Natural Hair in Ancient Egypt: Women with Long Curls
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Natural Hair in Ancient Egypt: Women with Long Curls
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10 Objects from the Metropolitan Museum of Art
#MiddleKingdomEgypt
The Metropolitan Museum have recently opened another exhibit. This time the focus is on the Middle Kingdom of ancient Egypt (Ancient Egypt Transformed).
Here are 10 objects from the Middle Kingdom that you may be able to find at the Met (although I have yet to find object 2, 3, & 5).
Since the ancient Egyptians have a history of head-shaving and wigs, I find it pleasing to see them so comfortable with their hair texture to not only wear it with little styling, but also depict it in their art.
BTW: The last photo was taken by a friend of mine.
A Study of Hair Texture in Ancient Egypt
[image description: Model Domestic figure, Middle Kingdom. via Met Museum, the overlaying texts says “A Study of Hair Texture in Ancient Egypt”]
It is generally accepted now that ancient Egyptians were indigenous Africans. Seeing them with black African ancestry, however, seems to be tougher for people to acknowledge by both scholars and the general public alike. Even Egyptologist Stuart Tyson Smith argues that “Egyptologists have been strangely reluctant to admit that the ancient Egyptians were rather dark-skinned Africans…” (191). Through a closer observation of ancient Egyptian art we can find that many ancient Egyptians shared physical traits to black Africans, not just in skin colors but in hair texture as well.
Black Africans do not have a homogeneous appearance in anyway, so instead I use the term “black African” as a way to describe a generality of resemblances across multiple ethnic groups.
When studied as individuals, not all ancient Egyptians would be perceived as black Africans in the way expected in contemporary Western society, the same goes for many modern North Africans. Although not every ancient Egyptian would be considered black, the civilization did have visible black Africans throughout their entire history.
Discoveries from Pre-dynastic Egypt
Long-teeth vertical combs, resembling afro combs, have been found [Gallery]
A toupee made out of sheep’s or goat’s wool (Tassie 1066).
Palettes depicting men with tight curls and round hairstyles. [Gallery]
Female figurines with dreadlocks [Gallery]
[image description: The ‘Donkey comb’ and five flat-topped combs, via link]
Afros of the Middle Kingdom
Afros became fashionable among men of non-royalty. [Gallery]
Hair during the New Kingdom
Egypt occupies Nubia, causing both cultures to merge (Redford).
Egypt adopts Nubian hairdressing creating the Nubian wig [Gallery]
We also see the use of the round wig. [Gallery]
Long corkscrew curls are worn, sometimes with the ends made into miniature dreadlocks [Gallery]
Woolly Hair in Achaemenid Egypt
[image description: an artistic depiction of Herodotus, known as the “father of history and travel writing.” Photo via The Telegraph)
The ancient Greek historian, Herodotus, described the hair of the ancient Egyptians, as woolly using the term (οὐλότριχες), ulotrichous which means woolly or crisp hair. The root word, οὐλό, also has been used by Greeks to also describe the hair of Ethiopians, or black Africans (Snowden 6).
In Later Periods
Depictions of ancient Egyptians with crisp hair can still be seen even after the Ptolemaic dynasty. [Gallery]
[image description: Alabaster cameo portrait bust of an Egyptian woman from the Roman period, wearing a stola. via British Museum]
The Cultural Norm for Hair
Ancient Egyptians with straight hair did exist, as shown in their art.
[image description: A Fresco Scene of two grape farmers, from the tomb of Nakht via post]
According to Egyptologist Joan Fletcher, during wig constructions, the type of hair they used for the wigs in every case was “Caucasian” hair rather than afro-textured hair except that of Maiherpri’s (495). The use of the term Caucasian hair is vague, Fletcher might have meant that the hair did not resembled afro-textured hair. It is suggested by another Egyptologist, Geoffrey Tassie, that the hair could have been gathered from foreign captives, or through trading (1066). If Fletcher is correct about the type of hair used for almost all wigs, then the texture of the “Caucasian” hair seemed to have been frequently altered to contemporary fashions, such as curly wigs.
[image description: (from left to right) lady Istemkhebs’ short curly wig, duplex wig, Ahmose-Hentempet’s short curly wig. Located in the Cairo Musuem. via Encyclopaedia of the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine in Non-western Cultures]
These alterations to the hair actually bear resemblance to afro-textured hair and aesthetics found in other black African cultures. We can even see many of these similar alterations and styles in modern-day black Africans that inhabit Northeast Africa, such the Afar.
[image description: A comparison I made of hairstyles between ancient Egyptians and Afar men. via post]
Throughout their history, ancient Egyptians made tools and hairstyles that would have unlikely to come into existence if they did not anything in common with black Africans. Even to this day black Northeast Africans wear similar hairstyles to the Egyptians of long ago.
Further Reading
The Social and Ritual Contextualisation of Ancient Egyptian Hair and Hairstyles from the Protodynastic to the End of the Old Kingdom by Geoffrey John Tassie (Highly Recommeded)
Curating Kemet: Fear of a Black Land? by Sally-Ann Ashton
Egyptian hair combs in the Fitzwilliam Museum by Sally-Ann Ashton
Hair and the Construction of Identity in Ancient Egypt by Gay Robins
Bibliography
Bridge, Sarah. “The Ethiopian Tribes Who Use BUTTER to Style Their Hair: Incredible Photos Reveal the Elaborate Curled Creations of the Afar People, and the Hamer Who Mix Ghee with Red Ochre to Spectacular Effect.” Mail Online. Associated Newspapers, 13 Feb. 2014. Web. 24 Feb. 2014.
Fletcher, Joann. “Hair.” Ancient Egyptian Materials and Technology. By Ian Shaw. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2000. 495-96. Print.
knowledgeequalsblackpower.”Maiherpri, Buried at Thebes, Valley of the Kings, New Kingdom 18th Dynasty, 1427-1392 BC” Tumblr. 10 Jan. 2012. Web. 24 Feb. 2014.
Martin, Frank. “The Egyptian Ethnicity Controversy and the Sociology of Knowledge”.Journal of Black Studies 14.3 (1984) 296+300-306. Print.
Redford, Donald B. From Slave to Pharaoh: The Black Experience of Ancient Egypt. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins UP, 2004. Print.
Smith, Stuart Tyson. “From Slave to Pharaoh.” (2008) Faculty Publications. Paper 127. 190-2. Print. http://digitalcommons.ric.edu/facultypublications/127
Snowden, Frank M. Blacks in Antiquity; Ethiopians in the Greco-Roman Experience. Cambridge, MA: Belknap of Harvard UP, 1970. Print.
Tassie, G. J. “Hair in Egypt.”, “Hair in Egypt: People and Technology Used in Creating Egyptian Hairstyles and Wigs”,”Hairstyling Technology and Techniques Used in Ancient Egypt”. Encyclopaedia of the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine in Non-western Cultures: With 107 Tables. ed. Helaine Selin. Berlin: Springer, 2008. 1060-1076. Print.
TRUTHTEACHER2007. Ancient Egyptian Afro Wigs. Youtube. 22 Apr. 2010. Web. 24 Feb. 2014.
Why would anyone consider the Ancient Egyptians as anything other than black? 0.o They were in Africa, a people of African descent, and all the Egyptian portrayals are of black people?? Like?
“The myth of Africa is that there were all these Africans running around, not being very bright, waiting for some European to discover them.”
Seen in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia by murllss + matchaarchives for ethiopian_girl_skaters (via IG)
Oualata, Mauritania
Oualata (also known as “Walata”), located in Southeast Mauritania, is one town out of a string of 4 in total, coined by UNESCO as the Ksour (ksar - singular, ksour - plural; a Maghrebi Arabic term meaning “fortified village”) of Ouadane, Chinguetti, Tichitt and Oualata. The city of Oualata became a popular caravan city, a trading hub, between the 12th and 16th centuries CE. [1] Today it is renowned for its decorative vernacular houses.
