fbpx
Wikipedia

Ancient Egyptian race controversy

The question of the race of ancient Egyptians was raised historically as a product of the early racial concepts of the 18th and 19th centuries, and was linked to models of racial hierarchy primarily based on craniometry and anthropometry. A variety of views circulated about the racial identity of the Egyptians and the source of their culture.[5]

The Ancient Egyptian classification of ancient peoples (from left to right): a Libyan, a Nubian, an Asiatic, and an Egyptian. Drawing by an unknown artist after a mural of the tomb of Seti I; Copy by Heinrich Menu von Minutoli (1820). In terms of skin colour, the Libyan has the lightest complexion, followed by the Asiatic who is yellowish in appearance. The Egyptian is reddish-brown, while the Nubian is black.[1] Each group is also marked with their own distinctive hairstyles and clothing.[2] The representation of ethnic groups in Egyptian iconography has been a source of dispute among scholars.[3][4]

Some scholars argued that ancient Egyptian culture was influenced by other Afroasiatic-speaking populations in North Africa, the Horn of Africa or the Middle East, while others pointed to influences from various Nubian groups or populations in Europe. In more recent times some writers continued to challenge the mainstream view, some focusing on questioning the race of specific notable individuals such as the king represented in the Great Sphinx of Giza, native Egyptian pharaoh Tutankhamun, Egyptian Queen Tiye, and Greek Ptolemaic queen Cleopatra VII.[citation needed]

Mainstream scholars reject the notion that Egypt was a white or black civilization; they maintain that applying modern notions of black or white races to ancient Egypt is anachronistic.[6][7][8] In addition, scholars reject the notion, implicit in the notion of a black or white Egypt hypothesis, that Ancient Egypt was racially homogeneous; instead, skin color varied between the peoples of Lower Egypt, Upper Egypt, and Nubia, who in various eras rose to power in Ancient Egypt. Within Egyptian history, despite multiple foreign invasions, the demographics were not shifted substantially by large migrations.[9][10][11]

Background

In the 18th century, French philosopher and abolitionist, Constantin François de Chassebœuf, comte de Volney, in a set of comments regarding the race of the ancient Egyptians, wrote that "the Copts are the proper representatives of the Ancient Egyptians due to their jaundiced and fumed skin, which is neither Greek nor Arab, their full faces, their puffy eyes, their crushed noses, and their thick lips...the ancient Egyptians were true Negroes of the same type as all native born Africans".[12] Volney also said that the Sphinx gave him the key to the riddle as to why all the Egyptians he saw across the country "have a bloated face, puffed-up eyes, flat nose, thick lips – in a word, the true face of the mulatto." He wrote he was tempted to attribute it to the climate, but upon visiting the Sphinx, its appearance gave him the answer; "seeing that head, typically negro in all its features",[13] Volney saw it as the "true solution to the enigma (of how the modern Egyptians came to have their 'mulatto' appearance)". He goes on to postulate, "the Copts were "true negroes" of the same stock as all the autochthonous peoples of Africa" and they "after some centuries of mixing..., must have lost the full blackness of its original color."[14] Jacques Joseph Champollion-Figeac criticized Volney and called his conclusion "evidently forced and inadmissible".[15]

The leading French scientist of the 18th century, Georges Cuvier, considered the Egyptians to be Caucasian, and it was with Cuvier that Augustus Granville sided in the dissection and first scientific autopsy of an ancient Egyptian mummy in 1825.[16] Another early example of the controversy is an article published in The New-England Magazine of October 1833, where the authors dispute a claim that "Herodotus was given as authority for their being negroes." They point out with reference to tomb paintings: "It may be observed that the complexion of the men is invariably red, that of the women yellow; but neither of them can be said to have anything in their physiognomy at all resembling the Negro countenance."[17]

In 1839, Jean-François Champollion suggested that: "In the Copts of Egypt, we do not find any of the characteristic features of the ancient Egyptian population. The Copts are the result of crossbreeding with all the nations that successfully dominated Egypt. It is wrong to seek in them the principal features of the old race."[18]

This memoir was made in the context of the first tribes that would have inhabited Egypt, his opinion was noted after his return from Nubia. In 1839, Champollion's and Volney's claims were disputed by Jacques Joseph Champollion-Figeac, who blamed a misunderstanding of the ancients for spreading a false impression of a "Negro" Egypt, stating "the two physical traits of black skin and woolly hair are not enough to stamp a race as negro"[14]: 26  and "the opinion that the ancient population of Egypt belonged to the Negro African race, is an error long accepted as the truth. ... Volney's conclusion as to the Negro origin of the ancient Egyptian civilization is evidently forced and inadmissible."[15]

Gaston Maspero, a 19th-century French Egyptologist, stated that "by the almost unanimous testimony of ancient Greek historians, they Ancient Egyptians belonged to the African race, which settled in Ethiopia."[19] Heinrich Karl Brusch, a 19th-century German Egyptologist stated that "according to ethnology, the Egyptians appear to form a third branch of the Caucasian race... and this much may be regarded as certain".[20] E.A. Wallis Budge, a 19th-century British Egyptologist, argued that "There are many things in the manners and customs and religions of the historic Egyptians that suggest that the original home of their ancestors was in a country in the neighbourhood of Uganda and Land of Punt".[21]

The debate over the race of the ancient Egyptians intensified during the 19th century movement to abolish slavery in the United States, as arguments relating to the justifications for slavery increasingly asserted the historical, mental and physical inferiority of black people.[22] For example, in 1851, John Campbell directly challenged the claims by Champollion and others regarding the evidence for a black Egypt, asserting "There is one great difficulty, and to my mind an insurmountable one, which is that the advocates of the negro civilization of Egypt do not attempt to account for, how this civilization was lost.... Egypt progressed, and why, because it was Caucasian."[23] The arguments regarding the race of the Egyptians became more explicitly tied to the debate over slavery in the United States, as tensions escalated towards the American Civil War.[24]

In 1854, Josiah C. Nott with George Gliddon set out to prove "that the Caucasian or white, and the Negro races were distinct at a very remote date, and that the Egyptians were Caucasians."[25] Samuel George Morton, a physician and professor of anatomy, concluded that "Negroes were numerous in Egypt, but their social position in ancient times was the same that it now is [in the United States], that of servants and slaves."[26]

Position of modern scholarship

Modern scholars who have studied ancient Egyptian culture and population history have responded to the controversy over the race of the ancient Egyptians in various ways.

At the UNESCO "Symposium on the Peopling of Ancient Egypt and the Deciphering of the Meroitic script" in Cairo in 1974, the "Black Hypothesis" and the notion of a homogeneous population in Egypt was proposed by Cheikh Anta Diop in his chapter Origins of the Ancient Egyptians. "Numerous objections were made to the ideas propounded by Diop. These objections revealed the extent of a disagreement which remained profound even though it was not voiced explicitly." The disagreement was largely due to methodological issues,[27] for example, the insufficient data "to enable provisional conclusions to be drawn with regard to the peopling of ancient Egypt and the successive phases through which it may have passed".[28]

The arguments for all sides are recorded in the UNESCO publication General History of Africa,[29] with the "Origin of the Egyptians" chapter being written by Cheikh Anta Diop, a proponent of the "Black Hypothesis".[30] Diop's chapter was credited in the general conclusion of the symposium report by the International Scientific Committee's Rapporteur, Jean Devisse,[31] as a "painstakingly researched contribution", consequently there was a "real lack of balance" in the discussion among participants.[32][33] At the 1974 UNESCO conference, several participants other than Diop and Obenga concluded that the Neolithic Egyptian population was indigenous to the Sahara, and was made up of people from north and south of the Sahara who had a range of skin colors.[34][35] The majority of participants in the conference disagreed with Diop's and Obenga's views.[36] Similarly, none of the participants voiced support for an earlier postulation that Egyptians were "white with a dark, even black, pigmentation",[14]: 43  although Professor Ghallab stated that "the inhabitants of Egypt in Palaeolithic times were Caucasoids".[14]: 44  A forthcoming General History of Africa Volume IX will update the pre-existing volumes with recent research. This volume will feature 60 historians from 28 countries (Africa, North America, Europe, Latin America, Caribbean and Asia).[37][38]

Subsequent reviewers of the 1974 symposium debate and the UNESCO publication have presented a range of views on the outcome of the debate.[39][40][41][42] According to Larissa Nordholt, the majority of reviewers at the time saw Diop's chapter as discrediting the publication's scholarly reputation due to the suggested "weight on politics".[43]: 279  Larissa Nordholt argued that Diop's chapter was politically motivated, having been published only due to being in line with UNESCO's political imperatives, despite clashing with accepted historical methods and standards of academic rigor.[44] Peter Shinnie reviewing the GHA volume, wrote that "It seems that UNESCO and [the editor] Mokhtar were embarrassed by the unscholarly and preposterous nature of Diop's views but were unable to reject his contribution".[45] However, Bethwell Allan Ogot, a Kenyan historian and editor of UNESCO General History of Africa Volume 5, stated that “Cheikh Anta Diop wrested Egyptian civilization from the Egyptologists and restored it to the mainstream of African history”.[46] Stephen Quirke argued that the UNESCO-sponsored conference on the General History of Africa in 1974 "did not change the Eurocentric climate of research" and of the need to incorporate both African-centred studies and White European, academic perspectives. He later outlined that "research conferences and publications on the history and language of Kemet [Egypt] remain dominated, beyond 90%, by those brought up and trained in European, not African societies and languages (which include Arabic)".[47]

Since the late 20th century, as the science of human population genetics has advanced, most biological anthropologists have come to reject the notion of race as having any validity in the study of human biology.[48][49]

Frank J. Yurco outlined in a 1989 article that "In short, ancient Egypt, like modern Egypt, consisted of a very heterogeneous population".[50] He also wrote in 1990: "When you talk about Egypt, it's just not right to talk about black or white .... To take the terminology here in the United States and graft it onto Africa is anthropologically inaccurate". Yurco added that "We are applying a racial divisiveness to Egypt that they would never have accepted, They would have considered this argument absurd, and that is something we could really learn from."[51] Yurco wrote in 1996 that "the peoples of Egypt, the Sudan, and much of North-East Africa are generally regarded as a Nilotic continuity, with widely ranging physical features (complexions light to dark, various hair and craniofacial types)".[52]

Gamal Mokthar, editor of the UNESCO General History of Africa, wrote in 1990 that "It is more than probable that the African strain, black or light, is preponderant in the Ancient Egyptian, but in the present state of our knowledge it is impossible to say more".[53]

Egyptologist Miriam Lichtheim, in 1990, wrote that "The Egyptians were not Nubians, and the original Nubians were not black. Nubia gradually became black because black peoples migrated northward out of Central Africa".[54]

Bernard R. Ortiz De Montellano wrote in 1993: "The claim that all Egyptians, or even all the pharaohs, were black, is not valid. Most scholars believe that Egyptians in antiquity looked pretty much as they look today, with a gradation of darker shades toward the Sudan".[9]

Christopher Ehret wrote in 1996: "Ancient Egyptian civilization was, in ways and to an extent usually not recognized, fundamentally African. The evidence of both language and culture reveals these African roots. The origins of Egyptian ethnicity lay in the areas south of Egypt".[55]

Nancy Lovell wrote in 1999 that studies of skeletal remains indicate that the physical characteristics of ancient southern Egyptians and Nubians were "within the range of variation" for both ancient and modern indigenous peoples of the Sahara and tropical Africa, and that the distribution of population characteristics "seems to follow a clinal pattern from south to north", which may be explained by natural selection as well as gene flow between neighboring populations. Lovell outlined that "In general, the inhabitants of Upper Egypt and Nubia had the greatest biological affinity to people of the Sahara and more southerly areas". She also wrote that the archaeological and inscriptional evidence for contact between Egypt and Syro-Palestine "suggests that gene flow between these areas was very likely", and that the early Nile Valley populations were "part of an African lineage, but exhibiting local variation".[56]

Stuart Tyson Smith wrote in 2001: "Any characterization of race of the ancient Egyptians depends on modern cultural definitions, not on scientific study. Thus, by modern American standards it is reasonable to characterize the Egyptians as 'black', while acknowledging the scientific evidence for the physical diversity of Africans." He continues: "Ancient Egyptian practices show strong similarities to modern African cultures including divine kingship, the use of headrests, body art, circumcision, and male coming of-age rituals, all suggesting an African substratum or foundation for Egyptian civilisation".[57] Smith also wrote in 2004: "Egyptian art depicts Nubians with stereotypical dark skin, facial features, hairstyles, and dress, all very different from Egyptians and the other two ethnic groups, Asiatics and Libyans".[58] He adds that "no single material correlate, no matter how abundantly represented, unambiguously reflects ethnic group affiliation".[59]

