by DR. LEROY VAUGHN, MD, MBA, HISTORIAN is now available on amazon.com.
ANCIENT PERIOD
WHO CREATED CIVILIZATION?
HATSHEPSUT
BLACK EGYPTIANS
ANCIENT NUBIAN BLACKS IN AMERICA
BLACK MULTI - GENIUSES
WHO CREATED CIVILIZATION?
President Thomas Jefferson said, "Never yet could I find that a Black had uttered a thought above the level of plain narration...never saw an elementary tract of painting or sculpture." Congressman Thomas Hardwick of Former President Richard Nixon was quoted in the Haldeman Diary as stating "the Black race is the only race, which never founded a civilization." Scientist and Professor R. B. Carrell concludes, “Savages, including the whole Negro race, should on account of their low mentality and unpleasant nature be painlessly exterminated.” Were White scholars and presidents never taught the correct version of history, or has there been a conspiracy for the past 200 years to deny Black civilizations? Before
All of the elements of civilization first began in Africa, including religion, art, science, government, mining, writing, mathematics, architecture, engineering, and agriculture. Dr. Charles Nelson at the
The oldest numeration system was found in
Astronomy and astrology are believed to have existed for almost 50,000 years. The oldest stellar calendar is dated 4241 B.C. It has 365 1/4 days and 12 months with 30 days in each month. The ancient Africans were also the first to divide the day into 24 hours and to begin the day at midnight.
African medical textbooks have been found that are over 5,000 years old. Ancient Africans were very well versed in medical diagnosis and treatment with as many as 1,000 animal, plant and mineral products used in the treatment of illness.
All religions are believed to have originated in
The ancient Black Egyptians created paper about 4000 B.C., which made the recording of history and science more practical for library storage. It is estimated that over 700,000 books were in the libraries of
Could it be that Black history is the best kept secret in the world or have politicians, including past presidents, denied Black history to accelerate Black disenfranchisement?
WHO CREATED CIVILIZATION BIBLIOGRAPHY
Ben-Jochannan, Y. A. (1970) African Origins of the Major Western Religion, Baltimore Black Classic PressBen-Jochannan, Y. A. (1988) Africa: Mother of Western Civilization. Baltimore, MD
Browder, A. (1992) Nile Valley Contributions to Civilization. Wash., D.C.: Institute of Karmic Guidance.
Budge, E. A. (1967) The Egyptian Book of the Dead, New York: Dover Publications
Diop, C.A. (1981) The African Origin of Civilization.: Myth or Reality. Westport, CT: Lawrence Hill and Company.
Finch, C. (1990) The African Background to Medical Science. London, U.K. Billing and Sons Ltd.
Finch. C. (1991) Echoes of the Old Darkland, Decatur, Georgia; Khenti, Inc.
Haldeman, H. (1994) The Halderman Diaries: Inside the Nixon White House, NY: Berkley Pub. Group.
James, G. (1954) Stolen Legacy. San Francisco: Julian Richardson.
Khamit-Kush, I. (1983) What They Never Told You In History Class. Bronx, NY: Luxorr Publications.
Massey, G. (1970) Ancient Egypt; New York: Samuel Weiser.
Massey, G. (1983) Natural Genesis: London: Williams and Northgate.
Van Sertima, I. (ed.) (1991) Blacks in Science. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Transaction Books.
HATSHEPSUT
Hatshepsut of ancientWhen the priests demanded that she step aside and allow her brother Thutmose II to rule as pharaoh, Hatshepsut tried to discredit her half brother by announcing that Thutmose II was the son of Mutnefert, a concubine, and therefore royal blood was only passed through to her. She knew that all Black African societies, including
These changes must have come as quite a shock to the priests who had witnessed her giving birth to two daughters, Nefrure and Merytra-Hatshepset, while married to Thutmose II. Several priests also joked that the one title she could not add was “Mighty Bull of Maat” which implies male fertility.
Hatshepsut became firmly established as King/Pharaoh for the next 21 years (1479-1458 B.C.), and her popularity increased tremendously as did the prosperity of
To further demonstrate her triumph over the priests of Amen, Hatshepsut commissioned her Black architect boyfriend, Senmut, to build a structure that would overshadow the colossal
It sits high in the cliffs with a frontage of 800 feet and a series of courtyards and colonnades decorated with relics, shrines, inscriptions, innumerable statues, wonderful terraces, and paradisiacal gardens. Deir el Bahari is still considered one of the world’s most remarkable architectural specimens and the embodiment of Senmut’s multi-faceted genius. Hatshepsut lined the walkway to her temple with sandstone sphinxes of herself. Sphinx monuments were previously reserved only for the male as “Loving Horus”.