The medieval Moroccan traveler and scholar, Ibn Battuta, wrote of his stay in Oualata in his Travels in Asia and Africa 1325-1354, saying:
“Thus we reached the town of Iwalatan [Walata] after a journey from Sijilmasa of two months to a day. Iwalatan is the northernmost province of the Negroes, and the sultan’s representative there was one Farba Husayn, ‘farba’ meaning deputy [in their Ianguage]. When we arrived there, the merchants deposited their goods in an open square, where the blacks undertook to guard them, and went to the farba. He was sitting on a carpet under an archway, with his guards before him carrying lances and bows in their hands, and the headmen of the Massufa behind him. The merchants remained standing in front of him while he spoke to them through an interpreter, although they were close to him, to show his contempt for them. It was then that I repented of having come to their country, because of their lack of manners and their contempt for the whites.
…Later on the mushrif [inspector] of Iwalatan, whose name was Mansha Ju, invited all those who had come with the caravan to partake of his hospitality. At first I refused to attend, but my companions urged me very strongly, so I went with the rest. The repast was served–some pounded millet mixed with a little honey and milk, put in a half calabash shaped like a large bowl. The guests drank and retired. I said to them, ‘Was it for this that the black invited us?’ They answered, ‘Yes; and it is in their opinion the highest form of hospitality.’ This convinced me that there was no good to be hoped for from these people, and I made up my mind to travel [back to Morocco at once] with the pilgrim caravan from Iwalatan. Afterwards, however, I thought it best to go to see the capital of their king [of the kingdom of Mali, at the city of Mali].”
He seems to have met an hateful sentiment against “white” North Africans from someone within the city. Nonetheless, he did not hate the blacks. Also by his own account (and as seen in the next excerpt), this city was inhabited by the Masufa Berbers, a tribe not known much about. The demographics of Oualata, being mostly black, could mean the Masufa are one of the few heavily black Berber tribes (the main most notably being Tuareg people), or they simply could have been the typical “white” Berbers.
University of Georgia historian Timothy Cleaveland notes in his book Becoming Walata: A History of Saharan Social Formation and Transformation (2002), on page 176, that the city was inhabited by a mix of the original Mande-speaking peoples (also inhabited by Soninke people as well), and later migrations of Zenaga-speaking Berbers, followed even further down the line by Arab or “Arabized” nomads. Although, he notes that the composition of the population didn’t change very much. [2]
The famous Israeli historian and expert of African Islamic history Nehemia Levtzion says in his book Ancient Ghana and Mali (1973) on page 147 that “Walata” had a mixed population of [”white”] Berbers and “Sudanese”; blacks. On pages 80 and 158, we read that it fell from its trading popularity to the city of Timbuktu in the second half of the 14th century. [3]
This is what Ibn Battuta had to say of his stay in the city of Oualata, its men and the quality of their women:
“My stay at Iwalatan lasted about fifty days; and I was shown honor and entertained by its inhabitants. It is an excessively hot place, and boasts a few small date-palms, in the shade of which they sow watermelons. Its water comes from underground waterbeds at that point, and there is plenty of mutton to be had. The garments of its inhabitants, most of whom belong to the Massufa tribe, are of fine Egyptian fabrics.
Their women are of surpassing beauty, and are shown more respect than the men. The state of affairs amongst these people is indeed extraordinary. Their men show no signs of jealousy whatever; no one claims descent from his father, but on the contrary from his mother’s brother. A person’s heirs are his sister’s sons, not his own sons. This is a thing which I have seen nowhere in the world except among the Indians of Malabar. But those are heathens; these people are Muslims, punctilious in observing the hours of prayer, studying books of law, and memorizing the Koran. Yet their women show no bashfulness before men and do not veil themselves, though they are assiduous in attending the prayers. Any man who wishes to marry one of them may do so, but they do not travel with their husbands, and even if one desired to do so her family would not allow her to go.
The women there have ‘friends’ and ‘companions’ amongst the men outside their own families, and the men in the same way have ‘companions’ amongst the women of other families. A man may go into his house and find his wife entertaining her ‘companion’ but he takes no objection to it. One day at Iwalatan I went into the qadi’s house, after asking his permission to enter, and found with him a young woman of remarkable beauty. When I saw her I was shocked and turned to go out, but she laughed at me, instead of being overcome by shame, and the qadi said to me ‘Why are you going out? She is my companion.’ I was amazed at their conduct, for he was a theologian and a pilgrim [to Mecca] to boot. I was told that he had asked the sultan’s permission to make the pilgrimage that year with his ‘companion’–whether this one or not I cannot say–but the sultan would not grant it.”
In a quite hilarious situation, Battuta is surprised by this beautiful woman and attempts to flee like a nervous boy. And he does end up leaving the city of Oualata, in frustration, for Mali to see the king, and notes that it takes 24 days to reach if the caravan pushes on rapidly. [4]
Citation 4 is the text provided by Fordham University’s IHSP.
The renowned 15th-16th century Moroccan Berber-Andalusi writer, Leo Africanus, notes in his Descrittione dell’Africa that:
“The fourth part of Africa which is called the land of Negros, beginneth eastward at the kingdome of Gaoga, from whence it extendeth west as far as Gualata.” (pg 124)
“I* my selfe saw fifteene kingdoms of the Negros: howbeit there are many more, which although I saw not with mine owne eies, yet are they by the Negros sufficiently knowen and frequented. Their names there fore (beginning from the west, and so proceeding Eastward and Southward) are these following: Gualata, Ghinea, Melli, Tombuto, Gago, Guber, Agadez, Cano, Cafena, Zegzeg, Zanfara, Guangara, Borno, Gaogo, Nube.” (pg 128) [5]
The last two citations are unrelated pieces written to explain what exactly this “Gaoga” kingdom was, seeing that it isn’t written of otherwise, for anyone interested.
The beautiful ancient city of Oualata, Mauritania remains a notable tourist attraction today. An hour-long documentary was made about the muralist women of Oualata who decorate these houses, titled “En attandant les hommes”, in 2007 by director Katy Ndiaye.
See www.walata.org if you plan to visit. Below are some extra pictures of the city (one of them shows muralists at work). Enjoy.
Citations:
1. http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/750/
2. http://www.jstor.org/stable/25653366
3. http://www.sahistory.org.za/sites/default/files/file%20uploads%20/nehemia_levtzion_ancient_ghana_and_malibook4you.pdf
4. http://sourcebooks.fordham.edu/halsall/source/1354-ibnbattuta.asp
5. Leo Africanus, The History and Description of Africa and of the Notable Things Therein Contained: Volume 1, pgs 124 and 128, published by B. Franklin, 1896
6. https://academic.oup.com/afraf/article-abstract/XXIX/CXV/280/121509/THE-KINGDOM-OF-GAOGA-OF-LEO-AFRICANUS
7. http://www.jstor.org/stable/180544
The Christian Kingdoms of Nubia
I must first admit that I find myself guilty of holding this anti-Christian narrative in the past, but as of now, with all I’ve learned, this is one of the narratives from the “Black Consciousness Movement” that irks me to no end. Nor is it appropriate for us to associate ourselves with Nubian lineage, as the people of Nubia today are still recognized as the same people; somewhat likely the Nuba and other Nilotic or Nilo-Saharan peoples including Sudanese, Southern Egyptian, and Kenyan peoples. [1] [2]
You can clearly tell the difference between a man from South Sudan and a man from Nigeria. But I wish not to rant about racial collectivism and identity at this moment. Before I start, just in case anyone was wondering, here is a clear image of the painting:
King Taharqa Leads His Queens
Gregory Manchess
Digital mural (d. 5100px x 3291px)
Photo by National Geographic Creative, 2011
“King Taharqa leads his queens (called Candaces or Kandakes) through a crowd during a festival.” [3]
I won’t go into the entirety of African Christian history in this blog (it is merely the start), but since the meme here includes a painting of the Nubian Pharaoh of the 25th dynasty, Taharqa (who is also a very significant figure mentioned in the Bible), that is what I will focus on. And seeing that this is even serious, I’d even assume the creator and those who have spread this, including myself in the past, are unaware of the painting’s details.