Sonia Zakrzewski who wrote in 2003 studied skeletal samples from the Badarian period to the Middle Kingdom in Upper Egypt. The raw data suggested that the Ancient Egyptians in general had "tropical body plans" but that their proportions were actually "super-negroid", i.e. the limb indices are relatively longer than in many "African" populations. She proposed that the apparent development of an increasingly African body plan over time may also be due to Nubian mercenaries being included in the Middle Kingdom sample. Although, she noted that in spite of the differences in tibiae lengths among the Badarian and Early Dynastic samples, that "all samples lie relatively clustered together as compared to the other populations". Zakrzewski concluded that the "results must remain provisional due to the relatively small sample sizes and the lack of skeletal material that cross-cuts all social and economic groups within each time period."[60]

Donald B. Redford wrote in 2004 that: "The old notion of waves of "races" flowing up the Nile Valley, effecting cultural change and improvement, is now known to be as erroneous as it was simplistic. New ideas need not come by means of invasion: occasionally they are indigenous and may parallel similar discoveries elsewhere which are wholly unrelated."[61]

Robert Morkot wrote in 2005 that "The ancient Egyptians were not 'white' in any European sense, nor were they 'Caucasian'... we can say that the earliest population of ancient Egypt included African people from the upper Nile, African people from the regions of the Sahara and modern Libya, and smaller numbers of people who had come from south-western Asia and perhaps the Arabian peninsula."[62]

Barry J. Kemp wrote in 2007 that the black/white argument, though politically understandable, is an oversimplification that hinders an appropriate evaluation of the scientific data on the ancient Egyptians since it does not take into consideration the difficulty in ascertaining complexion from skeletal remains. It also ignores the fact that Africa is inhabited by many other populations besides Bantu related ("Negroid") groups. He wrote that in reconstructions of life in ancient Egypt, modern Egyptians would therefore be the most logical and closest approximation to the ancient Egyptians. Kemp also wrote that "..sample populations available from northern Egypt from before the 1st Dynasty (Merimda, Maadi and Wadi Digla) turn out to be significantly different from sample populations from early Palestine and Byblos, suggesting a lack of common ancestors over a long time" and the anthropological measurements of ancient Egyptians male limb length proportions had grouped "them with Africans rather than with Europeans".[63]

Barbara Mertz wrote in 2011: "Egyptian civilization was not Mediterranean or African, Semitic or Hamitic, black or white, but all of them. It was, in short, Egyptian."[64]

Kathryn Bard wrote in 2014: "Egyptians were the indigenous farmers of the lower Nile valley, neither black nor white as races are conceived of today".[65]

Federico Puigdevall and Albert Cañagueral wrote in 2017: "There are defenders of the theory that the pharaohs were black, and there are those who maintain they had Caucasian origins. Neither theory is provable".[66]

Nicky Nielsen wrote in 2020: "Ancient Egypt was neither black nor white, and the repeated attempt by advocates of either ideology to seize the ownership of ancient Egypt simply perpetuates an old tradition: one of removing agency and control of their heritage from the modern population living along the banks of the Nile."[67]

Marc Van De Mieroop wrote in 2021: "Some scholars have tried to determine what Egyptians could have looked like by comparing their skeletal remains with those of recent populations, but the samples are so limited and the interpretations so fraught with uncertainties that this is an unreliable approach". He concluded that ancient Egypt's "location at the edge of northeast Africa and its geography as a corridor between that continent and Asia opened it up to influences from all directions, in terms of both culture and of demography."[68]

S.O.Y. Keita wrote in 2022 on the origins and the identity of the Ancient Egyptians. He examined various forms of evidence which included archaeology, historical linguistics and biological data to determine the population affinities. He concluded that "various disciplines indicate the groundings of Egypt within Northeastern Africa" and the ancient Egyptians "were a people and society that emerged in the Saharo-Nilotic region of Northeast Africa".[69] Keita also reviewed studies on the biological affinities of the Ancient Egyptian population and wrote in 1993 that the original inhabitants of the Nile Valley were primarily a variety of indigenous Northeast Africans from the areas of the desiccating Sahara and more southerly areas. He also added that whilst Egyptian society became more socially complex and biologically varied, the "ethnicity of the Niloto-Saharo-Sudanese origins did not change".[70]

William Stiebling and Susan Helft wrote in 2023 on the historical debate concerning the race and ethnicity of the ancient Egyptians in light of recent evidence. They argued that the physical appearances would have varied along a continuum from the Delta to the Nile’s source regions in the south. The authors specified that “some ancient Egyptians looked more Middle Eastern and others looked more Sudanese or Ethiopians of today, and some may even have looked like other groups in Africa”. The authors reached the view that “Egypt was a unique civilization with genetic and cultural ties linking it to other African cultures to its south and west and to Mediterranean and Near Eastern cultures to its north”.[71]

Scholarly views on bias in the historical and modern interpretations in the race controversy

Various scholars have highlighted the role of colonial racism in shaping the attitudes of early Egyptologists, and criticised the continued over-representation of North American and European perspectives in the field.[72][73][74][42][75] Diop in his work, "The African Origin of Civilization" argued that the prevailing views in Egyptology were driven by biased scholarship and colonial attitudes.[76][77] Similarly, Bruce Trigger wrote that early modern scholarship on the Nile Valley populations had been "marred by a confusion of race, language, and culture and by an accompanying racism".[78]

Stuart Tyson Smith wrote in 2018 that a common practice among Egyptologists was to "divorce Egypt from its proper northeast African context, instead framing it as fundamentally part of a Near Eastern or "Mediterranean" economic, social and political sphere, hardly African at all or at best a crossroad between the Near East, the eastern Mediterranean and Africa, which carries with it the implication that it is ultimately not really part of Africa". He explicitly criticises Van De Mieroop's comments that ancient Egypt was clearly 'in Africa' it was not so clearly 'of Africa' as reflecting "long-standing Egyptological biases". He concluded that the interrelated cultural features shared between northeast African dynamic and Pharaonic Egypt are not "survivals" or coincidence, but shared traditions with common origins in the deep past".[79]

Andrea Manzo wrote in 2022 that early Egyptologists had situated the origins of dynastic Egypt within a "broad Hamitic horizon that characterised several regions of Africa" and that these views had continued to dominate in the second half of the twentieth century. Manzo stated more recent studies had "pointed out the relevance of African elements to the rise of Egyptian culture, following earlier suggestions on Egyptian kingship and religion by Henri Frankfort" which countered the traditional view that considered Egypt "more closely linked to the Near East than to the rest of Africa".[80]

Ehret recounted in 2023 that the previous two centuries of Western scholarship had presented Egypt as an “offshoot of earlier Middle Eastern developments”. He continued to argue that these old ideas had influenced the attitudes of scholars in other disciplines such as genetics and their approaches even when existing archaeological, linguistic and biological anthropological evidence had determined the founding locales of Ancient Egypt to be the descendants of longtime populations in Northeastern Africa which included Nubia and the northern Horn of Africa.[81]

Genetic studies have been criticised by several scholars for a range of methodological problems and providing misleading racial classifications.[82][83][84][85][86][87][88] Boyce and Keita argued that certain studies have adopted a selective approach in sampling, such as using samples drawn mostly from northern (Lower) Egypt, which has historically had the presence of more foreigners from the Mediterranean and the Near East, and using those samples as representing the rest of Egypt. Thus, excluding the 'darker' south or Upper Egypt which presents a false impression of Egyptian variability. The authors also note that chromosomal patterns have featured inconsistent labelling such as Haplotype V as seen the with use of misleading terms like "Arabic" to describe it, implying this haplotype is of 'Middle Eastern' origins. However, when the haplotype V variant is looked at in context, it does have a very high prevalence in African countries above the Sahara and in Ethiopia.[89]

In 2022, Danielle Candelora criticised how modern DNA studies are misused for political and racist agendas. As an example she cites the media echo about the Schuenemann genome study published in 2017, which was "sensationalized in the media as proof that Egyptians were not black Africans" in spite of its methodological limits, and taken by white suprematists as "scientific evidence" to justify their view on the achievements of the Ancient Egyptian civilisation. Candelora also noted that the media overlooked methodological limitations with the study such as the "untested sampling methods, small sample size, and problematic comparative data".[90] However an unpublished, follow-up study in 2022 sampled six different excavation sites along the entire length of the Nile Valley, spanning 4000 years of Egyptian history, and the 18 high quality mitochondrial genomes that were reconstructed which the authors argued supported the results from the 2017 Schuenemann genome study.[91]

Present-day controversies

Today the issues regarding the race of the ancient Egyptians are "troubled waters which most people who write about ancient Egypt from within the mainstream of scholarship avoid."[92] The debate, therefore, takes place mainly in the public sphere and tends to focus on a small number of specific issues.

Tutankhamun

 
Mask of Tutankhamun

Several scholars, including Diop, have claimed that Tutankhamun was black, and have protested that attempted reconstructions of Tutankhamun's facial features (as depicted on the cover of National Geographic magazine) have represented the king as "too white". Among these writers was Chancellor Williams, who argued that King Tutankhamun, his parents, and grandparents were black.[93]

Forensic artists and physical anthropologists from Egypt, France, and the United States independently created busts of Tutankhamun, using a CT-scan of the skull. Biological anthropologist Susan Anton, the leader of the American team, said the race of the skull was "hard to call". She stated that the shape of the cranial cavity indicated an African, while the nose opening suggested narrow nostrils, which is usually considered to be a European characteristic. The skull was thus concluded to be that of a North African.[94] Other experts have argued that neither skull shapes nor nasal openings are a reliable indication of race.[95]

Although modern technology can reconstruct Tutankhamun's facial structure with a high degree of accuracy, based on CT data from his mummy,[96][97] determining his skin tone and eye color is impossible. The clay model was therefore given a coloring, which, according to the artist, was based on an "average shade of modern Egyptians".[98]

 
Tiye, grandmother of Tutankhamun

Terry Garcia, National Geographic's executive vice president for mission programs, said, in response to some of those protesting against the Tutankhamun reconstruction:

The big variable is skin tone. North Africans, we know today, had a range of skin tones, from light to dark. In this case, we selected a medium skin tone, and we say, quite up front, 'This is midrange.' We will never know for sure what his exact skin tone was or the color of his eyes with 100% certainty.... Maybe in the future, people will come to a different conclusion.[99]

When pressed on the issue by American activists in September 2007, the Secretary General of the Egyptian Supreme Council of Antiquities, Zahi Hawass stated "Tutankhamun was not black."[100]

In a November 2007 publication of Ancient Egypt magazine, Hawass asserted that none of the facial reconstructions resemble Tut and that, in his opinion, the most accurate representation of the boy king is the mask from his tomb.[101] The Discovery Channel commissioned a facial reconstruction of Tutankhamun, based on CT scans of a model of his skull, back in 2002.[102][103]

Stuart Tyson Smith, Egyptologist and professor of anthropology at University of California, Santa Barbara, in 2008 expressed criticism of the forensic reconstruction in a journal review, noting that "Tutankhamun's face" was "very light-skinned" which reflected a "bias" among media outlets. He further added that "Egyptologists have been strangely reluctant to admit that the ancient Egyptians were rather dark-skinned Africans, especially the farther south one goes".[104]

In 2011, the genomics company iGENEA launched a Tutankhamun DNA project based on genetic markers that it indicated it had culled from a Discovery Channel special on the pharaoh. According to the firm, the microsatellite data suggested that Tutankhamun belonged to the haplogroup R1b1a2, the most common paternal clade among males in Western Europe. Carsten Pusch and Albert Zink, who led the unit that had extracted Tutankhamun's DNA, chided iGENEA for not liaising with them before establishing the project. After examining the footage, they also concluded that the methodology the company used was unscientific with Putsch calling them "simply impossible".[105]

 
A painted, wooden figure of Tutankhamun found in his royal tomb

A 2020 DNA study by Gad, Hawass et al., analysed mitochondrial and Y-chromosomal haplogroups from Tutankhamun's family members of the 18th Dynasty, using comprehensive control procedures to ensure quality results. They found that the Y-chromosome haplogroup of the family was R1b, which originated in Europe and which today makes up 50–90% of the genetic pool of modern western Europeans. The mitochondrial haplogroup was K, which is most likely also part of a Near Eastern lineage. The profiles for Tutankhamun and Amenhotep III were incomplete and the analysis produced differing probability figures despite having concordant allele results.[106]

Because the relationships of these two mummies with the KV55 mummy had previously been confirmed in an earlier study, the haplogroup prediction of both mummies could be derived from the full profile of the KV55 data. The 20th Dynasty pair of Ramesses III and his son were found to have the haplogroup E1b1a, which has its highest frequencies in modern populations from West Africa and Central Africa, but which is rare among North Africans and nearly absent in East Africa.[106] Genetic analysis indicated the following haplogroups:

In 2010 Hawass et al. undertook detailed anthropological, radiological, and genetic studies as part of the King Tutankhamun Family Project. The objectives included attempting to determine familial relationships among 11 royal mummies of the New Kingdom, as well to research for pathological features including potential inherited disorders and infectious diseases.[107] In 2022, S.O.Y. Keita analysed 8 Short Tandem loci (STR) data published as part of these studies by Hawass et al., using an algorithm that only has three choices: Eurasians, sub-Saharan Africans, and East Asians. Using these three options, Keita concluded that the majority of the samples, which included the genetic remains of Tutankhamun, showed a population "affinity with "sub-Saharan" Africans in one affinity analysis". However, Keita cautioned that this does not mean that the royal mummies "lacked other affiliations" which he argued had been obscured in typological thinking. Keita further added that different "data and algorithms might give different results" which reflects the complexity of biological heritage and the associated interpretation.[108]

