AFRO-ASIAN DISPERSALS: How Scholarship has Come Around to the Truth about the Roots of Semitic Speech and Culture
by Dana Reynolds
by Dana Reynolds
Above are Afro-Asiatic women of the Omotic group. These African-Asiatics began immigrating from Africa thousands of years ago. |
Catal Huyuk stone ruins |
“As for Palestine, there was no drastic change for the main type during the transition from the Chalcolithic to the Early Bronze Age. Summing up, striking similarities link the physical characteristics of the predynastic Egyptians and of the contemporary Bedja population and the main Berber type and of the Palestinian skeletons of the early Bronze Age.” From Edward Lipinski’s - Semitic Languages: Outline of a Comparative Grammar, 2001, p.47.
"...the crucial linguistic finding is that the three deepest clades of the Afro-Asiatic family are localized in Eritrea and Ethiopia. All the other languages of the family outside that region belong to subclades of just one of those deep clades. This kind of cladistic distribution is a basic criterion of the genetic argument for the genetic lineage origins well understood by geneticists. It applies to linguistic history as well." (Ancient Local Evolution of African mtDNA Haplogroups in Tunisian Berber Populations). Frigi et al. Human Biology, 82:4, August, 2010)
Dassanech young woman of Ethiopia - The Dassanech are Omotic-speaking. They speak an "Afro-Asiatic" dialect |
It should now be realized by Africans, if by no one else, the global spread of Afroasiatic culture begins much further back than has lately been suspected. The 12th millenium B.C. pre-pottery neolithic (PPN) site of Gobekli Tepe in Anatolia (now modern Turkey ) has now shown clear connections between the earliest cultures of Turkey (such as Catal Huyuk) and those of megalithic Europe and Northern Africa some of which were of course pointed out by scholars over a century ago.
One author - Andrew Collins - calling himself a science writer (but more like a pop science writer) has this to say:
"The main relationship between key PPN sites such as Göbekli Tepe and Nevali Çori is the fact that their layout, design and art are the same. They were constructed by the same unique race of people. They connect with Çatal Hüyük because this was a latter development of the same high culture, and so this city - excavated first in the early 1960s by British archaeologist James Mellaart - can tell us much about the earlier cults at places such as Göbekli Tepe and Nevali Çori. Like, for example, the Neolithic cult of the dead. At Çatal Hüyük we find frescoes of vultures accompanying the soul of the deceased into the next world, and also of shamans taking the form of vultures for presumed shamanic practices, such as contacting or journeying into the other world. Since statues of birdmen, as well as those of vultures, have been found at both Göbekli Tepe and Nevali Çori, we can be pretty sure that the same cult existed here as far back as 11,500-10,000 BP."
However, leaving out the comment about a "unique race of people", the truth is that these people of the "high culture" of Catal Huyuk and pre-pottery Neolithic cultures of the Levant were in fact a link between the very ancient culture of Nilotic northeast Africa, Mesopotamia and the megalithic cultures of western Europe and northern Africa - all for the most part occupied predominately by a population that has skeletal or morphological affinities and traits "unique" to the Africans now called "sub-Saharan".
The discovery of Gobekli Tepe also lends credence to the supposition by some scientists that the pyramid complex and sphinx in Egypt dates back much earlier than is being formally acknowledged and to the supposition by Ehret, Bauval and other open-minded thinkers dating back to Higgins and Massey that the civilization of African-Asiatics was once more widespread and global in nature and more ancient than is presently believed.After all, some say the Ishango bone tracking lunar phases and purportedly having some connection to the Rhind papyrus in ancient Eygpt dates back some 25,000 or more years ago. These connections, however, are a subject to be discussed in a forthcoming page of this blog. : )
Reflecting the appearance of the earliest Semitic-speakers are East Africa's "Cushites" |
Not too long ago, Edward Lipinski, a well- known specialist in the “semitic” dialects and grammar had the following to say about the movement of the original “semite” from Africa as well as the rather widespread geographical situation of their ancestors in ancient times.