The three most notable Christian kingdoms of Nubia include Nobatia, Makuria, and Alodia; another, though very small, being Dotawo.
“And men of Nubia be Christian, but they be as black as the Moors for great heat of the sun.” – (I will also elaborate more on Moorish identity later)
The Travels of Sir John Mandevile, pg 31
Disputed–French or English (c. 14th-15th century) [4]
Nobatia
The conversion of the Nubians to Christianity began during the reign of Empress Theodora of Byzantinium (c. 500-June 28, 548 CE), through her missionary, Presbyter Julian. [5] [6] Nobatia became the first Christian Nubian kingdom to be established (c. 500-540 CE) under the reign of King Silko, or “Basiliskos” of the Nobatae, who converted specifically to Monophysite Christianity.
“At some point in the 6th century King Silko (q.v.) declared himself king of the Nobatae after defeating the Blemmyes, who had been his rivals in Lower Nubia. This was done in the name of his singular God, thus making him the founding Christian king of Nubia … Julian was a Monophysite missionary sent by Empress Theodora to compete with other missionaries sent by Justinian.”
“During the years 543-569 CE, the first Monophysite Christian kingdoms were organized in Nubia. In 543 CE, Faras (q.v.) was established as the capital of Nobatia.” [7]
“Blemmyes” is hyperlinked if you’d like to read my blog on “Vom Antichrist and the Aethiopian Blemmyae”; it regards the Moors as well. Silkos recorded his triumph over the infamous Blemmyes in a Greek inscription carved on the wall of the Temple of Talmis (Kalabsha in Arabic), a temple dedicated to Mandulis, the Nubian equivalent of the Egyptian Horus located near modern-day Aswan, Egypt.
Makuria
Another Christian kingdom of Nubia was Makuria. In a letter to Empress Theodora, the king of Nobatia tells her of his attempts to send Bishop Longinus (566-580 CE) to the Blemmyes. Known for their harshness and animosity towards foreigners, the conversion of the Blemmyes was a challenge to the bishop. In any case, the Blemmyes eventually converted to Christianity, in the same century. Shortly afterwards, the royal house of Makuria converted. [8]
The 6th century Syriac Church historian, John of Ephesus, wrote of them as being hostile to Monophysite missionaries headed to Alodia. Unlike Nobatia, Makuria subscribed to the “rival” Melkite Greek Catholic Church, as recorded by the 6th-7th century Visigothic chronicler, John of Biclarum. [9]
Speaking of Longinus, the Bishop of the Nobatae:
“Julian’s Monophysite successor of the missionizing of Nubia was Longinus, who visited the area in 569 CE, when he recognized Dongola as the capital of Makkura.” [10]
Fragmented pages of “Liber Institutionis Michaelis Archangeli” in its Old Nubian translation
Qasr Ibrim, Egypt (Makurian, c. 9th-10th century)
The British Museum
The name of Michael is seen in red.
Makuria later absorbed Nobatia, which would explain why this manuscript is associated with Makuria, even though it appears to be from Nobatian territory on the basic map of Christian Nubia (you can read on its contents on JSTOR through citation 12). [11] [12]
Alodia
The last of the three main Christian kingdoms of Nubia to be organized was Alodia, or “Alwa”. Alodia, another Monophysite Christian kingdom, was said to be the most powerful kingdom of the major three. Out of the three, in regards to its documentation, I personally find Alodia to be the most interesting.
Speaking of Longinus’s missions in Alodia, post-Nobatia:
“He extended his missionary work as far south as the kingdom of Alwa. By 579 CE, Alwa (q.v.) was probably converted to Christianity, and its capital was established at Soba (q.v).” [13]
The Syriac Church historian, John of Ephesus, reports in his Ecclesiastical History about Longinus and the kingdom of Alodia: [14]
“… and Longinus had travelled still further onward, beyond the people of the Nobadæ, to whom he had some time be fore returned, to another powerful tribe many score leagues beyond them, whom the Greeks call Alodæi, and who are supposed to be Æthio-pians : but God had helped them, and spoken to their king and his princes, and to all the tribes under his rule, as we will in due time relate in order.” (pg 314)
“… when the Alexandrians learnt that the king of the Alodæi had despatched a second embassy to the king of the Nobadæ, requesting him to let them have the same Longinus who had taught him, in envy, and not in zeal, they sent to that people, in the hope of setting them against Longinus, and of teaching them the same corruption and lawlessness of which they were themselves guilty. Accordingly, they hurriedly drew up a letter to them against Longinus, without fear of God, or regard for justice, being drunk, as it were, with envy, and the hatred that was in their hearts, and not reflecting that it was a wrong thing to send to a people in the error of heathenism, and who now were asking to be converted unto Christianity, and to learn the fear of God,” (pg 317)
“Meanwhile the king of the Alodæi had, as we have mentioned, sent a second embassy to the king of the Nobadæ, requesting that the bishop Longinus might be sent to teach and baptize both him and his people : and it was plainly visible that the conversion of that kingdom was the good purpose of the grace of God. The Lord therefore stirred up the spirit of Longinus to go to them ; and though the Nubians were grieved at being separated from him, they nevertheless sent with him nobles and princes and men well acquainted with the desert.” (pg 319)
I find these sections (pg 317, 319) most interesting, seeing that Alodians requested missionaries to convert them, rather than the common anti-Christian narrative from the “Black Consciousness Movement” that Christianity has always been force-fed to Africans, or that Christian missionaries from Europe “deceived” people into conversion.
Moving on, John of Ephesus goes on to say:
“… for between the Nobadæ and the Alodæi is a country inhabited by another people, called the Makoritæ ; and when their king heard that Longinus had started on his journey, Satan in his envy stirred him up to set watchers in all the passes of his kingdom on all the roads, both in the mountains and in the plains, as far as the sea of weeds e, in hopes of arresting Longinus, and so hindering the salvation of the powerful people of the Alodæi. But God preserved him, and blinded the eyes of those who wanted to seize him ; and he passed through them, and went on his way, and they saw him v not. And on his arrival at the borders of the kingdom to which he was travelling, the king, as he tells us in his letters, on hearing of it, sent one of his nobles to meet him, named Aitekia, who received him honourably, and made him pass over into their land with great pomp : and on approaching nearer, the king went out in per son to meet him, and received him with great joy. And immediately upon his arrival, he spake unto the king and to all his nobles the word of God, and they opened their understandings, and listened with joy to what he said; and after a few days’ instruction, both the king himself was baptized and all his nobles ; and subsequently, in [the] process of time, his people also.” (pg 319-320)
On page 322, the king’s noble, “Aitekia”, sent to John of Ephesus is identified as a princess, in this case her name is spelled “Itika”. This section is also sourced through citation [15], but the site is unfortunately no longer open for the public and has likely been moved to a private location.
Citation 13 is hyperlinked for those interested in reading the free e-book through Google Books. With that being said, I think I’ve made my point, and this is only one case where I will refute this pseudo-historical anti-Christian propaganda. Christian Nubia was a beautiful period and one of strong relations between Europeans and Africans, as the early history between blacks and whites shows to almost always have been the case.
If you’d like to read about the downfall of this period (which was followed by Islamization), refer to citation [16] for a JSTOR record of “The Downfall of the Christian Nubian Kingdoms”, by Mustafa M. Musad, from Sudan Notes and Records Vol. 40 (1959), pp. 124-128, published by the University of Khartoum, Sudan.
Extras:
For the remainder of this blog, enjoy some pictures and info of archaeological sites, artwork, and artifacts from Christian Nubia…
Nubian king’s crown from the intermediate period between Meroitic and Christian Nubia.
Aswan, Egypt (Lower Nubia, c. 350-600 CE)
Found in Tomb 118 of the Ballana cemetery, a complex of 122 tombs covered by large mounds, excavated by the British Egyptologist, Walter Bryan Emery, between 1928 and 1931. [17]
I added the crown just because it was included in my research of Makuria.