According to historian William Stiebling and archaeologist Susan N. Helft, conflicting DNA analysis conducted by different research teams on ancient Egyptians such as the Amarna royal mummies, which included the remains of Tutankhamun, has led to a lack of consensus on the genetic makeup of the ancient Egyptians and their geographic origins.[109]

Cleopatra

The race and skin color of Cleopatra VII, the last active Hellenistic ruler of the Macedonian Greek Ptolemaic dynasty of Egypt, established in 323 BC, has also caused some debate,[110] although generally not in scholarly sources.[111] For example, the article "Was Cleopatra Black?" was published in Ebony magazine in 2012,[112] and an article about Afrocentrism from the St. Louis Post-Dispatch mentions the question, too.[113] Mary Lefkowitz, Professor Emerita of Classical Studies at Wellesley College, traces the main origins of the black Cleopatra claim to the 1946 book by J. A. Rogers called World's Great Men of Color, although noting that the idea of Cleopatra as black goes back to at least the 19th century.[114][115]

Lefkowitz refutes Rogers' hypothesis, on various scholarly grounds. The black Cleopatra claim was further revived in an essay by afrocentrist John Henrik Clarke, chair of African history at Hunter College, entitled "African Warrior Queens."[116] Lefkowitz notes the essay includes the claim that Cleopatra described herself as black in the New Testament's Book of Acts – when in fact Cleopatra had died more than sixty years before the death of Jesus Christ.[116]

 
The Berlin Cleopatra, now in the Altes Museum, 1st century BC [117]

Scholars identify Cleopatra as essentially of Greek ancestry with some Persian and Sogdian Iranian ancestry, based on the fact that her Macedonian Greek family (the Ptolemaic dynasty) had intermingled with the Seleucid aristocracy of the time.[118] Michael Grant states that Cleopatra probably had not a drop of Egyptian blood and that she "would have described herself as Greek."[119] Duane W. Roller notes that "there is absolutely no evidence" that Cleopatra was racially black African as claimed by what he dismisses as generally not "credible scholarly sources,"[111] although he speculates Cleopatra may have been one-fourth Egyptian.[120] Part of Roller's argument rests on a speculated earlier marriage between Psenptais II and a certain "Berenice", once argued to possibly be a daughter of Ptolemy VIII. However, this speculation was refuted by Egyptologist Wendy Cheshire.[121][122]

Cleopatra's official coinage (which she would have approved) and the three portrait busts of her which are considered authentic by scholars, all match each other, and they portray Cleopatra as a Greek woman.[123][124][125][126][127] Polo writes that Cleopatra's coinage presents her image with certainty, and asserts that the sculpted portrait of the "Berlin Cleopatra" head is confirmed as having a similar profile.[124] Similar to the Berlin Cleopatra, other Roman sculpted portraits of Cleopatra include diadem-wearing marble heads now located in the Vatican Museums and Archaeological Museum of Cherchell, although the latter may instead be a depiction of her daughter Cleopatra Selene II.[128][129][130] Aside from Hellenistic art, native Egyptian artworks of Cleopatra include the Bust of Cleopatra in the Royal Ontario Museum,[131] as well as stone-carved reliefs of the Temple of Hathor in the Dendera Temple complex in Egypt depicting Cleopatra and Caesarion as ruling pharaohs providing offerings to Egyptian deities.[132][133] In his Kleopatra und die Caesaren (2006), Bernard Andreae contends that this Egyptian basalt statue is like other idealized Egyptian portraits of the queen, and does not contain realistic facial features and hence adds little to the knowledge of Cleopatra's appearance.[134]

In 2009, a BBC documentary speculated that Cleopatra might have been part North African. This was based largely on the claims of Hilke Thür of the Austrian Academy of Sciences, who in the 1990s had examined a headless skeleton of a female child in a 20 BC tomb in Ephesus (modern Turkey), together with the old notes and photographs of the now-missing skull. Thür hypothesized the body as that of Arsinoe, half-sister to Cleopatra.[135][136] Arsinoe and Cleopatra shared the same father (Ptolemy XII Auletes) but may have had different mothers,[137] with Thür claiming the alleged African ancestry came from the skeleton' mother.

To date it has never been definitively proved that the skeleton is that of Arsinoe IV. Furthermore, craniometry as used by Thür to determine race is based in scientific racism that is now generally considered a pseudoscience that supported "exploitation of groups of people" to "perpetuate racial oppression" and "distorted future views of the biological basis of race."[138] When a DNA test attempted to determine the identity of the child, it was impossible to get an accurate reading since the bones had been handled too many times,[139] and the skull had been lost in Germany during World War II. Numerous studies have shown that cranial variation has a low correlation with race, and rather that cranial variation was strongly correlated with climate variables.[note 1] Mary Beard states that the age of the skeleton is too young to be that of Arsinoe (the bones said to be that of a 15–18-year-old child, with Arsinoe being around her mid twenties at her death).[155]

The 2023 Netflix documentary series Queen Cleopatra, which appears to depict Cleopatra as black, spurred a lawsuit in Egypt claiming that the documentary was distorting the reality in order to promote Afrocentrism, and that Netflix's programs were not in line with Egyptian or Islamic values.[156] Similarly, an article published by The Telegraph criticized the Netflix documentary, stating that Cleopatra was Greek, and not a tool in Netflix's war on history.[157] Classics scholar Rebecca Futo Kennedy contends that discussing whether someone was “black” or “white” is anachronistic, and that asking this question says "more about modern political investments than attempting to understand antiquity on its own terms."[158]

Great Sphinx of Giza

 
The Sphinx in profile in 2010

The identity of the model for the Great Sphinx of Giza is unknown.[159] Most experts[160] believe that the face of the Sphinx represents the likeness of the Pharaoh Khafra, although a few Egyptologists and interested amateurs have proposed different hypotheses.[citation needed]

An early description of the Sphinx, "typically negro in all its features", is recorded in the travel notes of a French scholar, Volney, who visited Egypt between 1783 and 1785[161] along with French novelist Gustave Flaubert.[162] A similar description was given in the "well-known book"[163] by Vivant Denon, where he described the sphinx as "the character is African; but the mouth, the lips of which are thick."[164] Following Volney, Denon, and other early writers, numerous Afrocentric scholars, such as Du Bois,[165][166][167] Diop[168] and Asante[169] have characterized the face of the Sphinx as Black, or "Negroid".

American geologist Robert M. Schoch has written that the "Sphinx has a distinctive African, Nubian, or Negroid aspect which is lacking in the face of Khafre".[170][171] but he was described by others such as Ronald H. Fritze and Mark Lehner of being a "pseudoscientific writer".[172][173] David S. Anderson writes in Lost City, Found Pyramid: Understanding Alternative Archaeologies and Pseudoscientific Practices that Van Sertima's claim that "the sphinx was a portrait statue of the black pharaoh Khafre" is a form of "pseudoarchaeology" not supported by evidence.[174] He compares it to the claim that Olmec colossal heads had "African origins", which is not taken seriously by Mesoamerican scholars such as Richard Diehl and Ann Cyphers.[175][full citation needed]

Kemet

km in Egyptian hieroglyphs
km biliteral kmt (place) kmt (people)


Ancient Egyptians referred to their homeland as Kmt (conventionally pronounced as Kemet). According to Cheikh Anta Diop, the Egyptians referred to themselves as "Black" people or kmt, and km was the etymological root of other words, such as Kam or Ham, which refer to Black people in Hebrew tradition.[14]: 27 [176] A review of David Goldenberg's The Curse of Ham: Race and Slavery in Early Judaism, Christianity and Islam states that Goldenberg "argues persuasively that the biblical name Ham bears no relationship at all to the notion of blackness and as of now is of unknown etymology".[177] Diop,[178] William Leo Hansberry,[178] and Aboubacry Moussa Lam[179] have argued that kmt was derived from the skin color of the Nile valley people, which Diop claimed was black.[14]: 21, 26  The claim that the ancient Egyptians had black skin has become a cornerstone of Afrocentric historiography.[178]

At the UNESCO Symposium in 1974, Sauneron, Obenga, and Diop concluded that KMT and KM meant black.[14]: 40  However, Sauneron clarified that the adjective Kmtyw means "people of the black land" rather than "black people", and that the Egyptians never used the adjective Kmtyw to refer to the various black peoples they knew of, they only used it to refer to themselves.[180]

Mainstream scholars hold that kmt means "the black land" or "the black place", and that this is a reference to the fertile black soil that was washed down from Central Africa by the annual Nile inundation. By contrast the barren desert outside the narrow confines of the Nile watercourse was called dšrt (conventionally pronounced deshret) or "the red land".[178][181] Raymond Faulkner's Concise Dictionary of Middle Egyptian translates kmt into "Egyptians",[182] Gardiner translates it as "the Black Land, Egypt".[183]

Ancient Egyptian art

 
Painting on the sarcophagus of Queen Ashayet, showing the queen with both Egyptian and Nubian servants
 
Painting of the opening of the mouth ceremony being performed on a mummy before the tomb, Anubis attending the mummy of the deceased.

Ancient Egyptian tombs and temples contained thousands of paintings, sculptures, and written works, which reveal a great deal about the people of that time. However, their depictions of themselves in their surviving art and artifacts are rendered in sometimes symbolic, rather than realistic, pigments. As a result, ancient Egyptian artifacts provide sometimes conflicting and inconclusive evidence of the ethnicity of the people who lived in Egypt during dynastic times.[184][185]

In their own art, "Egyptians are often represented in a color that is officially called dark red", according to Diop.[186] Arguing against other theories, Diop quotes Champollion-Figeac, who states, "one distinguishes on Egyptian monuments several species of blacks, differing...with respect to complexion, which makes Negroes black or copper-colored."[187] Regarding an expedition by King Sesostris, Cherubini states the following concerning captured southern Africans, "except for the panther skin about their loins, are distinguished by their color, some entirely black, others dark brown.[188]

University of Chicago scholars assert that Nubians are generally depicted with black paint, but the skin pigment used in Egyptian paintings to refer to Nubians can range "from dark red to brown to black".[189] This can be observed in paintings from the tomb of the Egyptian Huy, as well as Ramses II's temple at Beit el-Wali.[190] Also, Snowden indicates that Romans had accurate knowledge of "negroes of a red, copper-colored complexion ... among African tribes".[191]

 
Men from The Land of Punt carrying gifts, tomb of Rekhmire

Stuart Tyson Smith, Egyptologist and professor of anthropology at University of California, Santa Barbara, wrote in 2001 that "The scene of an expedition to Punt from Queen Hatshepsuis mortuary complex at Deir el-Bahri shows Puntites with red skin and facial features similar to Egyptians, long or bobbed hair, goatee beards, and kilts".[192]

Conversely, in 2003 Najovits wrote that "Egyptian art depicted Egyptians on the one hand and Nubians and other blacks on the other hand with distinctly different ethnic characteristics and depicted this abundantly and often aggressively. The Egyptians accurately, arrogantly and aggressively made national and ethnic distinctions from a very early date in their art and literature."[193] He continues, "There is an extraordinary abundance of Egyptian works of art which clearly depicted sharply contrasted reddish-brown Egyptians and black Nubians."[193]

 
Inner back side of the sarcophagus of Ashayet, a Nubian wife of Mentuhotep II in the 11th Dynasty,[194] depicting her with male and female Egyptian servants (facsimile by Charles K. Wilkinson)

In 2003, David O'Connor and Andrew Reid remarked that "Puntite and Egyptian males are assigned similarly reddish skins, but Nubians typically have darker one, and Libyans at most periods have light coloured, yellowish skin. Initially, Nubians and Puntities may have been shown as fairly similar in appearance and dress (short linen kilts), but by ca 1400 BC they are distinctly different".[195]

Barbara Mertz in 2011 wrote in Red Land, Black Land: Daily Life in Ancient Egypt: "The concept of race would have been totally alien to them [Ancient Egyptians] ...The skin color that painters usually used for men is a reddish brown. Women were depicted as lighter in complexion,[196] perhaps because they didn't spend so much time out of doors. Some individuals are shown with black skins. I cannot recall a single example of the words "black," "brown," or "white" being used in an Egyptian text to describe a person." She gives the example of one of Thutmose III's "sole companions", who was Nubian or Kushite. In his funerary scroll, he is shown with dark brown skin instead of the conventional reddish brown used for Egyptians.[64]

Table of Nations controversy

 
The "Table of Nations", from Lepsius: First row, left to right: "Aamu" (Asiatics), "Nehesu" (Nubians), and "Themehu" (Libyans); second row: a deity, "Reth" (Egyptians), "Aamu" (Asiatics)

However, Manu Ampim, a professor at Merritt College specializing in African and African American history and culture, claims in the book Modern Fraud: The Forged Ancient Egyptian Statues of Ra-Hotep and Nofret, that many ancient Egyptian statues and artworks are modern frauds that have been created specifically to hide the "fact" that the ancient Egyptians were black, while authentic artworks that demonstrate black characteristics are systematically defaced or even "modified". Ampim repeatedly makes the accusation that the Egyptian authorities are systematically destroying evidence that "proves" that the ancient Egyptians were black, under the guise of renovating and conserving the applicable temples and structures. He further accuses "European" scholars of wittingly participating in and abetting this process.[197][198]

Ampim has a specific concern about the painting of the "Table of Nations" in the Tomb of Ramesses III (KV11). The "Table of Nations" is a standard painting that appears in a number of tombs, and they were usually provided for the guidance of the soul of the deceased.[184][199] Among other things, it described the "four races of men" as follows: (translation by E.A. Wallis Budge)[199] "The first are RETH, the second are AAMU, the third are NEHESU, and the fourth are THEMEHU. The RETH are Egyptians, the AAMU are dwellers in the deserts to the east and north-east of Egypt, the NEHESU are the black races, and the THEMEHU are the fair-skinned Libyans."