"This implies that the speakers of Proto-Semitic were still dwelling in Africa in the 5th millennium B.C., in the Neolithic Sub-pluvial (ca. 5500-3500 B.C.), when the Sahara’s climate was much wetter, so that erosion took place as in other moist temperate subtropical regions…Settlement was undoubtedly widespread in the Sahara at that time and there is ample evidence of Neolithic culture with rock drawings showing animals that no longer live there. A worsening of environmental conditions is indicated in North Africa ca. 3500 B.C. with disappearance of vegetation, a major faunal break, desertification and desertion. This might have been the period when the speakers of Proto-Semitic passed through the Nile delta from the West to the East, and reached Western Asia, where written documents of the third millennium B.C. preserve noticeable traces of Pre-Semitic and, in Mesopotamia, also of Pre-Sumerian substratum. The collapse of the Ghassulian culture in Palestine around 3300 B.C. and the Egyptian finds in southern Palestine from the Early Bronze period I (ca.3300-3050 B.C. ) may testify to the arrival of these new population groups. The Palestinian tumuli, belonging to the culture of seminomadic groups during much of the fourth and third millenia B.C. seem to confirm this hypothesis, since a very similar type of sepulture characterizes prehistoric North Africa, especially Algeria and it is a typical feature of the old Libyco-Berber tradition. It is now attested also in the Eastern Sahara, where the megalithic complex and the tumuli of Nabta Playa, about 100 km west of Abu Simbel, are dated from the fifth millennium B.C. Thus, from North Africa, wave after wave of Semitic migrations would seem to have set forth. The earliest of these migrants and those who went furthest to the East, were the Akkadians who, journeying along the Fertile Crescent through Palestine and Syria, and crossing over into Mesopotamia, reached Northern Babylonia ca. 3000 B.C. and founded the first Semitic Empire at Kish ….The Amorites and their congeners would appear to have followed as far as Syria before the 2500 B.C. The Southern Semites would seem to have reached the moister highlands of the Yemen and Hadramawt after 2000 B.C. following the collapse of the Early Bronze culture in Palestine, while the Ethiopians would have crossed over to the Horn of Africa when drier conditions prevailed in South Arabia ca. 1500-500 B.C. …The Libyco-Berbers continued, instead, to occupy the original language area of the speakers of Afro-Asiatic. Their African origins may even be confirmed by a possible relationship of Afro-Asiatic with Bantu languages which form the central group of the large Niger-Congo family …” (Lipinski, 2001, pp. 44 and 45) See Semitic Languages by Edward Lipinski
Lipinski
acknowledges in those paragraphs that the African ancestors of the original “semites” left in “wave
after wave” from Africa and colonized certain regions of the Near East and that
some immigrated back into Africa or Abyssinia. Since he published this book a little over 10
years ago there have been new discoveries showing that the southern Arabian
landscape was filled with an ancient Afro-Asian culture as early as the 3rd
and 4th millenium BC - and even earlier in some areas. Thus, he was a little off in the dating of
the presence of Semites there through no fault of his own.
More is also known
about the dates of the astronomically-based, megalithic complexes of Nabta
Playa in the Nubian desert, and the African
peoples occupying that area at the time. The culture in this region dates back
before the 6th millennium B.C.
Megaliths from the Nubian desert - Nabta Playa - displayed in an Aswan Museum For more on Nabta Playa, its megaliths and the African's who made them see Robert Bauval's relatively entertaining book - (Black Genesis The Prehistoric Origins of Ancient Egypt.)
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Megaliths from Central Africa from the rural town of Bouar in the Central African Republic. They are said to date to a little later than those from Nabta Playa.
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Christopher Ehret
one of the world's foremost specialists in African archaeology and
linguistics also has even more recently suggested a different scenario than Lipinski's suggesting the ancestors of the semitic speakers, which he considers “Eritraeans”, could have left Africa with an even earlier culture called the "Capsian" dating
before the 6th millennium in Northern
Africa west of Egypt.
In his book, History and the Testimony of Language, (2011), we read the following: "Among the Erythraite peoples who made Capsian civilization archaelogical cultures of those areas, domestic cattle were probably present in by sometime in the 7th millenium, if not before" (Ehret, 2011. p. 77). History and the Testimony of Language
Before that he states, "...Erythraite communities, speaking a language ancestral to the later Semitic languages moved northward at some point across the Sinai and Arabian peninsula and into the Palestine-Syrian region of far southwestern Asia." p. 76
Like Lipinski, Ehret and others have connected the bearers of “proto-semitic” or Afro-Asian culture and language to the modern East African populations formerly classified as “hamites”- the so-called "brown" or dolichocephalic "Mediterranean race" of Sergi Elliot-Smith and early physical anthropologists.