As a final blow to her detractors, Hatshepsut ordered the creation of two of the largest most beautiful rose granite obelisks the world had ever seen and presented them as gifts to the
By riding into battle with her troops, Hatshepsut was the forerunner to all the great African warrior queens from the Candaces of Ethiopia to Queen Nzinga of
Despite the fact that she often dressed as a male, she never lost touch with her feminine side. Scribes wrote that she was “lovely to look at; graceful in her movements, and fragrant as a flower.” Hatshepsut wrote of herself: “My fragrance is like a divine breath; my scent reaches as far as the
Hatshepsut’s rule was one of the most prosperous times ever for the people of
HATSHEPSUT BIBLIOGRAPHY
Breasted, J. (1937) A History of Cottrell, L. (1961) The Lost Pharaohs,
Diop, CA (1978) The Cultural Unity of Black Africa: Chicago: Third World Press.
Hyman, M. (1994) Blacks Before America. Trenton, NJ: Africa World Press
Montet, P. (1964) Eternal Egypt. New York: The New American Library
Murnana, W. (1977) Ancient Egyptian Coregencies. Chicago: Oriental Inst. of the University of Chicago.
Murray, M. (1963) The Splendor That Was Egypt. New York: Hawthorne Books
Redford, D. (1967) History & Chronology of the 18th Dynasty of
Rogers, J. A. (1946) World’s Great Men of Color. New York: Collier Books.
Romer, J. (1981) Valley of the Kings, New York: William Morrow and Co.
Sewell, B. (1968) Egypt Under the Pharaohs. New York: G. P Putnam’s Sons.
Sweetman, D. (1984) Women Leaders in African History. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann Educational Books.
Van Sertima, I. (ed.) (1988) Black Women in Antiquity. New Brunswick, New Jersey; Transaction Publishers.
Wells, E. (1969) Hatshepsut. New York: Doubleday and Co.
Williams, C. (1987) The Destruction of Black Civilization. Chicago: Third World Press
BLACK EGYPTIANS
The ancient Egyptians produced one of the highest forms of civilization ever known. They were outstanding in the fields of mathematics, astronomy and astrology, medicine, religion, philosophy, architecture, engineering, art, government, science, mining and virtually all other fields involving the elements of civilization.In mathematics, the ancient Egyptians gave us not only arithmetic, but algebra, geometry, trigonometry, and also calculus. Higher math was needed for building temples and pyramids. The Egyptian Great Pyramid is among the
Gerald Massey states that the religious records of virtually all religions including the Christian Bible, are traceable and in many cases, direct copies of the religious records of ancient
Given the outstanding accomplishments of the ancient Egyptians, it is understandable why every society on earth has claimed the ancient Egyptians as their ancestors including: Arabs, Europeans, and Asians. However, the current Egyptian is as different from the ancient Egyptian as the current American is from the ancient American. Cheikh Anta Diop, a Senegalese professor and scientist, claims that the original ancient Egyptian civilization was built by Black Africans long before
A Cairo symposium was held on February 3, 1974 by the United Nations Economic Social and Cultural Organization called (UNESCO) on the ethnicity of the ancient Egyptians. Diop convinced everyone in attendance that the ancient Egyptians were Black Africans based on his seven-point presentation.
First of all, he developed a melanin dosage test and demonstrated that ancient Egyptian mummies had heavy doses of melanin in their skin, which was non-existent in White skinned races.
Second, he proved that ancient Egyptians had group B type blood, common among Africans, and not group A type blood, characteristic of the White race.
Third, he gave osteological measurements of the skull and long bones and demonstrated typical Negroid facial and bodily proportions among the Egyptians.
Fourth, Diop produced records from ancient Greek and Latin writers, who were contemporary with the ancient Egyptians, including Herodotus, Aristotle, Lucian and Diodorus. These writers all claimed that the ancient Egyptians, Ethiopians, and Colchidians all had Black skin, thick lips, kinky hair, and thin legs.
Fifth, Diop showed artwork by ancient Egyptians who drew themselves with Black skin and wooly hair. They even named their country Kemit, which means Black and called themselves Kemites.
Sixth, ancient Egyptian gods were all portrayed as jet-black in color and during this period most nations drew their deities in their own image.