The archaeologist Karl Richard Lepsius documented many ancient Egyptian tomb paintings in his work Denkmäler aus Aegypten und Aethiopien.[200] In 1913, after the death of Lepsius, an updated reprint of the work was produced, edited by Kurt Sethe. This printing included an additional section, called the "Ergänzungsband" in German, which incorporated many illustrations that did not appear in Lepsius' original work. One of them, plate 48, illustrated one example of each of the four "nations" as depicted in KV11, and shows the "Egyptian nation" and the "Nubian nation" as identical to each other in skin color and dress. Ampim has declared that plate 48 is a true reflection of the original painting, and that it "proves" that the ancient Egyptians were identical in appearance to the Nubians, even though he admits no other examples of the "Table of Nations" show this similarity. He has further accused "Euro-American writers" of attempting to mislead the public on this issue.[201]

The late Egyptologist Frank J. Yurco visited the tomb of Ramesses III (KV11), and in a 1996 article on the Ramesses III tomb reliefs he pointed out that the depiction of plate 48 in the Ergänzungsband section is not a correct depiction of what is actually painted on the walls of the tomb. Yurco notes, instead, that plate 48 is a "pastiche" of samples of what is on the tomb walls, arranged from Lepsius' notes after his death, and that a picture of a Nubian person has erroneously been labeled in the pastiche as an Egyptian person. Yurco points also to the much more recent photographs of Erik Hornung as a correct depiction of the actual paintings.[202] (Erik Hornung, The Valley of the Kings: Horizon of Eternity, 1990).

Yurco later concluded that Egyptian iconography reflected "various complexions" and that "current scholarship in Egyptology, not acknowledged often by Afrocentrists, has demonstrated that the Egyptians were most closely related to Saharan Africans, culturally and linguistically, and that such Mesopotamian influence can be inferred, came through the Nile Delta town of Buto, as part of long-distance trade".[203] He also noted that the Egyptians made distinctions between groups from Nubia, such as "Nhsy" and "Mdja" with the former group described as "darker, with frizzy hair and wore a distinctive dress".[203] Ampim nonetheless continues to argue that plate 48 shows accurately the images that stand on the walls of KV11, and he categorically accuses both Yurco and Hornung of perpetrating a deliberate deception for the purposes of misleading the public about the true race of the ancient Egyptians.[201]

Fayyum mummy portraits

 
 
 
The naturalistic Fayum mummy portraits show the diversity of Egyptians in the Roman period.

The Roman era Fayum mummy portraits attached to coffins containing the latest dated mummies discovered in the Faiyum Oasis represent a population of both native Egyptians and those with mixed Greek heritage.[204] The dental morphology of the mummies align more with the indigenous North African population than Greek or other later colonial European settlers.[205]

Black queen controversy

The late British Africanist Basil Davidson stated "Whether the Ancient Egyptians were as black or as brown in skin color as other Africans may remain an issue of emotive dispute; probably, they were both. Their own artistic conventions painted them as pink, but pictures on their tombs show they often married queens shown as entirely black being from the south."[206][207]

 
Queen Ahmose-Nefertari of the 18th Dynasty

Ahmose-Nefertari is an example. In most depictions of Ahmose-Nefertari, she is pictured with black skin,[208][209] while in some instances her skin is blue[210] or red.[211] In 1939 Flinders Petrie said "an invasion from the south...established a black queen as the divine ancestress of the XVIIIth dynasty"[212][207] He also said "a possibility of the black being symbolic has been suggested"[212] and "Nefertari must have married a Libyan, as she was the mother of Amenhetep I, who was of fair Libyan style."[212]

In 1961 Alan Gardiner, in describing the walls of tombs in the Deir el-Medina area, noted in passing that Ahmose-Nefertari was "well represented" in these tomb illustrations, and that her countenance was sometimes black and sometimes blue. He did not offer any explanation for these colors, but noted that her probable ancestry ruled out that she might have had black blood.[210] In 1974, Diop described Ahmose-Nefertari as "typically negroid."[14]: 17  In the controversial book Black Athena, the hypotheses of which have been widely rejected by mainstream scholarship, Martin Bernal considered her skin color in paintings to be a clear sign of Nubian ancestry.[213] In 1981 Michel Gitton noted that while in most artistic depictions of the queen she is pictured with black complexion,[214]: 84  there are other cases in which she is shown with a pink, golden, blue, or dark red skin color.[214]: 74–5 

Gitton called the issue of Ahmose-Nefertari's black color "a serious gap in the Egyptological research, which allows approximations or untruths."[214]: 2  He pointed out that there is no known depiction of her painted during her lifetime (she is represented with the same light skin as other represented individuals in tomb TT15, before her deification); the earliest black skin depiction appears in tomb TT161, circa 150 years after her death.[214]: 11–12, 23, 74–5 [215]: 125  Barbara Lesko wrote in 1996 that Ahmose-Nefertari was "sometimes portrayed by later generations as having been black, although her coffin portrait gives her the typical light yellow skin of women."[216]

 
A plate from Monumenti dell'Egitto e della Nubia. The gods shown here have varying skin tones, including yellow, brown, blue and black.

In 2003, Betsy Bryan wrote in The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt that "the factors linking Amenhotep I and his mother with the necropolis region, with deified rulers, and with rejuvenation generally was visually transmitted by representations of the pair with black or blue skin – both colours of resurrection."[217] In 2004 Aidan Dodson and Dyan Hilton recognized in a later depiction of the queen, "the black skin of a deity of resurrection" in connection to her role as a patron goddess of the Theban necropolis.[215]: 125  Scholars such as Joyce Tyldesley, Sigrid Hodel-Hoenes, and Graciela Gestoso Singer, argued that the skin color of Ahmose-Nefertari is indicative of her role as a goddess of resurrection, since black is both the color of the fertile land of Egypt and that of Duat, the underworld.[208]

Singer recognizes that "Some scholars have suggested that this is a sign of Nubian ancestry."[208] Singer also states a statuette of Ahmose-Nefertari at the Museo Egizio in Turin which shows her with a black face, though her arms and feet are not darkened, thus suggesting that the black coloring has an iconographic motive and does not reflect her actual appearance.[218]: 90 [219][208][220]: 78–79  In 2014, Margaret Bunson wrote that "the unusual depictions of Ahmose-Nefertari in blue-black tones of deification reflect her status and cult."[221] In a wooden votive statue of Ahmose-Nefertari, currently in the Louvre museum, her skin was painted red,[211] a color commonly seen symbolizing life or a higher being, or elevated status.[57]

Historical hypotheses

Since the second half of the 20th century, typological and hierarchical models of race have increasingly been rejected by scientists, and most scholars have held that applying modern notions of race to ancient Egypt is anachronistic.[222][223][224] The current position of modern scholarship is that the Egyptian civilization was an indigenous Nile Valley development (see population history of Egypt).[225][226][52][227][228][229] At the UNESCO symposium in 1974, several participants concluded that the ancient Egyptian population was indigenous to the Nile Valley, and was made up of people from north and south of the Sahara who were differentiated by their color.[34][230]

Black Egyptian hypothesis

The Black Egyptian hypothesis is the hypothesis that ancient Egypt was a "Black", homogeneous civilization.[231][232] At a UNESCO symposium in 1974 there was consensus that Ancient Egypt was indigenous to Africa.[32]

However, Diop's hypothesis that Ancient Egypt was a "Black" civilization was met with "numerous objections" in 1974 which revealed "a disagreement which remained profound even though it was not voiced explicitly. In respect of certain sequences, the criticisms arose out of the line of argument put forward."[233] The majority of the objections "raised were of methodological nature" which ranged from the need for reliable statistical data to further research projects in several fields such as archaeology and physical anthropology before final conclusions on the peopling of Egypt could be made.[234] There was also "total disagreement" from the majority of scholars in the 1974 conference[36] on the hypothesis that Ancient Egypt had been a homogenous population until Persian times with several scholars favouring the hypothesis of a mixed population.[235][236]

Subsequent reviewers of the 1974 symposium debate and the UNESCO publication have presented a range of views on the outcome of the debate.[39][40][41][42] Larissa Nordholt argued that Diop's chapter was politically motivated, having been published only due to being in line with UNESCO's political imperatives, despite clashing with accepted historical methods and standards of academic rigor. Nordholdt argued that Diop's views aligned with the decolonization efforts of the General History of Africa but that he premised his arguments on outdated, racialism which classified humanity into distinct groups with a biological essence. However, she did state that the contributors did “come to a general consensus that the Egyptians could not have been “white” in the same way that Europeans were” and the dissemination of Diop’s ideas contributed to a wider recognition that the Ancient Egypt was an African civilisation although his methods were “not considered entirely permissible by most of the other GHA historians”[44] According to Larissa Nordholdt, "Many reviewers, however, still objected to what they identified as an overtly political ideology within the GHA. They did not necessarily object to the flavour of that ideology, but rather to the presence of a political agenda as such. Often Diop’s chapter seemed to serve as a catalyst for that sentiment".[43]: 268–279  Peter Shinnie reviewing the General History of Africa volume, wrote that "It seems that UNESCO and [the editor] Mokhtar were embarrassed by the unscholarly and preposterous nature of Diop's views but were unable to reject his contribution".[45] However, Bethwell Allan Ogot, a Kenyan historian and editor of UNESCO General History of Africa Volume 5, stated that “Cheikh Anta Diop wrested Egyptian civilization from the Egyptologists and restored it to the mainstream of African history”.[46] Stephen Quirke argued that the UNESCO-sponsored conference on the General History of Africa in 1974 "did not change the Eurocentric climate of research" and of the need to incorporate both African-centred studies and White European, academic perspectives. He later outlined that "research conferences and publications on the history and language of Kemet [Egypt] remain dominated, beyond 90%, by those brought up and trained in European, not African societies and languages (which include Arabic)".[237]

The Black Egyptian hypothesis includes a particular focus on links to Sub Saharan cultures and the questioning of the race of specific notable individuals from Dynastic times, including Tutankhamun[238] the person represented in the Great Sphinx of Giza,[231][239][240] and the Greek Ptolemaic queen Cleopatra.[241][242][243][244] Advocates of the Black African model rely heavily on writings from Classical Greek historians, including Strabo, Diodorus Siculus, Ammianus Marcellinus, and Herodotus. Advocates claim that these "classical" authors referred to Egyptians as "Black with woolly hair".[note 2] The Greek word used was "melanchroes", and the English language translation of this Greek word is disputed, being translated by many as "dark-skinned"[249][250] and by many others as "black".[note 3][note 6]

Other claims used to support the Black Hypothesis included anthropological measurements of Egyptian mummies, testing melanin levels in a small sample of mummies,[14]: 20, 37 [276] language affinities between ancient Egyptian language and sub-saharan languages,[14]: 28, 39–41, 54–55 [277] interpretations of the origin of the name Kmt, conventionally pronounced Kemet, used by the ancient Egyptians to describe themselves or their land (depending on points of view),[14]: 27, 38, 40  biblical traditions,[278][14]: 27–28  shared B blood group between Egyptians and West Africans,[14]: 37  and interpretations of the depictions of the Egyptians in numerous paintings and statues.[279]

The hypothesis also claimed cultural affiliations, such as circumcision,[280] matriarchy, totemism, hair braiding, head binding,[281] and kingship cults.[282] Artifacts found at Qustul (near Abu Simbel – Modern Sudan) in 1960–64 were seen as showing that ancient Egypt and the A-Group culture of Nubia shared the same culture and were part of the greater Nile Valley sub-stratum,[283][284][285][286][287] but more recent finds in Egypt indicate that the Qustul rulers probably adopted/emulated the symbols of Egyptian pharaohs.[288][289][290][291][292][293]

Authors and critics state the hypothesis is primarily adopted by Afrocentrists.[294][295][296][297][298][299][300][301] The current position of modern scholarship is that the Egyptian civilization was an indigenous Nile Valley development (see population history of Egypt).[225][226][52][227][228][229]

Asiatic race theory

This theory was the most dominant view from the Early Middle Ages (c. 500 AD) until the early 19th century.[5][302][163] The descendants of Ham were traditionally considered to be the darkest-skinned branch of humanity, either because of their geographic allotment to Africa or because of the Curse of Ham.[303][163] Thus, Diop cited Gaston Maspero "Moreover, the Bible states that Mesraim, son of Ham, brother of Chus (Kush) ... and of Canaan, came from Mesopotamia to settle with his children on the banks of the Nile."[304]

By the 20th century, the Asiatic race theory and its various offshoots were abandoned but were superseded by two related theories: the Eurocentric Hamitic hypothesis, asserting that a Caucasian racial group moved into North and East Africa from early prehistory subsequently bringing with them all advanced agriculture, technology and civilization, and the Dynastic race theory, proposing that Mesopotamian invaders were responsible for the dynastic civilization of Egypt (c. 3000 BC). In sharp contrast to the Asiatic race theory, neither of these theories proposes that Caucasians were the indigenous inhabitants of Egypt.[305]

At the UNESCO "Symposium on the Peopling of Ancient Egypt and the Deciphering of the Meroitic Script" in Cairo in 1974, none of the participants explicitly voiced support for any theory where Egyptians were Caucasian with a dark pigmentation."[14]: 43 [29] The current position of modern scholarship is that the Egyptian civilization was an indigenous Nile Valley development (see population history of Egypt).[225][226][52][227][228][229]

Caucasian / Hamitic hypothesis

 
1889 ethnographic map of Africa, showing the supposed Hamites in white.