Interior of the Church of Archangel Raphael
Old Dongola, Sudan (Makurian, c. 8th-9th century CE)
Archives of the Polish Centre of Mediterranean Archaeology, photo from excavations by a UNESCO-led team at the University of Warsaw. [18]
Ruins of the Citadel in Dongola
Old Dongola, Sudan (Makurian, approximate date unknown)
Excavated in 2008 by the Polish Centre of Mediterranean Archaeology at the University of Warsaw. The site included a palace and a cruciform (cross-shaped) commemorative structure (more than likely a church dedicated to the Archangel Michael or Raphael). [19]
You can read a bit more from PCMA’s discoveries between 2012 and 2014 at citation [20].
Pictures of a separate excavation of the upper church at Banganarti, Sudan, also called the Upper Church, including a 3D layout. This church was also dedicated to the Archangel Raphael. PCMA was also behind its excavation (2007). [21]
Four of the Apostles
Banganarti, Sudan (likely Makurian, c. 11th century CE)
The Upper Church [21]
A Nubian king protected by Archangel Rafael(?) and accompanied by apostles.
Banganarti, Sudan (likely Makurian, c. 11th century CE), painting from one of the chapels
The Upper Church [21]
“This depiction of the Harrowing of Hell, drawn in the ninth century, is considered to be the ‘masterpiece’ of the lower church artwork. It depicts Jesus entering the underworld so that he can trample Hades (Sheol) and rescue the first born. The figures below, in torment, are known as the ‘common dead.’”
Banganarti, Sudan (likely Makurian, c. 9th century CE)
The Lower Church [22]
Here’s some artwork from the PCMA excavations, on display since 1964:
An unspecified Archangel
Faras, Sudan (Makurian, c. 9th-10th century CE)
National Museum in Warsaw, Poland [23]
Bishop Petros with Saint Peter
Faras, Sudan (Makurian, c. 974-997 CE)
National Museum in Warsaw, Poland [23]
Bishop Marianos with the Virgin Mary and Christ
Faras, Sudan (Makurian, c. 1005-1036 CE)
National Museum in Warsaw, Poland [23]
Around 120 paintings from Faras were preserved, 67 of them being displayed in the National Museum in Warsaw. I couldn’t find exact details on this next set, however. But here you go:
As said, I’ve found no exact details for these paintings. They might not even be from Faras but, that’s fine!
“Fragments of the frieze from the apse of the first cathedral”–Sandstone block decorated with relief representation of birds, altars and columns.
Faras, Sudan (Makurian, c. Early 7th century CE)
National Museum in Warsaw, Poland [23]
Exhibit model of the Faras cathedral
National Museum in Warsaw, Poland
“Our goal was to recreate, using simple and, in a way, timeless architectural solutions, the mood of the historical sacral interior of an early Christian temple. We were also keen to avoid literal references to the architecture of the Faras cathedral,” said Miroslaw Orzechowski and Grzegorz Rytel, architects and authors of the new exhibition design. [24]
You can see more pictures from the museum at citation 24.
Ruins of the Church of Granite Columns
Old Dongola, Sudan (Makurian, 7th century CE)
The church was highlighted by 16 columns with elaborately decorated granite capitals. The last picture is a proposed layout. [25] [26]
And last, but not least…
The Throne Hall of Dongola
Old Dongola, Sudan (Makurian, c. 9th-10th century CE)
This throne hall, which is also known as the so-called “Mosque Building”, sits just a couple hundred feet away from the ruins of the Church of Granite Columns and can be seen from the Nile. It was eventually converted to a Muslim mosque. [27]
Citation 27 is a PDF with tons of information (including its general history, artworks, pictures & drawings, blueprints, and artifacts) about the “mosque building” from the University of Warsaw’s Centre of Mediterranean Archaeology.
Citations:
1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nubians
2. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuba_peoples
3. http://www.natgeocreative.com/photography/1130530
4. https://archive.org/stream/travelsofsirjohn00manduoft/travelsofsirjohn00manduoft_djvu.txt
5. http://www.ancientsudan.org/history_13_christianization.htm
6. G. Vantini, Oriental Sources Concerning Nubia (Heidelburg and Warsaw: Polish Academy of Sciences and Heidelberger Akademie der Wissenschaften, 1975)
7. Richard A. Lobban Jr., Historical Dictionary of Ancient and Medieval Nubia, pg 286, 2003
8. http://www.ancientsudan.org/history_13_christianization.htm
9. Giovanni Vantini, The Excavations at Faras: A Contribution to the History of Christian Nubia, 1970
10. Richard A. Lobban Jr., Historical Dictionary of Ancient and Medieval Nubia, pg 286, 2003
11. http://www.britishmuseum.org/research/collection_online/collection_object_details.aspx?objectId=116058&partId=1
12. http://www.jstor.org/stable/43076269
13. Aloys Grillmeier & Theresia Hainthaler, Christ in Christian Tradition: The Church in Alexandria, with Nubia and Ethiopia after 451 AD, Volume 2
14. The Third Part of the Ecclesiastical History of John, Bishop of Ephesus, pg 314, translated by R. Payne Smith, M.A., Oxford University Press, 1860
15. http://www29.homepage.villanova.edu/christopher.haas/nubian-texts.htm
16. http://www.jstor.org/stable/41719586
17. W.B. Emery, Nubian Treasure: An account of the Discoveries at Ballana and Qustul, 1948
18. http://scienceinpoland.pap.pl/en/news/news,409710,polish-archaeologists-discovered-dozens-of-paintings-in-sudan.html
19. http://www.pcma.uw.edu.pl/en/pcma-newsletter/2008/late-roman-byzantine-and-medieval/dongola-citadel-sudan/
20. https://www.academia.edu/28937021/Wall_inscriptions_in_Church_SWN.BV_on_the_citadel_of_Dongola_in_W._Godlewski_D._Dzierzbicka_eds._Dongola_2012-2014._Fieldwork_Conservation_and_Site_Management_PCMA_Excavation_Series_3_Warsaw_2015_pp._111-116
21. https://www.facebook.com/196130887228397/photos/ms.c.eJw1jMERwDAMwjbqYYhDvf9ivbjxUycEEXLGAmQhHzbTh1n8mcY2FmP8qvbG5eye~_3pWnn3U9cLbbE9~;~;lRr9rv~;MjH9bqZuH5aMV~;kB~_tUi7A~-~-.bps.a.201372456704240.1073741828.196130887228397/201372706704215/?type=3
22. http://www.livescience.com/16795-photos-banganarti-medieval-church.html
23. http://popular-archaeology.com/issue/june-2013/article/artifacts-of-christian-nubia-revealed
24. http://www.messagetoeagle.com/farasgallery.php#.WJV_k_krLIU
25. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Dongola
26. https://beastrabban.wordpress.com/2013/06/23/the-churches-and-monasteries-of-medieval-nubia-part-three-the-church-of-granite-columns-old-dongola/
27. http://www.pcma.uw.edu.pl/fileadmin/pam/PAM_2010_XXII/PAM_22_Dongola_Obluski_Godlewski_et_alii.pdf
Reblogging my first larger-scale research project on here (specifically on Tumblr; I did plenty of massive-scale research projects in high school that I shared on my old Instagram account) because my bum ass still has not fixed my laptop screen. Carving out time to blog and start new research projects right now would be difficult either way. Bare with me. Gonna reblog some more of my best posts later as well.
Btw thanks for 4,600 followers in less than a year of active blogging; more like a few months really.
This post about my take on Kanye’s slavery statement has been blowing up my phone recently (not sure who reblogged it for that to happen) getting over 1,500 notes in the past two days and 600 new followers. And I just want to remind you all this is blog is a space for free thought, but above all things respect, rationality, objectivity, and understanding.