Seventh, circumcision is of African origin beginning before 4000 B.C. in
Finally, there is a strong linguistic kinship or affinity between the ancient Egyptian language and the languages of
Cheikh Anta Diop was successful in convincing everyone at the 1974 UNESCO Symposium that the ancient Egyptians were Black Africans, and yet western society continues to portray them as White. The epitome of unconscionable cultural thievery is the Pyramid shaped Luxor Hotel in
BLACK EGYPTIANS BIBLIOGRAPHY
Bernal, M. (1987) Black Athena. London: Free Association BooksDiop, C.A. (1991) Civilization or Barbarism. Westport Connecticut: Lawrence Hill and Co.
Greenburg, J. H. (1963) The Languages of
Herodotus. (1983) The Histories. Middlesex, U.K.: Penguin Books
James, G. (1954) Stolen Legacy, San Francisco: Julian Richardson
Massey, G. (1970) Ancient Egypt. New York: Samuel Weiser
Massey, G. (1983) Natural Genesis. London Williams and Norgate.
St. Clair, D. (1987) Black Folk Here and There, Los Angeles; UCLA.
Van Sertima, I. (ed. (1986) Great African Thinkers, New Brunswick, New Jersey: Transaction Publishers.
Van Sertima, I. (ed.) (1989) Egypt Revisited. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Transaction Publishers.
ANCIENT NUBIAN BLACKS IN AMERICA
Nubians played a major role in Egyptian civilization, both at its beginning and near its end. During the Ninth Century B.C.,
It was during this 25th Egyptian dynasty, between 800 B.C. and 654 B.C., called the "Nubian Renaissance," that Africans were also responsible for tremendously influencing the first American civilization called the Olmec civilization. Speculation as to a possible African element in the first major American civilization began in 1858 A.D., when the first of many colossal stone heads were discovered by Mexican peasants. These colossal heads were over eight feet in height and weighed over 10 tons each. The colossal heads were carbon dated to 800 B.C. and all have typical Nubian features including full lips, fleshy noses, and Africoid facial contours. The ancient Egyptian harbor at
Dr. Ivan Van Sertima studied extensively the Egypto-Nubian presence in ancient
These technological advancements included the art of mummification, the art of pyramid building, and the skills needed to transport massive blocks of stone for long distances. Buildings required great mathematical precision in the laying, reveling, and fitting of the stone, and this was done for the first time in ancient
Cultural traits adopted by the Olmecs from the Egypto-Nubians included the use of the color purple, the artificial beard, and the double crown headdress for signifying royalty. Professor Wiercinski, a Polish skull and skeletal expert, says that 13.5% of the bones found in one Olmec cemetery were African and that many were dressed in a royal or priest fashion and were lying side by side with a native American female.
During the Nubian renaissance, long before Christopher Columbus and even before Jesus Christ, Blacks were masters of the old world of
ANCIENT BLACK NUBIANS IN AMERICA BIBLIOGRAPHY
Dee Roo, P. (1900) History of Hyman, M. (1994) Blacks Before
Irwin, C. (1963) Fair Gods, and Stone Faces.
Jairazbhoy, R. A. (1974) Ancient Egyptians and Chinese In America. New Jersey: Rowman and Littlefield.
Jairazbhoy, R. A. (1992) Rameses III: Father of Ancient America. Chicago: Frontline International.
Nettleford, R. & Hyatt, V. (eds.)(1995) Race, Discourse & Origin of the Americas. Wash., D. C. Smith. Inst. Pr.
Peterson, F. (1959) Ancient Mexico. New York: Putnam and Sons.
Van Sertima, I. (1977) They Came Before Columbus. New York: Random House.
Van Sertima, I. (ed.) (1992) African Presence In Early America. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers.
Von Wuthenau, A. (1975) Unexpected Faces in Ancient America. New York: Crown Publishers.
Von Wuthennau, A. (1969) Art of Terracotta Pottery in Pre-Columbian South & Central
Wiener, L. (1922) Africa and the Discovery of America. Philadelphia: Innes and Sons.
BLACK MULTI - GENIUSES
World history has produced many men who have been described as geniuses but very few have ever been described as multi-genius. European historians have used the term multi-genius to describe such men as Aristotle and Leonardo de Vinci. However, these historians have never described a Black person as a multi-genius despite the fact that there have been just as many Black multi-geniuses as there are White. In fact, the world's first and greatest multi-genius in recorded history is a small Black Egyptian named Imhotep. Others include Benjamin Banneker and Cheikh Anta Diop.Cheikh Anta Diop was born in 1923 in
In mid stream, Diop decided to change his Ph.D. dissertation to ancient Egyptian history and to use his scientific background to prove that ancient Egyptians were Black skinned indigenous Africans, who taught the Greeks what later became Western civilization. Diop wanted Black people around the world to be able to claim the ancient Egyptians with great pride as their ancestors.