In his book, History and the Testimony of Language, (2011), we read the following: "Among the Erythraite peoples who made Capsian civilization archaelogical cultures of those areas, domestic cattle were probably present in by sometime in the 7th millenium, if not before" (Ehret, 2011. p. 77). History and the Testimony of Language
Before that he states, "...Erythraite communities, speaking a language ancestral to the later Semitic languages moved northward at some point across the Sinai and Arabian peninsula and into the Palestine-Syrian region of far southwestern Asia." p. 76
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Like Lipinski, Ehret and others have connected the bearers of “proto-semitic” or Afro-Asian culture and language to the modern East African populations formerly classified as “hamites”- the so-called "brown" or dolichocephalic "Mediterranean race" of Sergi Elliot-Smith and early physical anthropologists.
Continuing with
his discussion of the African roots of semitic-speakers, Lipinski importantly states
the following:
“…any linguistic mapping of Afro-Asiatic speakers should be complemented by an anthropological approach. The data are not so abundant as might be wished, but enough evidence is available to establish the fact that the Afro-Asians belonged basically to the long-headed or dolichocephalic Mediterranean peoples widespread in distribution in Late Neolithic and Chalcolithic times….” “…skeletal evidence seems to indicate that the same Neolithic peoples from North Africa entered the Iberian peninsula and moved into the Egyptian upper valley of the Nile in predynastic times. They are well represented by the Naqada cranial series, dated ca. 3900-3300 B.C. It reveals an increasing diversification from the preceding Badari period (4400-3900 B.C.), which probably reflects a northern or northwestern immigration…The modern descendants of the Naqada people – though frequently mixed with negroes – are found among the speakers of Cushitic languages in the Horn of Africa and the Bedja people in the desert between the Nile and the Red Sea. Characteristic artefacts of the Naqada period, suggesting connections with prehistoric Libyco-Berbers, are statuettes of bearded men wearing phallic sheaths, like those of the Libyans in historical times.” (Lipinski, pp. 44-45)
Thus, Lipinski
like earlier specialists acknowledge that the ancient Bedja and other east
Africans were at one time representative of the ancient dolichocephalic populations
that once dominated the Mediterranean in large numbers, including those who came to
populate Egypt and Bronze Age Palestine and those who passed into Europe
through Iberia and Anatolia (Catal Huyuk) contributing to the Neolithic and Pre-Pottery Neolithic populations there.
These dispersed populations are frequently found in rock art throughout East Africa, Syria, Arabia, the Sahara and Mediterranean ( including on the European side of the Mediterranean) depicting themselves as near black in complexion and in art stylistically reminiscent of the Saharan artwork.
According to Antonio Martinez this Saharan-Iberian connection is particularly true of what is called the Spanish Levantine art. He writes
An author of Indian Rock Art and its Global Context also writes "The chronological attributions of Saharan rock arts have followed a pattern that is rather similar to that which we have noted in the Spanish Levantine rock art" (Chakravarty and Bednarik, 1997, p. F-26).
Numerous of these populations in Europe were often
associated with megalithic complexes comparable to those in the eastern
Mediterranean and Africa and in fact elsewhere and have been euphemistically classified under the
term “Mediterranean” - which laymen and certain scholars have unfortunately confused
with modern inhabitants of the Mediterranean - Europeans
who are the descendants of more recent “Eurasiatics”. (The word “negroes” as
used by Lipinski and anthropologists others refers to certain of the
Niger-Congo and Nilo-Saharan-speakers in the area of Nubia.)
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Ggantije megalithic ruins - 3rd to 4th millenium BC |
These dispersed populations are frequently found in rock art throughout East Africa, Syria, Arabia, the Sahara and Mediterranean ( including on the European side of the Mediterranean) depicting themselves as near black in complexion and in art stylistically reminiscent of the Saharan artwork.
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According to Antonio Martinez this Saharan-Iberian connection is particularly true of what is called the Spanish Levantine art. He writes
"...the use of perspective tordue must remain in suspense for depicting the horns and antlers of animals depicted seen in profile is a convention common to both cave art and Levantine paintings. According to Brueil, it was first used in the Perigordian ...the same convention is found in neolithic paintings in North Africa and even later in situations which can have nothing to do with the neolithic" (Martinez, 1982, p. 67 ).
An author of Indian Rock Art and its Global Context also writes "The chronological attributions of Saharan rock arts have followed a pattern that is rather similar to that which we have noted in the Spanish Levantine rock art" (Chakravarty and Bednarik, 1997, p. F-26).