I’ve responded to the fair constructive feedback, different viewpoints, critical input, etc. But I’ve yet to respond to anyone simply saying stuff like “I’m unfollowing”, “you’re an idiot”, “fuck Coonye”, and the likes. Disagree all you want, being emotional will do nothing.
I feel this just reinforces my point in the sense that if we are to consider a life of slavery as a choice, one of the biggest barriers to freedom BY FAR is negative response from your own people when you’re giving them something they can utilize. Imagine it’s 1842; I’m on a plantation in Georgia and I tell a man “we can escape tonight, we don’t have to live like this”, and he tells me to fuck off. Crazy. The comments I’ve been getting are legit on some real life Boondocks / Catcher Freeman type shit. Mostly straw mans like how recently a guy compared my piece to “if a woman gets raped, that’s her choice because she didn’t fight hard enough.” Not even gonna go into why that is disrespectful to the WOMAN involved and not me, but I doubt half the people who responded negatively even understand what they’re trying to say, or have no clue how to properly word their statements to convey something rational. Or at least how to diss me without unintentionally dissing the subject of their response.
All I want y'all to know, and especially my younger generation, is that circumstances can’t necessarily be avoided, but the outcome of those circumstances can be changed.
What a lot of "Woke" Black People fail to Understand about Kanye's Statement
There’s been plenty of talk in the past few weeks about Kanye West’s statements, from his interview with Charlamagne, to his Twitter antics regarding Donald Trump, and most notably his interview/rant on TMZ, where he said: “400 years of slavery sounds like a choice.”
I’m going to weigh in on this and show how simple this statement is to dissect and understand from a black perspective.
Simply put, I agree, slavery is a choice. Why exactly?
Because Joseph Cinque and the Amistad Rebellion, where Mende captives revolted against their ship’s crew and won their freedom in New York.
Because Harriet Tubman and the Underground Railroad.
Because Toussaint L'Ouverture, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, and the Haitian Revolution.
The Malê revolt of Brazil, led by Hausa Muslim slaves and freedmen during the last 10 days of Ramadan, inspired by their Islamic faith.
Because Nat Turner’s insurrection.
Because Frederick Douglass.
Because Igbo Landing, where 75 enslaved Igbos staged a mutiny near Dunbar Creek, Georgia and drowned their captors, along with themselves.
Because Queen Nanny, her brother Captain Cudjoe, and the Jamaican Maroons who led two organized wars against the British.
Because François Mackandal, the Haitian Maroon leader and Voudou priest who gave slaves poison from plants to silently kill off their captors.
Because the Tempati Rebellion of Surinamese Maroons.
Because the Kru people of Liberia.
Because the Demerara Rebellion, which saw the mobilization of 10,000 enslaved rebels.
Because Madison Washington (a now twice-emancipated slave) and the Creole Case mutiny, revolting against the crew and forcing the overseer to sail them to the Bahamas; inspired by word of the Hermosa mutiny one year before.
Because the Stono Rebellion.
Because Harriet Jacobs, who escaped from slavery by hiding in her grandmother’s attic for 7 years until she could afford to reach the North.
Because the Zanj Rebellion in Southern Iraq.
Because Henry “Box” Brown who mailed himself to freedom by hiding in a box-crate.
Because Carlota’s Cuban insurrection.
Because Robert Smalls, who stole a Confederate ship and sailed to the North.
Because Sojourner Truth, who escaped to freedom with her infant daughter.
Because the Little George ship revolt, which saw 96 captured Guineans kill the crew and sail back to Africa.
Because Malik Ambar, an Ethiopian sold into Indian slavery as a child who amassed an army and became a regional leader.
Because Mr. and Mrs. William and Ellen Craft, of which the wife posed as a white man and the husband as her servant to safely reach the North hiding in plain sight.
Because the Akwamu slave revolt of St. John.
Because Cuffy and the Berbice slave revolt.
Because the 1811 German Coast Uprising.
Because Samuel Sharpe and the Baptist War “Great Jamaican Slave Revolt, which saw the mobilization of 60,000 enslaved rebels.
Need I say more? Trust me, I can go on and on and on about this, giving examples anywhere from the the United States to the Carribean to Africa, India, or the Middle East.
The point behind “400 years of slavery sounds like a choice” is simple: if you have a choice to escape the plantation, you have a choice to stay and work the fields; if you have a choice to revolt and kill your oppressors, you have a choice to remain subordinate and take their orders; if you have a choice to free your people, you have a choice to leave them behind and let them suffer; if you have a choice to jump ship or take the wheel, you have a choice to remain a passenger.
The act of being enslaved or captured is almost never a choice–unless of course the attempt is met with resistence, and if it fails, then it fails. The choice in 400 years of slavery is allowing yourself and your people to remain in those conditions. Fear is not an excuse either, fear is a choice. Our ancestors and distant relatives knew this, and they fought with their lives for freedom. They were brave, couragous, resourceful and above all resiliant, and it’s almost an insult to not recognize this.
Kanye definitely should have been much better at explaining himself, but nonetheless his own screw-up isn’t an excuse to act out irrationally. Close enough, he freestyled shortly before the TMZ rant, saying: “Hopped off the Amistad and made ’[I’m] A God’ … I say what they say when the mic is off … teach white dominance? Question your common sense, see yall been washed in tradition that I'ma rinse, hopped off the Amistad and made ’[I’m] A God’ …”. I also like the line in Ye vs. The People (feat. T.I.): “A lot of people agree with me but they too scared to speak up”.
Yall have to remember one key thing about Kanye West; amongst all the interracial relationship controversy, Trump support, etc., Kanye was raised by a Black Panther for a father and a black community leader for a mother (R.I.P.) on the south side of Chicago. He doesn’t exist in the same thought bubble as today’s heavily liberal, majority-Democratic black population, and yall have to realize for once that not everyone is in your echo chamber screaming at the walls with you; people have different opinions, and the world that exists beyond your ideological safe space should be enough on its own to understand that we can’t deal with everyone in absolutes by something as shallow as political beliefs. Any talk about how Kanye let us down or how Kanye is a traitor, this and that, is nonsense and ultimately your own fault for thinking he had any obligation to meet your own expectations. And on top of that, everybody don’t gotta agree with you, fam.
The way a lot of you so-called “woke” or conscious black people reacted to Kanye’s statement lowkey reminds me of the Catcher Freeman skit from the Boondocks: “Man, fuck that white nigga, that’s yo massa, ion know that nigga! … You prolly don’t even wanna leave, all on massa nuts.” Like foreal, I have a strong feeling some of yall would actually enjoy slavery.
Lastly, considering the current climate of black culture, it’s also funny to me how a lot of these people complaining are the same people who recently applauded Killmonger’s character in Black Panther; the militant, black revolutionary anti-hero who infamously said before his death: “Just bury me in the ocean with my ancestors who jumped from the ships, because they knew that death was better than bondage.” Sounds to me like your buddy Killmonger wouldn’t hesitate to fight back and/or die in the process of seeking out his freedom. But let Kanye say it a bit different and the world catches on fire.
But I digress… Yall go do a lot more reading and do a lot less talking for a while. And stop alienating your own people.
I dislike Kanye as a person and an artist but I approve of his recent foray in politics.
My own personal interpretation is that Kanye made it seem like the concept of slavery for 400 years was a choice. And clearly the concept of it isn’t, its pretty much the definition of the word. And one single person wasnt a slave for 400 years. It was several generations. Born into it. Not knowing anything else or how to free themselves from it. That wasnt a choice. A slave born to slave parents that don’t teach them about rebellion and revolt and freedom won’t know those things exist and just grow up knowing slavery as “the norm”. All the previous examples were people who knew of greater better things and fought for them. Died for them. But not everyone is born with that part of them.
Good point. But it doesn’t always need to be taught. Humans have an inherent desire to remove themselves from stressful situations, whether by fight or flight. You don’t need to know how to plan an attack to know that you have the general ability to attack. Most of the stuff I listed on here happened in cases where the enslaved people initially had no weapons, no fighting skills, and no experience in any situation of the likes. It’s a natural response. Some people just don’t have the willpower, which I understand. But there is always many more people who do.