Diop’s Ph.D. dissertation was rejected three times until he developed a chemical process for testing melanin in the skin of Egyptian mummies and proved that ancient Egyptians were a dark skinned race. He also became an expert in linguistics and proved that the Egyptian language was African and that it was genetically related to a family of African languages including his own native Wolof. In 1966, Diop built a radiocarbon laboratory in
Another Black genius was Benjamin Banneker, who was born near
The first scientific book ever written by an African American is believed to be the “Astronomical Almanac” first published by Banneker in 1791, which accurately predicted eclipses, high and low tides, positions of the planets, times for sunrise and sunset, and many other useful items. Banneker was also the most important member of a federal surveying team, which laid out plans for the construction of
The first and greatest of all multi-geniuses was Imhotep, who served the Egyptian Pharaoh Zoser around 2980 B.C. His titles included: Chief Physician, Grand Vizier, Chief Architect, Head Priest, Chief Scribe, and Astronomer. Imhotep was the real “Father of Medicine”, and his reputation as a healer was so great that he was worshiped as the “God of Medicine” by Persians, Greeks, and Romans over a period of 3,000 years.
As Grand Vizier, Imhotep served as the king's supervisor of all departments of State including: the judiciary, the treasury, the army and navy, agriculture, and on all the king's construction projects. Imhotep's father was a distinguished architect who taught his son very well. Imhotep built the first and largest stone structure in recorded history called the Step Pyramid of Zakkarah. It was designed to become the tomb of Pharaoh Zoser and consisted of large blocks of limestone, which reached 195 feet high and 396 feet wide at the base.
BLACK MULTI-GENIUSES BIBLIOGRAPHY
Stetter, C. (1993) Secret Medicine of the Pharaohs. Carol Streams, Illinois: Quintessence Publishing Co. Inc.Van Sertima, I. (ed.) (1986) Great African Thinkers. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Transaction Publishers.Adams, R. (1969) Great Negroes: Past and Present. Chicago: Afro-Am Publishing Co.
Diop, C.A. (1978) The Cultural Unity of Black Africa. Chicago: Third World Press
Diop, C.A. (1981) The African Origin of Civilization: Myth or Reality. Westport CT: Lawrence Hill Co.
Diop, C.A. (1991 Civilization or Barbarism. Westport Connecticut: Lawrence Hill and Co.
Finch. C. (1990) African Background to Medical Science. London, U.K.: Billing and sons Ltd., Worcester.
Hayden, R. (1992) 7 African American Scientists. Frederick, Maryland: Twenty-First Century Books.
Hurry, J. (1987) Imhotep: The Egyptian God of Medicine. Chicago: Ares Publishers Inc.
Rogers, J. A. (1946) World’s Great Men of Color. New York: Collier Books.
Rogers, J. A. (1989) Africa’s Gift to
Sally, C. (1993) The Black 100.
Van Sertima, I. (ed.) )1991) Blacks In Science, New Brunswick, New Jersey: Transaction Publishers.
HANNIBAL: AFRICAN MILITARY GENIUS
Hannibal Barca (247-183 B.C.) from the ancient city ofAncient
After loosing the first Punic War (264-241 B.C.), Hamilcar Barca conquered most of southern
Upon the death of his father,
On one occasion, large 1,000-ton boulders blocked
Once
In his first battle against the Roman army (217 B.C.) at the
After having two large armies slaughtered by
One of the greatest mysteries of all time is why
After many years, a brilliant young Roman general named Publius Cornelius Scipio, who spent most of his life studying
One has to speculate what type of world we would have if
Baker, G. (1929) Hannibal. New York: Dodd Meade.
Cottrell, L. (1988) Hannibal: Enemy of Rome. New York: Da Capo Press, Inc.
De Beer, G. (1959) Alps and Elephants:
DeGraft-Johnson, J.C. (1954) African Glory. Baltimore: Black Classic Press.
Gilbert, C. (1968) Life and Death of Carthage. New York: Tapinger.
Hyman, M. (1994) Blacks Before America. Trenton, N.J.: Africa World Press.
Jackson, J. G. (1970) Introduction to African Civilizations. New York: Carol Publishing Group.
Lamb, H. (1958) Hannibal: One Man Against Rome. New York: Doubleday.
Law, W. (1866) The Alps of
Liddell, H. (1926) Greater Than Napoleon - Scipio Africanus. London: William Blackwood and Sons.
Rogers, J. A. (1946) World’s Great Men of Color, New York: Collier Books
Van Sertima, I (ed.) (1986) Great African Thinkers. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Transaction Publishers.
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