The Caucasian hypothesis, which has been rejected by mainstream scholarship, is the hypothesis that the Nile valley "was originally peopled by a branch of the Caucasian race".[306] It was proposed in 1844 by Samuel George Morton, who acknowledged that Negroes were present in ancient Egypt but claimed they were either captives or servants.[307] George Gliddon (1844) wrote: "Asiatic in their origin .... the Egyptians were white men, of no darker hue than a pure Arab, a Jew, or a Phoenician."[308]

The similar Hamitic hypothesis, which has been rejected by mainstream scholarship, developed directly from the Asiatic Race Theory, and argued that the Ethiopid and Arabid populations of the Horn of Africa were the inventors of agriculture and had brought all civilization to Africa. It asserted that these people were Caucasians, not Negroid. It also rejected any Biblical basis despite using Hamitic as the theory's name.[309] Charles Gabriel Seligman in his Some Aspects of the Hamitic Problem in the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan (1913) and later works argued that the ancient Egyptians were among this group of Caucasian Hamites, having arrived in the Nile Valley during early prehistory and introduced technology and agriculture to primitive natives they found there.[310]

The Italian anthropologist Giuseppe Sergi (1901) believed that ancient Egyptians were the Eastern African (Hamitic) branch of the Mediterranean race, which he called "Eurafrican". According to Sergi, the Mediterranean race or "Eurafrican" contains three varieties or sub-races: the African (Hamitic) branch, the Mediterranean "proper" branch and the Nordic (depigmented) branch.[311] Sergi maintained in summary that the Mediterranean race (excluding the depigmented Nordic or 'white') is: "a brown human variety, neither white nor Negroid, but pure in its elements, that is to say not a product of the mixture of Whites with Negroes or Negroid peoples".[312]

Grafton Elliot Smith modified the theory in 1911,[313] stating that the ancient Egyptians were a dark haired "brown race",[314] most closely "linked by the closest bonds of racial affinity to the Early Neolithic populations of the North African littoral and South Europe",[315] and not Negroid.[316] Smith's "brown race" is not synonymous or equivalent with Sergi's Mediterranean race.[317] The Hamitic Hypothesis was still popular in the 1960s and late 1970s and was supported notably by Anthony John Arkell and George Peter Murdock.[318][319]

At the UNESCO "Symposium on the Peopling of Ancient Egypt and the Deciphering of the Meroitic Script" in Cairo in 1974, none of the participants explicitly voiced support for any theory where Egyptians were Caucasian with a dark pigmentation."[14]: 43 [29] The current position of modern scholarship is that the Egyptian civilization was an indigenous Nile Valley development (see population history of Egypt).[225][226][52][228][227][320]

Turanid race hypothesis

The Turanid race hypothesis, which has been rejected by mainstream scholarship, is the hypothesis that the ancient Egyptians belonged to the Turanid race, linking them to the Tatars.

It was proposed by Egyptologist Samuel Sharpe in 1846, who was "inspired" by some ancient Egyptian paintings, which depict Egyptians with sallow or yellowish skin. He said "From the colour given to the women in their paintings we learn that their skin was yellow, like that of the Mongul Tartars, who have given their name to the Mongolian variety of the human race.... The single lock of hair on the young nobles reminds us also of the Tartars."[321]

The current position of modern scholarship is that the Egyptian civilization was an indigenous Nile Valley development (see population history of Egypt).[225][226][52][227][228][229]

Dynastic race theory

The Dynastic race theory, which has been rejected by modern scholarship, is the hypothesis that a Mesopotamian force had invaded Egypt in predynastic times, imposed itself on the indigenous Badarian people, and become their rulers.[225][322] The Mesopotamian-founded state or states were supposed to have conquered both Upper and Lower Egypt and founded the First Dynasty of Egypt.

The theory was proposed in the early 20th century by Flinders Petrie, who deduced that skeletal remains found at pre-dynastic sites at Naqada (Upper Egypt) indicated the presence of two different races, with one race differentiated physically by a noticeably larger skeletal structure and cranial capacity.[323] Petrie also noted new architectural styles—the distinctly Mesopotamian "niched-façade" architecture—pottery styles, cylinder seals and a few artworks, as well as numerous predynastic rock and tomb paintings depicting Mesopotamian style boats, symbols, and figures. Based on plentiful cultural evidence, Petrie concluded that the invading ruling elite was responsible for the seemingly sudden rise of Egyptian civilization. In the 1950s, the dynastic race theory was widely accepted.[226][322][225]

While there is clear evidence the Naqada II culture borrowed abundantly from Mesopotamia, the Naqada II period had a large degree of continuity with the Naqada I period,[324] and the changes which did happen during the Naqada periods happened over significant amounts of time.[325] The most commonly held view today is that the achievements of the First Dynasty were the result of a long period of cultural and political development,[225] and the current position of modern scholarship is that the Egyptian civilization was an indigenous Nile Valley development.[225][226][52][326][227][229]

Frank Yurco stated that depictions of pharonic iconography such as the royal crowns, Horus falcons and victory scenes were concentrated in the Upper Egyptian Naqada culture and A-Group Nubia. He further elaborated that "Egyptian writing arose in Naqadan Upper Egypt and A-Group Nubia, and not in the Delta cultures, where the direct Western Asian contact was made, [which] further vititates the Mesopotamian-influence argument".[327] According to David Wengrow, the A-Group polity of the late 4th millenninum BCE is poorly understood since most of the archaeological remains are submerged underneath Lake Nasser.[328]

The Senegalese Egyptologist Cheikh Anta Diop fought against the dynastic race theory with his own "Black Egyptian" theory and claimed, among other things, that Eurocentric scholars supported the dynastic race theory "to avoid having to admit that Ancient Egyptians were black".[329] Martin Bernal proposed that the dynastic race theory was conceived by European scholars to deny Egypt its African roots.[330]

Reactions in modern Egypt

In 2023, American comedian Kevin Hart's planned tour of Egypt was cancelled, after an uproar on Egyptian social media over Afrocentric claims made by Hart about Egyptian history.[331]

In response to the Hart controversy, Egyptian Egyptologist Zahi Hawass stated that "Africans have nothing to do with the pyramids scientifically"[332][333] Hawass has previously commented on the race controversy and expressed the view that the Ancient Egyptians were not black and “We believe that the origin of Ancient Egyptians was purely Egyptian based on the discovery made by British Egyptologist Flinders Petrie at Naqada, and this is why the Ancient Egyptian civilisation did not occur in Africa, it occurred only here”.[334] Hawass had also affirmed that "No Africans built the pyramids because Kushites didn't exist at the period when the pyramids were built" and dismissed the "notions that Egyptians are Black Africans despite our presence in Africa".[335]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ In 1912, Franz Boas argued that cranial shape was heavily influenced by environmental factors and could change within a few generations under differing conditions, thereby making the cephalic index an unreliable indicator of inherited influences such as ethnicity.[140] Gravlee, Bernard and Leonard (2003),[141][142] Beals, Smith, and Dodd (1984) and Williams and Armelagos (2005) similarly posited that "race" and cranial variation had low correlations, and proposed that cranial variation was instead strongly correlated with climate variables.[143][144] Brace (1993) differentiated adaptive cranial traits from non-adaptive cranial traits, asserting that only the non-adaptive cranial traits served as reliable indicators of genetic relatedness between populations.[145] This was further corroborated in studies by von Cramon-Taubadel (2008, 2009a, 2011).[146][147][148] Clement and Ranson (1998) estimated that cranial analysis yields a 77%-95% rate of accuracy in determining the racial origins of human skeletal remains.[149] FORDISC, an interactive discriminant functions program,[150] is used by forensic anthropologists to assist in the creation of a decedent's biological profile when only parts of the cranium are available. The software uses discriminant function analysis to sort individuals into specific groups that are defined by certain criteria,[151] by comparing potential profiles to data contained in a database of skeletal measurements of modern humans.[152] However a 2009 study found that even in favourable circumstances, FORDISC 3.0 can be expected to classify no more than 1 percent of specimens with confidence."[153] In 2012, research presented at the 81st Annual Meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists concluded that ForDisc ancestry determination was not always consistent, that the program does not perform to expectations and that it should be used with caution.[154]
  2. ^ [245][246][247]: 316–321 [232]: 52–53 [248]: 21 
  3. ^ [246][232]: 52–53 [248]: 15–60 [251][252][253]
  4. ^ [259][260]: 1 [261][262][263][264]
  5. ^ [265][266][267][268][269][270][271][272][273][274][275]
  6. ^ Diop said "Herodotus applied melanchroes to both Ethiopians and Egyptians...and melanchroes is the strongest term in Greek to denote blackness."[254] According to historian and classicist to Alan B. Lloyd "there is no linguistic justification" for relating the term Melanchroes to blacks, since it "could denote any colour from bronzed to black (LSJ p. 1094, b)".[255] Snowden claims that Diop is distorting his classical sources and is quoting them selectively.[256] According to Snowden, "both Egyptians and Ethiopians as melanes, but mentions only Ethiopians, not Egyptians, as having exceedingly woolly hair. In short, Ethiopians whose skin was the blackest and whose hair was the woolliest or most tightly curled of all mankind were the only people in classical texts who correspond roughly to the concept of blacks or Negroes as generally understood in modern usage".[257] Keita specified that the historical accounts of the ancient Greeks were of limited value as "they were not working within modern science" and it remained unclear if distinctions between Egyptians and Ethiopians were cultural rather than biological at certain times. He also added that "some Greeks reported that Egypt was an Ethiopian colony".[258] There is dispute about the historical accuracy of the works of Herodotus – some scholars support the reliability of Herodotus[note 4] while other scholars regard his works as being unreliable as historical sources, particularly those relating to Egypt.[note 5]