Agreed it is in everybody. But the desire isnt always. Especially when the result could easily be death. And many people dont have the “from my cold dead hands mentality” God bless those who do/did. But lets not look down our noses on those who didnt.
Fear of death is fairly rational so I’ll just leave that be. But personally, if it meant my entire life was going to be a living Hell, I wouldn’t hesitate to be resistent. That’s just how I am as a person and I’ve always been that way, very strategic in my approach to things and always finding a way to isolate myself by any means. So I’ll say honestly if there is another thought process contrary to my own, where people are more hesitant or content, then I don’t understand it.
Good information… different point of view. Dialogue…
CHECK!!!
Good dialogue. I understood where Kanye was coming from but he has always suffered from not being able to express himself well. Which is ironic. Yes, every other place that there has been a large slave force they fought for their freedom, while in America they had to be “given” it. Now, I understand that, potentially, the slaves that were around during the time of the emancipation proclamation had witnessed attempted revolts and had been terrified into abandoning any such thoughts. But at the end of the day, blacks in America aren’t seen as warriors because in places like Haiti, Cuba, and others they fought for the right to be free. While here, the oppressors had to give them theirs
Being scared due to witnessing the bloody strife and consequence for emancipation is a good point. I respect your view.
What a lot of "Woke" Black People fail to Understand about Kanye's Statement
There’s been plenty of talk in the past few weeks about Kanye West’s statements, from his interview with Charlamagne, to his Twitter antics regarding Donald Trump, and most notably his interview/rant on TMZ, where he said: “400 years of slavery sounds like a choice.”
I’m going to weigh in on this and show how simple this statement is to dissect and understand from a black perspective.
Simply put, I agree, slavery is a choice. Why exactly?
Because Joseph Cinque and the Amistad Rebellion, where Mende captives revolted against their ship’s crew and won their freedom in New York.
Because Harriet Tubman and the Underground Railroad.
Because Toussaint L'Ouverture, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, and the Haitian Revolution.
The Malê revolt of Brazil, led by Hausa Muslim slaves and freedmen during the last 10 days of Ramadan, inspired by their Islamic faith.
Because Nat Turner’s insurrection.
Because Frederick Douglass.
Because Igbo Landing, where 75 enslaved Igbos staged a mutiny near Dunbar Creek, Georgia and drowned their captors, along with themselves.
Because Queen Nanny, her brother Captain Cudjoe, and the Jamaican Maroons who led two organized wars against the British.
Because François Mackandal, the Haitian Maroon leader and Voudou priest who gave slaves poison from plants to silently kill off their captors.
Because the Tempati Rebellion of Surinamese Maroons.
Because the Kru people of Liberia.
Because the Demerara Rebellion, which saw the mobilization of 10,000 enslaved rebels.
Because Madison Washington (a now twice-emancipated slave) and the Creole Case mutiny, revolting against the crew and forcing the overseer to sail them to the Bahamas; inspired by word of the Hermosa mutiny one year before.
Because the Stono Rebellion.
Because Harriet Jacobs, who escaped from slavery by hiding in her grandmother’s attic for 7 years until she could afford to reach the North.
Because the Zanj Rebellion in Southern Iraq.
Because Henry “Box” Brown who mailed himself to freedom by hiding in a box-crate.
Because Carlota’s Cuban insurrection.
Because Robert Smalls, who stole a Confederate ship and sailed to the North.
Because Sojourner Truth, who escaped to freedom with her infant daughter.
Because the Little George ship revolt, which saw 96 captured Guineans kill the crew and sail back to Africa.
Because Malik Ambar, an Ethiopian sold into Indian slavery as a child who amassed an army and became a regional leader.
Because Mr. and Mrs. William and Ellen Craft, of which the wife posed as a white man and the husband as her servant to safely reach the North hiding in plain sight.
Because the Akwamu slave revolt of St. John.
Because Cuffy and the Berbice slave revolt.
Because the 1811 German Coast Uprising.
Because Samuel Sharpe and the Baptist War “Great Jamaican Slave Revolt, which saw the mobilization of 60,000 enslaved rebels.
Need I say more? Trust me, I can go on and on and on about this, giving examples anywhere from the the United States to the Carribean to Africa, India, or the Middle East.
The point behind “400 years of slavery sounds like a choice” is simple: if you have a choice to escape the plantation, you have a choice to stay and work the fields; if you have a choice to revolt and kill your oppressors, you have a choice to remain subordinate and take their orders; if you have a choice to free your people, you have a choice to leave them behind and let them suffer; if you have a choice to jump ship or take the wheel, you have a choice to remain a passenger.
The act of being enslaved or captured is almost never a choice–unless of course the attempt is met with resistence, and if it fails, then it fails. The choice in 400 years of slavery is allowing yourself and your people to remain in those conditions. Fear is not an excuse either, fear is a choice. Our ancestors and distant relatives knew this, and they fought with their lives for freedom. They were brave, couragous, resourceful and above all resiliant, and it’s almost an insult to not recognize this.
Kanye definitely should have been much better at explaining himself, but nonetheless his own screw-up isn’t an excuse to act out irrationally. Close enough, he freestyled shortly before the TMZ rant, saying: “Hopped off the Amistad and made ’[I’m] A God’ … I say what they say when the mic is off … teach white dominance? Question your common sense, see yall been washed in tradition that I'ma rinse, hopped off the Amistad and made ’[I’m] A God’ …”. I also like the line in Ye vs. The People (feat. T.I.): “A lot of people agree with me but they too scared to speak up”.
Yall have to remember one key thing about Kanye West; amongst all the interracial relationship controversy, Trump support, etc., Kanye was raised by a Black Panther for a father and a black community leader for a mother (R.I.P.) on the south side of Chicago. He doesn’t exist in the same thought bubble as today’s heavily liberal, majority-Democratic black population, and yall have to realize for once that not everyone is in your echo chamber screaming at the walls with you; people have different opinions, and the world that exists beyond your ideological safe space should be enough on its own to understand that we can’t deal with everyone in absolutes by something as shallow as political beliefs. Any talk about how Kanye let us down or how Kanye is a traitor, this and that, is nonsense and ultimately your own fault for thinking he had any obligation to meet your own expectations. And on top of that, everybody don’t gotta agree with you, fam.
The way a lot of you so-called “woke” or conscious black people reacted to Kanye’s statement lowkey reminds me of the Catcher Freeman skit from the Boondocks: “Man, fuck that white nigga, that’s yo massa, ion know that nigga! … You prolly don’t even wanna leave, all on massa nuts.” Like foreal, I have a strong feeling some of yall would actually enjoy slavery.
Lastly, considering the current climate of black culture, it’s also funny to me how a lot of these people complaining are the same people who recently applauded Killmonger’s character in Black Panther; the militant, black revolutionary anti-hero who infamously said before his death: “Just bury me in the ocean with my ancestors who jumped from the ships, because they knew that death was better than bondage.” Sounds to me like your buddy Killmonger wouldn’t hesitate to fight back and/or die in the process of seeking out his freedom. But let Kanye say it a bit different and the world catches on fire.
But I digress… Yall go do a lot more reading and do a lot less talking for a while. And stop alienating your own people.
I dislike Kanye as a person and an artist but I approve of his recent foray in politics.
My own personal interpretation is that Kanye made it seem like the concept of slavery for 400 years was a choice. And clearly the concept of it isn’t, its pretty much the definition of the word. And one single person wasnt a slave for 400 years. It was several generations. Born into it. Not knowing anything else or how to free themselves from it. That wasnt a choice. A slave born to slave parents that don’t teach them about rebellion and revolt and freedom won’t know those things exist and just grow up knowing slavery as “the norm”. All the previous examples were people who knew of greater better things and fought for them. Died for them. But not everyone is born with that part of them.
