Top