Women in rock art of Chad (in the Sahara) |
Women in art of the Spanish Levant |
British
anatomist Grafton Elliot-Smith, Haddon and other early forensic
anthropologists frequently spoke of the close or striking similarities both culturally and
osteologically amongsts these Afro-Asian populations. One variant of these ancient populations
present in both Europe and Africa, as well as southern Asia (the Near East
extending to central and southern Asia) was
described by Smith early on. He unabashedly asserted that “a
description of the bones of an Early Briton of that remote epoch might apply in all essential details to an
inhabitant of Somaliland… The people were
longheaded of small stature, skull is long, narrow and coffin shaped, brow
ridges poorly developed, forehead is narrow, vertical and often slightly
bulging…” (Smith, 1911, p. 58 -59).
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Many decades before Lipinski, Elliot-Smith in fact wrote “the
physical characteristics of the present day Nubian, Beja, Danakil, Galla, and
Somali populations, if we leave out of account the alien negro and Semitic
traits… are an obvious token of their undoubted kinship with the
proto-Egyptians” (Elliot-Smith, 1911, p. 75) The Ancient Egyptians
Because
of the implications of such revelations, which have only been confirmed by more
recent anthropological investigation and genetic studies, many apparently offended European
scholars since that time have been averse to referring to the work of the early
anthropologists, taking it upon themselves to proclaim such work theoretically unsound
or “ultra-diffusionist”. On the other hand,
most rhetoric took another direction with some anthropologists insisting that
there was some direct connection between these early black “Afro-Asians” with modern
Europeans. This diversion was of course based on racist belief that the direct
ancestors of modern Europeans were the makers of all or most of early
civilization and representative of Biblical peoples whether in Africa or elsewhere - along with the notion that sub-Saharan Africans
were in fact, “pre-Adamites”.
Hence the category
of “black Caucasians” was created, otherwise known as “the Hamite”, which was
then replaced by the adopted title dolichocephalic Mediterranean race or "long-headed Mediterranean” type. Meanwhile the rest of the people of “teeming”sub-Saharan Africa - except for those
the colonialists termed “pigmy” and “bushmen” - were simply classified under the euphemism
of “negro”. The latter is was a word which had many assigned prerequisites and meanings depending on the
conjurer, with as much significance as the term
“koolie” or “coolie” in south and east Asia, and with the added suggestion of an "uncivilized", child-like primitive, of course.
The
most recent attribution of the so-called “negro” or “sub-Saharan African”,
however, as seen in popular genetic sites
created for public consumption is being “part pygmy”. The newly espoused, and in fact,
rather amusing nature of such suggestions on sites purporting to "scientifically" analyze the
amount of African ancestry - particularly “West
African” dna - is implied by the use of the term “pygmy” itself, a colonialist
designation for the small-statured groups of Africans such as the Mbuti, Twa
and Aka in Africa who probably predate the evolution of most later African
types by thousands if not some 10s of thousands of years. These sites,
nevertheless, may have been inspired in part by earlier influential scholars
now considered pseudo-scholars, such as the eugenicist Carleton S. Coon. His
theories were once influential, but based on rather racist and obsolete views, are
not by any means taken seriously by most established anthropologists, and for
obvious reasons. *
In
reality these black so-called “Mediterraneans” present in the early
European landscapes varied in phenotype or osteological characteristics, if not
their obvious African character. The smaller variant was often described as
"superficially Negroid” in cranio-facial aspect, as with the early small “gracile,
Mediterranean type” purportedly associated with the Chamblandes and Linear
Band Ceramic cultures of France
and Anatolia. (Ironically, sometimes as in the
case of early anthropologists Guiseppe Sergi, the term “pygmoid” was applied to them as well.)
Cushitic woman of the Iraqw tribe. Cushites were once wrongly thought to be more closely affiliated with modern Europeans, than with other black Africans |
Some of the
early Mesolithic and Neolithic Natufians and Mediterranean types in Iran and Mesopotamia
were described as rather robust and significantly very prognathic in character, although Coon tried to group them with modern Englishmen and classified them
under a nebulous “Atlanto-Mediterranean” category. While others like Immanuel
Anati who studied the rock art of the Arabian peninsula, Syro-Palestine and
other parts of the Near East noted an “elongated”
“Negroid” type in the deserts of Syro-Arabia that bore likeness in appearance
both biological and cultural to modern East African pastoralists and nomadic or
semi-nomadic populations in the Neolithic Sahara and Nilotic area.
