Is it true that Somalis were the first to domesticate camels?

which one did it?

  • Somalis

    Votes: 25 75.8%
  • Arabs

    Votes: 8 24.2%

  • Total voters
    33

Hamzza

VIP
The very fact camels is our staple shows we are arabs. Did u know during Sahaba days-- they used to know tribes by same shared characteristics? For example there were arab tribes that were good in business. (like Somalis are good in business) Others were good in the art of war archery- others were just naturally hooligans. Today, if u look at our Qabil doctrine, The same stereotype exist.

Mjs sits at the helm of the Crown. Their high population and nature of being treacherous and too clever for their own good, makes them subject of envy and hate by other qabil


Hawiiye are known for bravery and peaceful nature, but also unfortunately associated with dark skin and un-attractiveness . Which is false because Hawadleys are beautiful loool


Isaaaq for the love of material and status but are also very peaceful.


Ogaden low I.Q and a nature of Vultures but religious Mashalaaah


Dhulbahante -- Love of Education and Alcohol


etc etc etc
Excellent description
 

Basra

LOVE is a product of Doqoniimo mixed with lust
Let Them Eat Cake
VIP
What about warsangali ?


Warsangeli are more "real" than their superficial Dhulbahante neighbors, but their very dark skin, makes them more Dhiir Material than Darood material
 

Nalaaye floxks

Life is like a sandwich, the bread comes first💰💯
Mjs sits at the helm of the Crown. Their high population and nature of being treacherous and too clever for their own good, makes them subject of envy and hate by other qabil
And don’t forget we are the clan of love too, we marry out the most
 
The very fact camels is our staple shows we are arabs. Did u know during Sahaba days-- they used to know tribes by same shared characteristics? For example there were arab tribes that were good in business. (like Somalis are good in business) Others were good in the art of war archery- others were just naturally hooligans. Today, if u look at our Qabil doctrine, The same stereotype exist.

Mjs sits at the helm of the Crown. Their high population and nature of being treacherous and too clever for their own good, makes them subject of envy and hate by other qabil


Hawiiye are known for bravery and peaceful nature, but also unfortunately associated with dark skin and un-attractiveness . Which is false because Hawadleys are beautiful loool


Isaaaq for the love of material and status but are also very peaceful.


Ogaden low I.Q and a nature of Vultures but religious Mashalaaah


Dhulbahante -- Love of Education and Alcohol


etc etc etc
What's This With Mj Being Treacherous

We Are The Fathers Of Nationhood In The Horn

55f918c3d18593dae9c0084b09d4e43e.gif
 

Celery

We finally beat Medicare 🎊 🎉
Stick to basketball threads, saxib.
Ok. But what’s so offensive about what I said? I didn’t see this reaction coming. How would you react if you came across these giant long necked things with humps? What if they eat you? You know what I’m saying
 

Nalaaye floxks

Life is like a sandwich, the bread comes first💰💯
Ok. But what’s so offensive about what I said? I didn’t see this reaction coming. How would you react if you came across these giant long necked things with humps? What if they eat you? You know what I’m saying
Giant kulaha, I’m taller than a camel deadass :mjlol:
 
The camel was also known to the Sumerians as “the donkey of the land of the sea”, which signifies the desert of Arabian/Persian Gulf (Susa, 1990, p.125). Mo’nis (1988) highlighted that the remains of camels in Arabia that date to ca. 30,000 years BP were unearthed; yet, they were very scarce to the extent that they were only found in southern Iraq and northern Yemen. He advocated that the domestication of camels approxtimately took place 25,000 years BP in southern Iraq; its south western areas, and at its outskirts, southern Levant, and northern Yemen. He added that before that date, 25,000 years BP, the camel was wild, it lived in remote areas. At that time, as attested by excavations, the camel propagated and multiplied in number (Mo’nis, 1988, pp.25, 28, 37, 43). Moreover, Susa (1990) underscored that camels existed anciently in Arabia as attested in an inscription of a one-humped camel on a stone in Tubayq mountain in a location named Kilwah, which is dated as Mesolithic. This is the same breed found currently in Arabia (Susa, 1990, p.124). However, Abdel-Naeem (1995) underlined that it was revealed from radiocarbon dating the jaw bones of a camel in Tihamah that camels existed ever since the 7th millennium BCE (p.427).
 

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