References

  1. ^ Burrell, Kevin (2019). "Cushite Ethnic Identity in the Context of Ancient Egypt". Cushites in the Hebrew Bible. Brill Publishing. p. 99. doi:10.1163/9789004418769_004. ISBN 978-90-04-41876-9. S2CID 214258815.
  2. ^ Eaverly, Mary Ann (2013). Tan Men/Pale Women: Color and Gender in Archaic Greece and Egypt, a Comparative Approach. University of Michigan Press. p. 35. ISBN 978-0-472-11911-0.
  3. ^ Matić, Uroš (November 2020). "Ethnic Identities in the Land of the Pharaohs: Past and Present Approaches in Egyptology". Elements in Ancient Egypt in Context. doi:10.1017/9781108885577. ISBN 978-1108885577. S2CID 229429843.
  4. ^ Sabbahy, Lisa (2019). All things ancient Egypt : an encyclopedia of the ancient Egyptian world. Santa Barbara, California. pp. 158–160. ISBN 978-1440855122.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  5. ^ a b Sanders 1969, pp. 521–532.
  6. ^ Lefkowitz, Mary R.; Rogers, Guy Maclean (1996). Black Athena Revisited. UNC Press Books. p. 162. ISBN 978-0807845554. Retrieved May 28, 2016 – via Google Books.
  7. ^ Bard, Kathryn A.; Shubert, Steven Blake (1999). Encyclopedia of the Archaeology of Ancient Egypt. Routledge. p. 329. ISBN 978-0415185899. Retrieved May 28, 2016 – via Google Books.
  8. ^ Howe, Stephen (1999). Afrocentrism: Mythical Pasts and Imagined Homes. Verso. p. 19. ISBN 978-1859842287. Retrieved May 28, 2016 – via Google Books.
  9. ^ a b Montellano, Bernard R. Ortiz De (1993). "Melanin, afrocentricity, and pseudoscience". American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 36 (S17): 33–58. doi:10.1002/ajpa.1330360604. ISSN 1096-8644.
  10. ^ "Slavery, Genocide and the Politics of Outrage". MERIP. March 6, 2005. Retrieved March 8, 2020.
  11. ^ Brace, C. Loring; Tracer, David P.; Yaroch, Lucia Allen; Robb, John; Brandt, Kari; Nelson, A. Russell (1993). "Clines and clusters versus 'Race': a test in ancient Egypt and the case of a death on the Nile". American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 36 (S17): 1–31. doi:10.1002/ajpa.1330360603.
  12. ^ Chasseboeuf 1787, pp. 74–77.
  13. ^ Diop 1974, p. 27.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Mokhtar, G. (1990). General History of Africa II: Ancient Civilizations of Africa. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. pp. 1–118. ISBN 978-0-520-06697-7.
  15. ^ a b Milton & Bandia 2009, p. 215.
  16. ^ Riggs, Christina (2014). Unwrapping Ancient Egypt. A&C Black. p. 71. ISBN 978-0-85785-677-7.
  17. ^ "Original Papers: Ancient Egyptians". The New-England Magazine. 5 (4): 273–280. October 1833.
  18. ^ Jacques Joseph 1839, p. 27.
  19. ^ Diop, Cheikh Anta (1991). Civilization or barbarism : an authentic anthropology (Firs ed.). Brooklyn, New York. pp. Foreword (pp. 1–10). ISBN 1556520484.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  20. ^ Morkot, Robert (2005). The Egyptians: An Introduction. Psychology Press. p. 8. ISBN 978-0-415-27103-5.
  21. ^ Diop, Cheikh Anta (1991). Civilization or barbarism : an authentic anthropology. Brooklyn, New York. pp. Foreword (pp. 1–10). ISBN 978-1-55652-048-8.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  22. ^ Baum 2006, pp. 106–108.
  23. ^ Campbell 1851, pp. 10–12.
  24. ^ Baum 2006, pp. 105–108.
  25. ^ Baum 2006, p. 108.
  26. ^ Baum 2006, p. 105.
  27. ^ The peopling of ancient Egypt and the deciphering of Meroitic script : proceedings of the symposium held in Cairo from 28 January to 3 February 1974. Paris: Unesco. 1978. pp. 81–82. ISBN 92-3-101605-9.
  28. ^ The peopling of ancient Egypt and the deciphering of Meroitic script : proceedings of the symposium held in Cairo from 28 January to 3 February 1974. Paris: Unesco. 1978. pp. 73–88. ISBN 9231016059.
  29. ^ a b c UNESCO, Symposium on the Peopling of Ancient Egypt and the Deciphering of the Meroitic Script; Proceedings, (Paris: 1978), pp. 3–134
  30. ^ Ancient civilizations of Africa (Abridged ed.). London: J. Currey. 1990. p. 43. ISBN 0852550928.
  31. ^ Mokhtar, Gamal (1990). Ancient Civilizations of Africa (Unesco International Scientific Committee for the Drafting of a General History of Africa). Currey. pp. 33–34. ISBN 978-0-85255-092-2.
  32. ^ a b Ancient civilizations of Africa (Abridged ed.). London: J. Currey. 1990. pp. 43–46. ISBN 0852550928.
  33. ^ The peopling of ancient Egypt and the deciphering of Meroitic script : proceedings of the symposium held in Cairo from 28 January to 3 February 1974. Paris: UNESCO. 1978. pp. 86, 93–94, 99. ISBN 92-3-101605-9.
  34. ^ a b Mukhtār, Muḥammad Jamāl al-Dīn (1990). Ancient Civilizations of Africa. Currey. p. 46. ISBN 978-0852550922. Retrieved June 2, 2016.
  35. ^ The peopling of ancient Egypt and the deciphering of Meroitic script : proceedings of the symposium held in Cairo from 28 January to 3 February 1974. London: Karnak House. 1997. pp. 94–95. ISBN 978-0907015994.
  36. ^ a b Macgaffey, Wyatt (1991). "Who Owns Ancient Egypt?". The Journal of African History. 32 (3): 515–519. doi:10.1017/S0021853700031595. ISSN 1469-5138. S2CID 162117991. The majority, especially the Egyptians, disagreed with the views of Diop and Obenga.
  37. ^ "Intergovernmental Council of the Management of Social Transformations Programme, 16th, Paris, 2023". unesdoc.unesco.org.
  38. ^ "Report by the Intergovernmental Council on the activities of the Management of Social Transformation (MOST) Programme in 2022-2023". unesdoc.unesco.org.
  39. ^ a b Apena, Adeline (October 1, 1994). "G. Mokhtar, ed. UNESCO General History of Africa". Comparative Civilizations Review. 31 (31). ISSN 0733-4540.
  40. ^ a b Brett, Michael (1982). "The UNESCO History: Volume Two". The Journal of African History. 23 (1): 117–120. doi:10.1017/S0021853700020284. S2CID 245909418.
  41. ^ a b Wilks, Ivor (1982). "Book Reviews: UNESCO General History of Africa". The International Journal of African Historical Studies. 15 (2): 283–285. doi:10.2307/218551. JSTOR 218551.
  42. ^ a b c Kamugisha, Aaron (July 2003). "Finally in Africa? Egypt, from Diop to Celenko". Race & Class. 45 (1): 31–60. doi:10.1177/0306396803045001002. ISSN 0306-3968. S2CID 145514370.
  43. ^ a b Nordholt, Larissa Schulte (2021). Africanising African history: decolonisation of knowledge in UNESCO's general history of Africa (1964-1998) (PhD thesis). Leiden University. pp. 539–551.
  44. ^ a b Schulte Nordholt, Larissa (2021). "Multiple Hamitic Theories and Black Egyptians: Negotiating Tensions between Standards of Scholarship and Political Imperatives in UNESCO's General History of Africa (1964–1998)". History of Humanities. 6 (2): 449–469. doi:10.1086/715866. hdl:1887/3242830. ISSN 2379-3163. S2CID 244133991.
  45. ^ a b Shinnie, Peter L.; Jewsiewicki, B. (1981). Ki-Zerbo, J.; UNESCO; Mokhtar, G. (eds.). "The UNESCO History Project / L'Histoire-monument ou l'histoire conscience". Canadian Journal of African Studies. 15 (3): 539–551. doi:10.2307/484734. ISSN 0008-3968. JSTOR 484734.
  46. ^ a b Ogot, Bethwell (2011). African Historiography: From colonial historiography to UNESCO's general history of Africa. p. 72. S2CID 55617551.
  47. ^ Egypt in its African context : proceedings of the conference held at the Manchester Museum, University of Manchester, 2–4 October 2009. Oxford: Archaeopress. 2011. pp. 7–9. ISBN 978-1407307602.
  48. ^ "American Anthropological Association Statement on Race". American Anthropologist. Arlington County: American Anthropological Association. 100. 1998. (Occasionally re-included in other volumes afterwards.)
  49. ^ . American Journal of Physical Anthropology. New York: John Wiley & Sons. 101. 1996. Archived from the original on March 12, 2017.
  50. ^ "Were the Ancient Egyptians Black or White?". The BAS Library. September 1989. Retrieved February 22, 2022. The ancient Egyptians, like their modern descendants, were of varying complexions of color, from the light Mediterranean type (like Nefertiti), to the light brown of Middle Egypt, to the darker brown of Upper Egypt, to the darkest shade around Aswan and the First Cataract region, where even today, the population shifts to Nubian." [...] "Ancient and modern Egyptian hair ranges from straight to wavy to woolly; in color, it varies from reddish brown to dark brown to black. Lips range from thin to full. Many Egyptians possess a protrusive jaw. Noses vary from high-bridged—straight to arched or even hooked—to flat-bridged, with bulbous to broad nostrils. In short, ancient Egypt, like modern Egypt, consisted of a very heterogeneous population.
  51. ^ Specter, Michael (February 26, 1990). "Was Nefertiti Black? Bitter Debate Erupts". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved February 22, 2022.
  52. ^ a b c d e f g Yurco, Frank (1996). "An Egyptological Review". In Lefkowitz, Mary R.; Rogers, Guy MacLean (eds.). Black Athena Revisited. The University of North Carolina Press. pp. 62–100.
  53. ^ Mokthar, Gamar (1990). Ancient Civilizations of Africa Vol 2 (Unesco General History of Africa (abridged)) (Abridged ed.). London: J. Currey. pp. 1–30. ISBN 978-0852550922.
  54. ^ Duhon-Sells, Rose M.; Pitts, Emma Thomas (1994). A Vision of Multicultural Education for the Year 2000. E. Mellen Press. p. 30. ISBN 978-0-7734-9427-5.
  55. ^ Christopher Ehret (1996). "Ancient Egyptian as an African Language, Egypt as an African Culture," in Egypt in Africa, Theodore Celenko (ed). Indianapolis, Ind.: Indianapolis Museum of Art. pp. 25–27. ISBN 0-936260-64-5.
  56. ^ Lovell, Nancy C. (1999). "Egyptians, physical anthropology of". In Bard, Kathryn A.; Shubert, Steven Blake (eds.). Encyclopedia of the Archaeology of Ancient Egypt. London. pp. 328–331. ISBN 0415185890.{{cite encyclopedia}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  57. ^ a b Smith, Stuart Tyson (2001). Redford, Donald (ed.). The Oxford encyclopedia of ancient Egypt. Vol. 3. Oxford University Press. pp. 27–28.
  58. ^ Wretched Kush: Ethnic Identities and Boundaries in Egypt's Nubian Empire, by Stuart Tyson Smith; pp. 5-8; Routledge 2004; ISBN 978-1134200931
  59. ^ Wretched Kush: Ethnic Identities and Boundaries in Egypt's Nubian Empire, by Stuart Tyson Smith; p. 36; Routledge 2004; ISBN 978-1134200931
  60. ^ Zakrzewski, Sonia R. (2003). "Variation in Ancient Egyptian Stature and Body Proportions" (PDF). American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 121 (3): 219–29. doi:10.1002/ajpa.10223. PMID 12772210., Read at [1]
  61. ^ Redford 2004, p. 1.
  62. ^ Morkot, Robert (2005). The Egyptians : an introduction. New York: Routledge. pp. 10–13. ISBN 0415271045.
  63. ^ Kemp, Barry J. (2007). Ancient Egypt: Anatomy of a Civilisation. Routledge. pp. 46–58. ISBN 978-1134563883.
  64. ^ a b Mertz, Barbara (2011). Red Land, Black Land: Daily Life in Ancient Egypt. HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-06-208716-4 – via Google Books.
  65. ^ Lefkowitz, Mary R.; Rogers, Guy MacLean (2014). Black Athena Revisited. University of North Carolina Press Books. ISBN 978-1-4696-2032-9.
  66. ^ Puigdevall, Federico; Cañagueral, Albert (December 15, 2017). The Secrets of Ancient Egypt: Egyptian Pyramids and the Secrets of the Pharaohs. Cavendish Square Publishing, LLC. p. 68. ISBN 978-1-5026-3329-3.
  67. ^ Nielsen, Nicky (2020). Egyptomaniacs: How We Became Obsessed with Ancient Epypt. Pen and Sword History. ISBN 978-1-5267-5404-2.
  68. ^ Van de Mieroop, Marc (2021). A history of ancient Egypt (2nd ed.). Chichester, West Sussex. pp. 5–6. ISBN 978-1119620877.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  69. ^ Keita Shomarka. (2022). Ancient Egyptian 'Origins and "Identity"'. In Ancient Egyptian society : challenging assumptions, exploring approaches. Abingdon, Oxon. pp. 111–122. ISBN 978-0367434632.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  70. ^ Keita, S. O. Y. (1993). "Studies and Comments on Ancient Egyptian Biological Relationships". History in Africa. 20: 129–154. doi:10.2307/3171969. ISSN 0361-5413. JSTOR 3171969. S2CID 162330365.
