That hairstyle is actually worn until the kid is like 7 or 8 .why the baby so big
That hairstyle is actually worn until the kid is like 7 or 8 .why the baby so big
A typo, I mean “ I think”. I think the Somalia-Egypt connection is overrated, and even perhaps nonexistent.Do you mean you think that ? Becuase I obviously dont this whole thread was about proving that connection. In fact everything lines up so perfectly that anybody who reads about all the connections would have to be legitimately insane to deny it.
I dont blame you for thinking that so did I and everybody else. At most people assumed some eygptians were arriving in somalia due to the punt expeditions.A typo, I mean “ I think”. I think the Somalia-Egypt connection is overrated, and even perhaps nonexistent.
If you look at the 19th/20th century European travel accounts. Every port on the red sea had somali sailors and the main yemeni port from the 1700s even had a somali quarter.I dont blame you for thinking that so did I and everybody else. At most people assumed some eygptians were arriving in somalia due to the punt expeditions.
But once you look at the geography of the horn of africa and connect that with the periplus,medieval historical accounts from the rasulid period and the 19/20th century European explorer writings. It becomes obvious that this common census is not just wrong its actually retarded. In 15-20 years people will probably wonder how the hell 20th and early 21st century historians could be so stupid.
To be honest even they're agriculture is quite limited since it relies on rainfall in that small stretch of highlands in the north of Yemen . Which means its mostly for subsistence and not export.By the way I suspect most of you maybe even none of you are aware of the fact that like 99% of yemenis are actually farmers and that there are basically 0 bedouins/nomads in yemen. Thats why they had to import livestock from all across Somalia which was arriving at the port of berbera .since why would people who are all farmers keep a huge amount of livestock?
Its also why I found the south arabia/Yemen theory of camel domestication kind of dumb. Half of the world's camels are basically in somalia. It'd be like saying it wasn't nomad people living on the steppe who domesticated the horse it was actually eastern European farmers who don't own much livestock who did it.
Yeah I didnt mean there was literally not a single pastoralist. But that its basically an incredibly small livestock pouplation in comparison to somalia and so importing it from somalia makes more sense. The little arable land they do have is used for growing@Midas
It's not because there are zero pastoralists in Yemen or even Arabia that they had to import livestock from Somalia. It's because Somalia's interior has larger more extensive grassy pastures for livestock to graze and feed on compared to them. So even when they kept livestock they couldn't grow their herds that much.
Today , even though Somalia has only 10% pastoralists compared to the 80% doing other activities. Yet it has a very large camel, cattle, sheep and donkey/horse population because our land can support it.
We are also more spread out engaged in diverse activities because our land supports that as well.
It was Shabelle river linked to the Benadiir coast that was called the grain coast. But they also exported produce from Juba usually out of Kismaayo and Barawa ports in the 19th century.
Both those rivers give southern Somalia , parts of Galbeed a lot of agricultural productivity. Whereas Yemen because of the lack of rivers was more limited to domestic production and consumption . Similar to how farming is practiced today in parts of Northern Somalia.
Which means its mostly for subsistence and not export.
Yemen and Saudi Arabia combined have about 30,000 km worth of Arable land whereas as somalia alone and not somali weyene has about 82,000 km worth of Arable land. This is not even factoring in that the jubba valley is probably several times more productive than land in the arabian penisula.Yeah I didnt mean there was literally not a single pastoralist. But that its basically an incredibly small livestock pouplation in comparison to somalia and so importing it from somalia makes more sense. The little arable land they do have is used for growing