Good point. But it doesn’t always need to be taught. Humans have an inherent desire to remove themselves from stressful situations, whether by fight or flight. You don’t need to know how to plan an attack to know that you have the general ability to attack. Most of the stuff I listed on here happened in cases where the enslaved people initially had no weapons, no fighting skills, and no experience in any situation of the likes. It’s a natural response. Some people just don’t have the willpower, which I understand. But there is always many more people who do.
Agreed it is in everybody. But the desire isnt always. Especially when the result could easily be death. And many people dont have the “from my cold dead hands mentality” God bless those who do/did. But lets not look down our noses on those who didnt.
Fear of death is fairly rational so I'll just leave that be. But personally, if it meant my entire life was going to be a living Hell, I wouldn't hesitate to be resistent. That's just how I am as a person and I've always been that way, very strategic in my approach to things and always finding a way to isolate myself by any means. So I'll say honestly if there is another thought process contrary to my own, where people are more hesitant or content, then I don't understand it.
What a lot of "Woke" Black People fail to Understand about Kanye's Statement
There’s been plenty of talk in the past few weeks about Kanye West’s statements, from his interview with Charlamagne, to his Twitter antics regarding Donald Trump, and most notably his interview/rant on TMZ, where he said: “400 years of slavery sounds like a choice.”
I’m going to weigh in on this and show how simple this statement is to dissect and understand from a black perspective.
Simply put, I agree, slavery is a choice. Why exactly?
Because Joseph Cinque and the Amistad Rebellion, where Mende captives revolted against their ship’s crew and won their freedom in New York.
Because Harriet Tubman and the Underground Railroad.
Because Toussaint L'Ouverture, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, and the Haitian Revolution.
The Malê revolt of Brazil, led by Hausa Muslim slaves and freedmen during the last 10 days of Ramadan, inspired by their Islamic faith.
Because Nat Turner’s insurrection.
Because Frederick Douglass.
Because Igbo Landing, where 75 enslaved Igbos staged a mutiny near Dunbar Creek, Georgia and drowned their captors, along with themselves.
Because Queen Nanny, her brother Captain Cudjoe, and the Jamaican Maroons who led two organized wars against the British.
Because François Mackandal, the Haitian Maroon leader and Voudou priest who gave slaves poison from plants to silently kill off their captors.
Because the Tempati Rebellion of Surinamese Maroons.
Because the Kru people of Liberia.
Because the Demerara Rebellion, which saw the mobilization of 10,000 enslaved rebels.
Because Madison Washington (a now twice-emancipated slave) and the Creole Case mutiny, revolting against the crew and forcing the overseer to sail them to the Bahamas; inspired by word of the Hermosa mutiny one year before.
Because the Stono Rebellion.
Because Harriet Jacobs, who escaped from slavery by hiding in her grandmother’s attic for 7 years until she could afford to reach the North.
Because the Zanj Rebellion in Southern Iraq.
Because Henry “Box” Brown who mailed himself to freedom by hiding in a box-crate.
Because Carlota’s Cuban insurrection.
Because Robert Smalls, who stole a Confederate ship and sailed to the North.
Because Sojourner Truth, who escaped to freedom with her infant daughter.
Because the Little George ship revolt, which saw 96 captured Guineans kill the crew and sail back to Africa.
Because Malik Ambar, an Ethiopian sold into Indian slavery as a child who amassed an army and became a regional leader.
Because Mr. and Mrs. William and Ellen Craft, of which the wife posed as a white man and the husband as her servant to safely reach the North hiding in plain sight.
Because the Akwamu slave revolt of St. John.
Because Cuffy and the Berbice slave revolt.
Because the 1811 German Coast Uprising.
Because Samuel Sharpe and the Baptist War “Great Jamaican Slave Revolt, which saw the mobilization of 60,000 enslaved rebels.
Need I say more? Trust me, I can go on and on and on about this, giving examples anywhere from the the United States to the Carribean to Africa, India, or the Middle East.
The point behind “400 years of slavery sounds like a choice” is simple: if you have a choice to escape the plantation, you have a choice to stay and work the fields; if you have a choice to revolt and kill your oppressors, you have a choice to remain subordinate and take their orders; if you have a choice to free your people, you have a choice to leave them behind and let them suffer; if you have a choice to jump ship or take the wheel, you have a choice to remain a passenger.
The act of being enslaved or captured is almost never a choice–unless of course the attempt is met with resistence, and if it fails, then it fails. The choice in 400 years of slavery is allowing yourself and your people to remain in those conditions. Fear is not an excuse either, fear is a choice. Our ancestors and distant relatives knew this, and they fought with their lives for freedom. They were brave, couragous, resourceful and above all resiliant, and it’s almost an insult to not recognize this.
Kanye definitely should have been much better at explaining himself, but nonetheless his own screw-up isn’t an excuse to act out irrationally. Close enough, he freestyled shortly before the TMZ rant, saying: “Hopped off the Amistad and made ’[I’m] A God’ … I say what they say when the mic is off … teach white dominance? Question your common sense, see yall been washed in tradition that I'ma rinse, hopped off the Amistad and made ’[I’m] A God’ …”. I also like the line in Ye vs. The People (feat. T.I.): “A lot of people agree with me but they too scared to speak up”.
Yall have to remember one key thing about Kanye West; amongst all the interracial relationship controversy, Trump support, etc., Kanye was raised by a Black Panther for a father and a black community leader for a mother (R.I.P.) on the south side of Chicago. He doesn’t exist in the same thought bubble as today’s heavily liberal, majority-Democratic black population, and yall have to realize for once that not everyone is in your echo chamber screaming at the walls with you; people have different opinions, and the world that exists beyond your ideological safe space should be enough on its own to understand that we can’t deal with everyone in absolutes by something as shallow as political beliefs. Any talk about how Kanye let us down or how Kanye is a traitor, this and that, is nonsense and ultimately your own fault for thinking he had any obligation to meet your own expectations. And on top of that, everybody don’t gotta agree with you, fam.
The way a lot of you so-called “woke” or conscious black people reacted to Kanye’s statement lowkey reminds me of the Catcher Freeman skit from the Boondocks: “Man, fuck that white nigga, that’s yo massa, ion know that nigga! … You prolly don’t even wanna leave, all on massa nuts.” Like foreal, I have a strong feeling some of yall would actually enjoy slavery.
Lastly, considering the current climate of black culture, it’s also funny to me how a lot of these people complaining are the same people who recently applauded Killmonger’s character in Black Panther; the militant, black revolutionary anti-hero who infamously said before his death: “Just bury me in the ocean with my ancestors who jumped from the ships, because they knew that death was better than bondage.” Sounds to me like your buddy Killmonger wouldn’t hesitate to fight back and/or die in the process of seeking out his freedom. But let Kanye say it a bit different and the world catches on fire.
But I digress… Yall go do a lot more reading and do a lot less talking for a while. And stop alienating your own people.
I dislike Kanye as a person and an artist but I approve of his recent foray in politics.
My own personal interpretation is that Kanye made it seem like the concept of slavery for 400 years was a choice. And clearly the concept of it isn’t, its pretty much the definition of the word. And one single person wasnt a slave for 400 years. It was several generations. Born into it. Not knowing anything else or how to free themselves from it. That wasnt a choice. A slave born to slave parents that don’t teach them about rebellion and revolt and freedom won’t know those things exist and just grow up knowing slavery as “the norm”. All the previous examples were people who knew of greater better things and fought for them. Died for them. But not everyone is born with that part of them.
Good point. But it doesn't always need to be taught. Humans have an inherent desire to remove themselves from stressful situations, whether by fight or flight. You don't need to know how to plan an attack to know that you have the general ability to attack. Most of the stuff I listed on here happened in cases where the enslaved people initially had no weapons, no fighting skills, and no experience in any situation of the likes. It's a natural response. Some people just don't have the willpower, which I understand. But there is always many more people who do.