  71. ^ Jr, William H. Stiebing; Helft, Susan N. (2023). Ancient Near Eastern History and Culture. Taylor & Francis. pp. 209–212. ISBN 978-1-000-88066-3.
  72. ^ Egypt in its African context : proceedings of the conference held at the Manchester Museum, University of Manchester, 2–4 October 2009. Oxford: Archaeopress. 2011. pp. 1–115. ISBN 978-1407307602.
  73. ^ Sedra, Paul (2004). "Imagining an Imperial Race: Egyptology in the Service of Empire". Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East. 24 (1): 249–259. doi:10.1215/1089201X-24-1-251. ISSN 1548-226X. S2CID 143690935.
  74. ^ Walker, J. D. (1995). "The Misrepresentation of Diop's Views". Journal of Black Studies. 26 (1): 77–85. doi:10.1177/002193479502600106. ISSN 0021-9347. JSTOR 2784711. S2CID 144667194.
  75. ^ Young, Robert J.C. "Black Athena, and Colonial Discourse Robert J.C. · PDF fileEgypt in America : Black Athena, Racism and Colonial Discourse Robert J.C. Young Colonial discourse analysis was initiated".
  76. ^ Victor, Cilius (October 1992). "Book reviews : Civilization or Barbarism: an authentic anthropology". Race & Class. 34 (2): 98–100. doi:10.1177/030639689203400214. ISSN 0306-3968. S2CID 145646841.
  77. ^ Clarke, John Henrik (1974). "Cheikh Anta Diop and the New Light on African History". Transition (46): 74–76. doi:10.2307/2934962. ISSN 0041-1191. JSTOR 2934962. S2CID 156002419.
  78. ^ Trigger, Bruce (1978). 'Nubian, Negro, Black, Nilotic?', in Sylvia Hochfield and Elizabeth Riefstahl (eds), Africa in Antiquity: the arts of Nubia and the Sudan, Vol. 1.
  79. ^ Smith, Stuart Tyson (January 1, 2018). "Gift of the Nile? Climate Change, the Origins of Egyptian Civilization and Its Interactions within Northeast Africa". Across the Mediterranean – Along the Nile: Studies in Egyptology, Nubiology and Late Antiquity Dedicated to László Török. Budapest: 325–345.
  80. ^ Manzo, Andrea (2022). Ancient Egypt in its African context : economic networks, social and cultural interactions. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 1–50. ISBN 978-1009074544.
  81. ^ Ehret, Christopher (June 20, 2023). Ancient Africa: A Global History, to 300 CE. Princeton: Princeton University Press. pp. 83–86, 167–169. ISBN 978-0-691-24409-9. from the original on March 22, 2023. Retrieved March 20, 2023.
  82. ^ Lieberman, Leonard; Jackson, Fatimah Linda C. (1995). "Race and Three Models of Human Origin". American Anthropologist. 97 (2): 231–242. doi:10.1525/aa.1995.97.2.02a00030. ISSN 0002-7294. JSTOR 681958.
  83. ^ Celenko, Theodore (1996). "The Geographical Origins and Population Relationships of Early Ancient Egyptians" In Egypt in Africa. Indianapolis, Ind.: Indianapolis Museum of Art. pp. 20–33. ISBN 0936260645.
  84. ^ Ryan A.Brown and George J. Armelagos (2001). "Apportionment of racial diversity: A review". Evolutionary Anthropology. 10, Issue 1 (34–40): 34–40. doi:10.1002/1520-6505(2001)10:1<34::AID-EVAN1011>3.0.CO;2-P. S2CID 22845356.
  85. ^ Eltis, David; Bradley, Keith R.; Perry, Craig; Engerman, Stanley L.; Cartledge, Paul; Richardson, David (2021). The Cambridge World History of Slavery: Volume 2, AD 500-AD 1420. Cambridge University Press. p. 150. ISBN 978-0-521-84067-5 – via Google Books.
  86. ^ Candelora 2022, pp. 101–122.
  87. ^ Keita, S. O. Y.; Kittles, Rick A. (1997). "The Persistence of Racial Thinking and the Myth of Racial Divergence". American Anthropologist. 99 (3): 534–544. doi:10.1525/aa.1997.99.3.534. ISSN 0002-7294. JSTOR 681741.
  88. ^ Ehret, Christopher (2023). Ancient Africa: A Global History, to 300 CE. Princeton: Princeton University Press. pp. 83–86, 167–169. ISBN 978-0-691-24409-9.
  89. ^ Keita, S. O. Y.; Boyce, A. J. (2005). "Interpreting Geographical Patterns of Y Chromosome Variation". History in Africa. 32: 221–246. doi:10.1353/hia.2005.0013. S2CID 163020672. Retrieved March 3, 2022.
  90. ^ Candelora 2022, pp. 101–111.
  91. ^ "Human mitochondrial haplogroups and ancient DNA preservation across Egyptian history (Urban et al. 2021)" (PDF). ISBA9, 9th International Symposium on Biomolecular Archaeology. 2021. p. 126. In a previous study, we assessed the genetic history of a single site: Abusir el-Meleq from 1388 BCE to 426 CE. We now focus on widening the geographic scope to give a general overview of the population genetic background, focusing on mitochondrial haplogroups present among the whole Egyptian Nile River Valley. We collected 81 tooth, hair, bone, and soft tissue samples from 14 mummies and 17 skeletal remains. The samples span approximately 4000 years of Egyptian history and originate from six different excavation sites covering the whole length of the Egyptian Nile River Valley. NGS 127 based ancient DNA 8 were applied to reconstruct 18 high-quality mitochondrial genomes from 10 different individuals. The determined mitochondrial haplogroups match the results from our Abusir el-Meleq study.
  92. ^ Kemp 2006, p. 47.
  93. ^ Williams, Chancellor (1987). The Destruction of Black Civilization. Chicago: Third World Press. p. 110. ISBN 978-0-88378-030-5.
  94. ^ "A New Look at King Tut". The Washington Post. May 11, 2005. Retrieved May 11, 2012.
  95. ^ Eskandary, Hossein; Nematollahi-Mahani, Seyed Noureddin; Zangiabadi, Nasser (January 5, 2012). "Skull Indices in a Population Collected From Computed Tomographic Scans of Patients with Head Trauma". Journal of Craniofacial Surgery. 20 (2): 545–550. doi:10.1097/SCS.0b013e31819b9f6e. PMID 19305252. S2CID 206050171. Retrieved May 1, 2012.
  96. ^ . Archived from the original on February 20, 2009.
  97. ^ . Sciencemuseum.org.uk. Archived from the original on May 27, 2012. Retrieved May 1, 2012.
  98. ^ . National Geographic. October 28, 2010. Archived from the original on May 14, 2005. Retrieved May 1, 2012.
  99. ^ Henerson, Evan (June 15, 2005). . U-Daily News — L.A. Life. Archived from the original on October 30, 2006. Retrieved August 5, 2006.
  100. ^ . AFP. September 25, 2007. Archived from the original on February 13, 2012. Retrieved February 27, 2012.
  101. ^ "Welcome to Ancient Egypt Magazine's Web Site". Ancientegyptmagazine.com. Retrieved June 2, 2016.
  102. ^ "Photographic image: Wikimedia Commons" (JPG). Commons.wikimedia.org. December 10, 2007. Retrieved May 1, 2012.
  103. ^ "Tutankhamun: beneath the mask". Sciencemuseum.org.uk. Retrieved May 1, 2012.
  104. ^ Smith, Stuart Tyson (January 1, 2008). "Review of From Slave to Pharaoh: The Black Experience of Ancient Egypt by Donald Redford". Near Eastern Archaeology 71:3.
  105. ^ "King Tut Related to Half of European Men? Maybe Not". Live Science. August 3, 2011. Retrieved December 27, 2016.
  106. ^ a b Yehia Z Gad (October 2020) Insights from ancient DNA analysis of Egyptian human mummies: clues to disease and kinship, Human Molecular Genetics, Volume 30, Issue R1, 1 March 2021, Pages R24–R28 [2] 2 May 2021 at the Wayback Machine Maternal and Paternal Lineages in King Tutankhamun's Family Guardian of Ancient Egypt: Studies in Honor of Zahi Hawass. Vol. I, pp. 497–518; 2020 [3] 9 May 2021 at the Wayback Machine
  107. ^ Hawass, Zahi; Gad, Yehia Z.; Ismail, Somaia; Khairat, Rabab; Fathalla, Dina; Hasan, Naglaa; Ahmed, Amal; Elleithy, Hisham; Ball, Markus; Gaballah, Fawzi; Wasef, Sally; Fateen, Mohamed; Amer, Hany; Gostner, Paul; Selim, Ashraf (February 17, 2010). "Ancestry and Pathology in King Tutankhamun's Family". JAMA. 303 (7): 638–647. doi:10.1001/jama.2010.121. ISSN 0098-7484. PMID 20159872.
  108. ^ Keita, S. O. Y. (September 2022). "Ideas about "Race" in Nile Valley Histories: A Consideration of "Racial" Paradigms in Recent Presentations on Nile Valley Africa, from "Black Pharaohs" to Mummy Genomest". Journal of Ancient Egyptian Interconnections.
  109. ^ Jr, William H. Stiebing; Helft, Susan N. (2023). Ancient Near Eastern History and Culture. Taylor & Francis. pp. 209–212. ISBN 978-1-000-88066-3.
  110. ^ Price, Hugh B. (September 26, 1991). "Was Cleopatra Black?". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved May 28, 2012.
  111. ^ a b Roller (2010).
  112. ^ Whitaker, Charles (February 2002). . Ebony. Archived from the original on March 9, 2007. Retrieved September 11, 2023. The author cites a few examples of the claim, one of which is a chapter titled "Black Warrior Queens", published in 1984 in Black Women in Antiquity, part of The Journal of African Civilization series. It draws heavily on the work of J.A. Rogers.
  113. ^ Charen, Mona (February 14, 1994). "Afrocentric View Distorts History and Achievement by Blacks". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Retrieved May 29, 2012.
  114. ^ Lefkowitz (1992), pp. 36–40.
  115. ^ Rogers, J.A. (2011). World's Great Men of Color. Vol. I. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-1451650549.
  116. ^ a b Lefkowitz (1992), pp. 40–41.
  117. ^ Roller (2010), pp. 54, 174–175.
  118. ^ Samson 1990, p. 104; Schiff 2011, pp. 2, 28, 35–36, 42; Preston 2009, pp. 22, 77; Goldsworthy 2010, pp. 8, 127–128; Jones 2006, p. xiii; Kleiner 2005, p. 22; Tyldesley 2008, pp. 30, 235–236.
  119. ^ Grant (1972), p. 5.
  120. ^ Roller (2010), pp. 15, 18, 166.
  121. ^ Cheshire (2011), pp. 20–30.
  122. ^ Lippert (2013), p. 33.
  123. ^ Schiff (2011), pp. 2, 41–42.
  124. ^ a b Pina Polo (2013), pp. 185–186.
  125. ^ Kleiner (2005), pp. 151–153, 155.
  126. ^ Bradford (2003), pp. 14, 17.
  127. ^ Watterson (2020), p. 15.
  128. ^ Roller (2003), p. 139.
  129. ^ Ferroukhi (2001a), p. 219.
  130. ^ Kleiner (2005), pp. 155–156.
  131. ^ Ashton (2002), p. 39.
  132. ^ Kleiner (2005), p. 87.
  133. ^ Roller (2010), pp. 113–114, 176–177.
  134. ^ Pina Polo (2013), p. 194, footnote 11.
  135. ^ Foggo, Daniel (March 15, 2009). "Found the sister Cleopatra killed". The Times. London. Retrieved April 15, 2010.
  136. ^ "Also in the news | Cleopatra's mother 'was African'". BBC News. March 16, 2009. Retrieved June 2, 2016.
  137. ^ Fielding, Sarah; Johnson, Christopher D. (1994). The Lives of Cleopatra and Octavia. Bucknell University Press. p. 154. ISBN 978-0-8387-5257-9.
  138. ^ "Phrenology and "Scientific Racism" in the 19th Century". Vassar College Word Press. March 5, 2017. from the original on February 28, 2018. Retrieved January 16, 2019.
  139. ^ "Have Bones of Cleopatra's Murdered Sister Been Found?". Live Science. Retrieved April 7, 2017.
  140. ^ Boas (1912). "Changes in Bodily Form of Descendants of Immigrants". American Anthropologist. 14 (3): 530–562. doi:10.1525/aa.1912.14.3.02a00080. PMC 2986913.
  141. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on April 21, 2004. Retrieved April 21, 2004.
  142. ^ Gravlee, Clarence C.; Bernard, H. Russell; Leonard, William R. (2003). "Heredity, Environment, and Cranial Form: A Re-Analysis of Boas's Immigrant Data" (PDF). American Anthropologist. 105 (1): 123–136. doi:10.1525/aa.2003.105.1.125. hdl:2027.42/65137.
  143. ^ Lieberman, Leonard. (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on September 2, 2009.
  144. ^ "Forensic Misclassification of Ancient Nubian Crania: Implications for Assumptions about Human Variation".
  145. ^ Brace et al., 'Clines and clusters versus "race"' (1993)
  146. ^ von Cramon-Taubadel, N. (2011). "The relative efficacy of functional and developmental cranial modules for reconstructing global human population history". American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 146 (1): 83–93. doi:10.1002/ajpa.21550. PMID 21710659.