It should be noted that all of these groups depicted
themselves in their own art work as near black in aspect or complexion, similar
to those appearing in early artwork in Nubia and the Sahara. Yet it has taken decades for some scholars to
acknowledge that this presence in fact was not some monolithic “race” of black
“Caucasians”, but the out-of-Africa expressions of the
various black populations that were dispersed since the paleolithic or Holocene
period in ancient and tropical Africa. As the tropical climate and ecology in
Northern Africa turned to an arid one, and deserts overtook humid areas the
various groups of Africa all still connected by
similar haplotypes (L and E) began to modify their lifestyles and food habits,
and as a consequence were osteologically modified.
In most cases the
change to a Neolithic diet led to a more gracile form and reduction in the
cranial-masticatory complex associated with chewing. Those in the deserts also
became more elongated and narrow in their limb and facial proportions to adapt
to their environments. Nevertheless, Loring Brace was able to determine the
rather direct descent of modern east Africans from these Neolithic and
Paleolithic populations. Their
descendants now make up a great proportion of
Saharan Africa, northeast Africa and the Sahel.
The Afro-Asians that
left Africa within the last 13-15,000 years still
share many of the cultural modes and notions concerning the phenomenal world
that apparently developed solely amongst black Africans many thousands of years
ago. This is implied by the presence of matrifocal customs, totemism and
similar practices and ideological views still present among Dravidic-speaking
peoples in India and peoples speaking derivatives of the ancient Himyaritic dialects in Arabia. This also includes more specific customs, beliefs
and mores such as the presence of circumcision and making of porthole tombs
among dozens of other things highly reminiscent of their Neolithic forebearers
in Africa and Eurasia.
Some scholars are now proposing - based on genetic, cultural and linguistic connections - a link between Afroasiatic speakers and the Dravidians of India. One linguistic scholar wrote relatively recently, “Blazek (in press) has proposed that Elamite an extinct
language of the Ancient Near East, either constitutes a seventh branch of
Afroasiatic or is CO-ordinate with it. Elamite is usually classified with
Dravidian, spoken in South India, but does
show clear resemblances with Afroasiatic. Blazek proposes a structure where
Afroasiatic is related to Dravidian at a higher level and Elamite forms a
bridge between the two. Whether the links between Elamite and Afroasiatic
reflect a genetic relationship or are simply a case of extensive loanwords,
remains to be explored” (Blench, R., 2006, p. 147). See Blench's Westward Wanderings of Cushitic Pastoralists PDF here
There have already been noted several similarities between the cultures of Africans and Dravidians including "common types of round hut, common music instruments, common forms of snake worship and tree worship." In addition its been noted that a South-Indian board game pallankuli "closely resembles the African game mancalal".
The famed Professor and anthropologist Mircea Eliade who also spoke about an “Afroasian” culture extending between east Africa and southern Asia noted the Dravidic Hiranyagarbha rite as being similar to a custom documented among ancient Egyptian pharaohs.
Tamil Dravidian girl from India like many Dravidic speakers probably resembles her Afro-Asian forebearers or the original Dravidic-speakers |
Paniyar Dravidian |
There have already been noted several similarities between the cultures of Africans and Dravidians including "common types of round hut, common music instruments, common forms of snake worship and tree worship." In addition its been noted that a South-Indian board game pallankuli "closely resembles the African game mancalal".
The famed Professor and anthropologist Mircea Eliade who also spoke about an “Afroasian” culture extending between east Africa and southern Asia noted the Dravidic Hiranyagarbha rite as being similar to a custom documented among ancient Egyptian pharaohs.
Just these similarities alone would suggest a
Nilotic or Saharan affiliation of the earliest Dravidic-speaking populations before
their absorption of other settlers and movement southward from the area of Baluchistan and Elam.
*Just a note of caution for Africans about the Dienekes and some of the newer commercial websites purporting to analyze the dna of Africans.
See also the unique new blog - http://greatafricanists.blogspot.com/
Blench, R. (2006) Archaeology Language and the African Past.
Chakravarty, K. Bednarik, R. G. (1997). Indian rock art and its global context.
Elliot-Smith, G. (1911). The ancient Egyptians and their influence upon the civilization of Europe.
Ehret, C. (2011). The history and testimony of language.
Martino, A. B. (1982). Rock art of Spanish Levant. Cambridge University Press.
Lipinksi, E. ( 2001). Semitic Languages: Outline of a comparative grammar.
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