What a lot of "Woke" Black People fail to Understand about Kanye's Statement
There’s been plenty of talk in the past few weeks about Kanye West’s statements, from his interview with Charlamagne, to his Twitter antics regarding Donald Trump, and most notably his interview/rant on TMZ, where he said: “400 years of slavery sounds like a choice.”
I’m going to weigh in on this and show how simple this statement is to dissect and understand from a black perspective.
Simply put, I agree, slavery is a choice. Why exactly?
Because Joseph Cinque and the Amistad Rebellion, where Mende captives revolted against their ship’s crew and won their freedom in New York.
Because Harriet Tubman and the Underground Railroad.
Because Toussaint L'Ouverture, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, and the Haitian Revolution.
The Malê revolt of Brazil, led by Hausa Muslim slaves and freedmen during the last 10 days of Ramadan, inspired by their Islamic faith.
Because Nat Turner’s insurrection.
Because Frederick Douglass.
Because Igbo Landing, where 75 enslaved Igbos staged a mutiny near Dunbar Creek, Georgia and drowned their captors, along with themselves.
Because Queen Nanny, her brother Captain Cudjoe, and the Jamaican Maroons who led two organized wars against the British.
Because François Mackandal, the Haitian Maroon leader and Voudou priest who gave slaves poison from plants to silently kill off their captors.
Because the Tempati Rebellion of Surinamese Maroons.
Because the Kru people of Liberia.
Because the Demerara Rebellion, which saw the mobilization of 10,000 enslaved rebels.
Because Madison Washington (a now twice-emancipated slave) and the Creole Case mutiny, revolting against the crew and forcing the overseer to sail them to the Bahamas; inspired by word of the Hermosa mutiny one year before.
Because the Stono Rebellion.
Because Harriet Jacobs, who escaped from slavery by hiding in her grandmother’s attic for 7 years until she could afford to reach the North.
Because the Zanj Rebellion in Southern Iraq.
Because Henry “Box” Brown who mailed himself to freedom by hiding in a box-crate.
Because Carlota’s Cuban insurrection.
Because Robert Smalls, who stole a Confederate ship and sailed to the North.
Because Sojourner Truth, who escaped to freedom with her infant daughter.
Because the Little George ship revolt, which saw 96 captured Guineans kill the crew and sail back to Africa.
Because Malik Ambar, an Ethiopian sold into Indian slavery as a child who amassed an army and became a regional leader.
Because Mr. and Mrs. William and Ellen Craft, of which the wife posed as a white man and the husband as her servant to safely reach the North hiding in plain sight.
Because the Akwamu slave revolt of St. John.
Because Cuffy and the Berbice slave revolt.
Because the 1811 German Coast Uprising.
Because Samuel Sharpe and the Baptist War “Great Jamaican Slave Revolt, which saw the mobilization of 60,000 enslaved rebels.
Need I say more? Trust me, I can go on and on and on about this, giving examples anywhere from the the United States to the Carribean to Africa, India, or the Middle East.
The point behind “400 years of slavery sounds like a choice” is simple: if you have a choice to escape the plantation, you have a choice to stay and work the fields; if you have a choice to revolt and kill your oppressors, you have a choice to remain subordinate and take their orders; if you have a choice to free your people, you have a choice to leave them behind and let them suffer; if you have a choice to jump ship or take the wheel, you have a choice to remain a passenger.
The act of being enslaved or captured is almost never a choice–unless of course the attempt is met with resistence, and if it fails, then it fails. The choice in 400 years of slavery is allowing yourself and your people to remain in those conditions. Fear is not an excuse either, fear is a choice. Our ancestors and distant relatives knew this, and they fought with their lives for freedom. They were brave, couragous, resourceful and above all resiliant, and it’s almost an insult to not recognize this.
Kanye definitely should have been much better at explaining himself, but nonetheless his own screw-up isn’t an excuse to act out irrationally. Close enough, he freestyled shortly before the TMZ rant, saying: “Hopped off the Amistad and made ’[I’m] A God’ … I say what they say when the mic is off … teach white dominance? Question your common sense, see yall been washed in tradition that I'ma rinse, hopped off the Amistad and made ’[I’m] A God’ …”. I also like the line in Ye vs. The People (feat. T.I.): “A lot of people agree with me but they too scared to speak up”.
Yall have to remember one key thing about Kanye West; amongst all the interracial relationship controversy, Trump support, etc., Kanye was raised by a Black Panther for a father and a black community leader for a mother (R.I.P.) on the south side of Chicago. He doesn’t exist in the same thought bubble as today’s heavily liberal, majority-Democratic black population, and yall have to realize for once that not everyone is in your echo chamber screaming at the walls with you; people have different opinions, and the world that exists beyond your ideological safe space should be enough on its own to understand that we can’t deal with everyone in absolutes by something as shallow as political beliefs. Any talk about how Kanye let us down or how Kanye is a traitor, this and that, is nonsense and ultimately your own fault for thinking he had any obligation to meet your own expectations. And on top of that, everybody don’t gotta agree with you, fam.
The way a lot of you so-called “woke” or conscious black people reacted to Kanye’s statement lowkey reminds me of the Catcher Freeman skit from the Boondocks: “Man, fuck that white nigga, that’s yo massa, ion know that nigga! … You prolly don’t even wanna leave, all on massa nuts.” Like foreal, I have a strong feeling some of yall would actually enjoy slavery.
Lastly, considering the current climate of black culture, it’s also funny to me how a lot of these people complaining are the same people who recently applauded Killmonger’s character in Black Panther; the militant, black revolutionary anti-hero who infamously said before his death: “Just bury me in the ocean with my ancestors who jumped from the ships, because they knew that death was better than bondage.” Sounds to me like your buddy Killmonger wouldn’t hesitate to fight back and/or die in the process of seeking out his freedom. But let Kanye say it a bit different and the world catches on fire.
But I digress… Yall go do a lot more reading and do a lot less talking for a while. And stop alienating your own people.
Changed name...
@africanrenaissance > @black-renaissance
Nothing major, just letting yall know. I'm still very caught up with a lot of other stuff right now tho.
Blog Update (02/26/2018)
Over the past 5 months I've been either EXTREMELY busy or for some reason of my own fault unable to make new content. This hasn't stopped me from expanding and refining the information I have archived and bookmarked in the form of hundreds of articles, books/PDFs, documentaries, etc. I'm simply on a whole different path right now trying to take fashion design courses, working on getting this dropshipping shit together, in the process of desperately trying to move out of where I am now, and helping my mom at all costs; And it's starting to become totally unfeasable to be in a location where I'm constantly tempted, or faced, with a lack of productive activities and opportunities.
And yes, my damn laptop screen is still cracked. If I can see enough support I'll also launch my Patreon soon. Ima share more details on that and what all of my patrons would get in return later. I have a lot of expenses and content creation is definitely one that doesn't come first on the spectrum between wants and needs, so I would appreciate any monetary support in the future to keep this shit moving. Much of what I've already provided includes information behind university paywalls and libraries that I had to get out of my own money; it's a lot harder to actually get citations than it might seem. Not everything is going to pop up in your search engine, even with Google Scholar.
I'm sitting on A LOT of stuff right now. I do have one post that might be in the works within the next few days, however. Courtesy to @medievalpoc for sharing the link to it originally; I'm sharing more in detail (you'll see).
And btw, thank you for 4,000 followers in 1 year! I appreciate all the support and hope yall continue to learn something new from my blog. As of now, I'm probably just going to be reposting my oldest stuff for those who haven't been here that long or scrolled that far. Thanks.
Just wanna say thanks for all the support and taken interest in my blog recently. The amount of activity is crazy. My situation I mentioned roughly a month ago took a turn for the better in virtually every way and I'm doing much better now, my laptop screen is still broken tho lol. I'm going to be getting it fixed very soon, however. I'll get back to creating content within the next month or two (I have hundreds of subjects I want to write about and discuss). For the meantime, I'll try to share some small stuff here and there. Sorry for the wait but thanks everyone.
Paola Viesi - Dogon
Paola Viesi - Tuareg