  147. ^ von Cramon-Taubadel, N.; Lycett, S.J. (2008). "Human cranial variation fits iterative founder effect model with African origin". American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 136 (1): 108–113. doi:10.1002/ajpa.20775. PMID 18161847.
  148. ^ von Cramon-Taubadel, N. (2009a). "Congruence of individual cranial bone morphology and neutral molecular affinity patterns in modern humans". American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 140 (2): 205–215. doi:10.1002/ajpa.21041. PMID 19418568.
  149. ^ Wilkinson, Caroline (2004). Forensic Facial Reconstruction. Cambridge University Press. p. 84. ISBN 978-0521820035. Retrieved June 2, 2015 – via Google Books.
  150. ^ . Computer Weekly News. May 31, 2012. Archived from the original on March 29, 2015. Retrieved November 27, 2014 – via HighBeam Research.
  151. ^ Ousley, Stephen; Jantz, Richard (2014). "Ch. 15: Fordisc 3 and Statistical Methods for Estimating Sex and Ancestry". In Dirkmaat, Dennis (ed.). A Companion to Forensic Anthropology. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 311–329.
  152. ^ Ousley, S.D., and R.L. Jantz (2005) FORDISC 3.0: Personal Computer Forensic Discriminant Functions.University of Tennessee July 5, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  153. ^ Elliott, Marina; Collard, Mark (November 11, 2009). "Fordisc and the determination of ancestry from cranial measurements". Biology Letters. The Royal Society. 2009 (5): 849–852. doi:10.1098/rsbl.2009.0462. PMC 2827999. PMID 19586965.
  154. ^ . meeting.physanth.org. Archived from the original on April 19, 2021. Retrieved October 22, 2015.
  155. ^ . The Times Literary Supplement. March 15, 2009. Archived from the original on March 17, 2009. Retrieved June 12, 2018.
  156. ^ "Egyptian lawyer sues Netflix over Queen Cleopatra". Egypt Independent. April 18, 2023. Retrieved April 20, 2023.
  157. ^ Daouda, Marie (April 20, 2023), "Cleopatra was Greek, not a tool in Netflix's war on real history", The Telegraph, retrieved April 22, 2023
  158. ^ "Was Cleopatra Black? A New Netflix Series Is Reviving an Old Controversy". Time Magazine. April 20, 2023. Retrieved April 20, 2023.
  159. ^ "Uncovering Secrets of the Sphinx". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved May 24, 2020.
  160. ^ Curran, Brian A. (January 1, 1998). "The Hypnerotomachia Poliphili and Renaissance Egyptology". Word & Image. 14 (1–2): 156–185. doi:10.1080/02666286.1998.10443948. ISSN 0266-6286.
  161. ^ Volney, C-F (1807). Voyage en Syrie et en Égypte: pendant les années 1783, 1784 et 1785 …. Paris: Paris: Chez Courcier, imprimeur-libraire. p. 71.
  162. ^ Flaubert, Gustave. Flaubert in Egypt, ed. Francis Steegmuller. (London: Penguin Classics, 1996). ISBN 978-0-14-043582-5.
  163. ^ a b c Foster, Herbert J. (1974). "The Ethnicity of the Ancient Egyptians". Journal of Black Studies. 5 (2): 175–191. doi:10.1177/002193477400500205. JSTOR 2783936. S2CID 144961394.
  164. ^ Denon, Vivant (1803). Travels in Upper and Lower Egypt. General Bonaparte. pp. 269–270. the character is African, but the mouth, the lips of which are thick
  165. ^ Irwin, Graham W. (1977). Africans abroad: a documentary history of the Black Diaspora in Asia, Latin …. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0231039369. Retrieved June 2, 2016 – via Google Books.
  166. ^ Du Bois, W. E. B. (2001). The Negro. University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 978-0812217759. Retrieved June 2, 2016 – via Google Books.
  167. ^ Ben-Jochannan, Yosef. Black man of the Nile and his family. pp. 109–110.
  168. ^ Diop 1974, pp. Frontispiece, 27, 43, 51–53.
  169. ^ Asante, Molefi Kete (1996). European Racism Regarding Ancient Egypt: Egypt in Africa. Indianapolis: Indiana University Press. p. 117. ISBN 978-0-936260-64-8.
  170. ^ Schoch, Robert M. (1995). . robertschoch.net. Archived from the original on February 4, 2012. Retrieved May 29, 2012.
  171. ^ "Fortean Times". No. 79. London. February 1995. pp. 34, 39.
  172. ^ Fritze, Ronald H. (2009). Invented Knowledge: False History, Fake Science and Pseudo-Religions. Reaktion Books. ISBN 978-1-86189-430-4 – via Google Books.
  173. ^ "Scholars Dispute Claim That Sphinx Is Much Older". The New York Times. February 9, 1992.
  174. ^ Card, Jeb J.; Anderson, David S. (2016). Lost City, Found Pyramid: Understanding Alternative Archaeologies and Pseudoscientific Practices. University of Alabama Press. ISBN 978-0-8173-1911-3 – via Google Books.
  175. ^ Diehl 2004, p. 112. Cyphers 1996, p. 156.
  176. ^ Diop 1974, pp. 246–248.
  177. ^ Levine, Molly Myerowitz (2004). . Bryn Mawr Classical Review. Archived from the original on October 25, 2016. Retrieved February 4, 2013.
  178. ^ a b c d Shavit 2001: 148
  179. ^ Aboubacry Moussa Lam, "L'Égypte ancienne et l'Afrique", in Maria R. Turano et Paul Vandepitte, Pour une histoire de l'Afrique, 2003, pp. 50 &51
  180. ^ Mukhtār, Muḥammad Jamāl al-Dīn (1990). Ancient Civilizations of Africa. Currey. p. 10. ISBN 978-0852550922. Retrieved June 2, 2016.
  181. ^ Kemp 2006, p. 21.
  182. ^ Faulkner, Raymond (2002). A Concise Dictionary of Middle Egyptian. Oxford: Griffith Institute. p. 286.
  183. ^ Gardiner, Alan (1957) [1927]. Egyptian Grammar: Being an Introduction to the Study of Hieroglyphs (3rd ed.). Griffith Institute, Oxford. ISBN 978-0-900416-35-4.
  184. ^ a b . Archived from the original on February 7, 2009. Retrieved February 9, 2009.
  185. ^ Booth, Charlotte (2007). The Ancient Egyptians for Dummies. p. 217.[ISBN missing]
  186. ^ Diop 1974, p. 48.
  187. ^ Diop 1974, p. 55.
  188. ^ Diop 1974, pp. 58–59.
  189. ^ . The Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago. Archived from the original on January 3, 2014. Retrieved September 10, 2012.
  190. ^ Emberling, Geoff (2011). Nubia: Ancient Kingdoms of Africa. New York: The Institute for the Study of the Ancient World. pp. 22–23, 36–37. ISBN 978-0-615-48102-9.
  191. ^ Snowden, Frank (1970). Blacks in Antiquity. Cambridge, Massachusetts: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. p. 3.
  192. ^ Smith, Stuart Tyson (February 1, 2001). Redford, Donald (ed.). "Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt – Volume 3". pp. 28–29.
  193. ^ a b Egypt, Trunk of the Tree, A Modern Survey of an Ancient Land, Vol. 2. by Simson Najovits p. 318
  194. ^ Liszka, Kate (October 8, 2018). "Discerning Ancient Identity: The Case of Aashyet's Sarcophagus (JE 47267)". Journal of Egyptian History. 11 (1–2): 185–207. doi:10.1163/18741665-12340047. ISSN 1874-1657. S2CID 240026775.
  195. ^ O'Connor, David; Reid, Andrew (2003). Ancient Egypt in Africa. Cavendish Publishing. p. 13. ISBN 978-1-84314-758-9.
  196. ^ Digital Collections, The New York Public Library. "(still image) Dynastie IV. Pyramiden von Giseh [Jîzah], Grab 24. [ Grabkammer No. 2 im K. Museum zu Berlin.], (1849–1856)". The New York Public Library, Astor, Lenox, and Tilden Foundations. Retrieved August 19, 2020.
  197. ^ Sertima, Ivan Van, ed. (1994). "Ra-Hotep and Nofret: Modern Forgeries in the Cairo Museum?". Egypt: Child of Africa. pp. 207–212.
  198. ^ "AFRICANA STUDIES". Manuampim.com. Retrieved May 1, 2012.
  199. ^ a b "The Book of Gates: The Book of Gates: Chapter VI. The Gate Of Teka-Hra. The Fifth Division of the Tuat". Sacred-texts.com. Retrieved May 1, 2012.
  200. ^ Digital Collections, The New York Public Library. "(still image) Neues Reich. Dynastie XIX. Theben [Thebes]. Bab el Meluk [Bîbân el-Mulûk]. Grab Sethos I. [Plan No. XVII] a. d. Raum D. [Forsetzung von Bl. 135]; c. Pfeiler aus Raum J; d. Ecke aus Raum M. [c. und d. jetzt im K. Mus. zu Berlin], (1849–1856)". The New York Public Library, Astor, Lenox, and Tilden Foundations. Retrieved August 20, 2020.
  201. ^ a b "Africana Studies. Tomb of Rameses III". Manuampim.com. Retrieved May 1, 2012.
  202. ^ Yurco, Frank (1996). "Two Tomb-Wall Painted Reliefs of Ramesses III and Sety I and Ancient Nile Valley Population Diversity". In Celenko, Theodore (ed.). Egypt in Africa.
  203. ^ a b Yurco, Frank (1996). Celenko, Theodore (ed.). Egypt in Africa. Indianapolis, Ind.: Indianapolis Museum of Art. p. 110. ISBN 0253332699.
  204. ^ Bagnall, R.S. (2000). Walker, Susan (ed.). Ancient Faces: Mummy Portraits in Roman Egypt. Metropolitan Museum of Art Publications. New York: Routledge. p. 27.
  205. ^ Irish, J.D. (April 2006). "Who were the ancient Egyptians? Dental affinities among Neolithic through postdynastic peoples". American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 129 (4): 529–543. doi:10.1002/ajpa.20261. PMID 16331657.
  206. ^ Davidson, Basil (1991). African Civilization Revisited: From Antiquity to Modern Times. Africa World Press.
  207. ^ a b Digital Collections, The New York Public Library. "(still image) Neues Reich. Theben [Thebes]: Der el Medînet [Dayr al-Madînah Site]: Stuckbild aus Grab 10. [jetzt im K. Museum zu Berlin.], (1849–1856)". The New York Public Library, Astor, Lenox, and Tilden Foundations. Retrieved August 19, 2020.
  208. ^ a b c d Graciela Gestoso Singer, "Ahmose-Nefertari, The Woman in Black". Terrae Antiqvae, January 17, 2011
  209. ^ Gitton, Michel (1973). "Ahmose Nefertari, sa vie et son culte posthume" [Ahmose Nefertari, her life and her posthumous cult]. École Pratique des Hautes études, 5e Section, Sciences Religieuses (in French). 85 (82): 84. doi:10.3406/ephe.1973.20828. ISSN 0183-7451.
  210. ^ a b Gardiner, Alan H. (1961). Egypt of the Pharaohs: an introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press., p. 175
  211. ^ a b "The deified former queen Ahmose Nefertari, protectress of royal tomb workers". www.louvre.fr.
  212. ^ a b c Petrie (1939), p. 155
  213. ^ Martin Bernal (1987), Black Athena: Afroasiatic Roots of Classical Civilization. The Fabrication of Ancient Greece, 1785–1985, vol. I. New Jersey, Rutgers University Press
  214. ^ a b c d Gitton, Michel (1981). L'épouse du dieu, Ahmes Néfertary : documents sur sa vie et son culte posthume [The god's wife, Ahmes Nefertary: documents on her life and her posthumous cult] (in French) (2nd ed.). Besançon: Université de Franche-Comté. ISBN 978-2-251-60172-4.
  215. ^ a b Dodson, Aidan; Hilton, Dyan (2004). The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt. London: Thames & Hudson. ISBN 0-500-05128-3.
  216. ^ The Remarkable Women of Ancient Egypt, by Barbara S. Lesko; p. 14; B.C. Scribe Publications, 1996; ISBN 978-0-930548-13-1
  217. ^ Betsy Bryan; p. 213; The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt; edited by Ian Shaw; OUP Oxford, 2003; ISBN 978-0-19-280458-7
  218. ^ Tyldesley, Joyce. Chronicle of the Queens of Egypt. Thames & Hudson. 2006. ISBN 0-500-05145-3
  219. ^ Hodel-Hoenes, S & Warburton, D (trans), Life and Death in Ancient Egypt: Scenes from Private Tombs in New Kingdom Thebes, Cornell University Press, 2000, p. 268.
  220. ^ Vassilika, Emili (2009). I capolavori del Museo Egizio di Torino [The masterpieces of the Egyptian Museum of Turin] (in Italian). Florence: Fondazione Museo delle antichità egizie di Torino. ISBN 978-88-8117-950-3.
  221. ^ Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt; by Margaret Bunson; Pg 17, Infobase Publishing, 2014; ISBN 978-1-4381-0997-8
  222. ^ Lefkowitz, Mary R.; Rogers, Guy Maclean (1996). Black Athena Revisited. UNC Press Books. p. 162. ISBN 978-0807845554. Retrieved June 2, 2016 – via Google Books.
  223. ^ Bard, Kathryn A.; Shubert, Steven Blake (1999). Encyclopedia of the Archaeology of Ancient Egypt. Routledge. p. 329. ISBN 978-0415185899. Retrieved June 2, 2016 – via Google Books.
  224. ^ Howe, Stephen (1999). Afrocentrism: Mythical Pasts and Imagined Homes. Verso. p. 136. ISBN 978-1859842287. Retrieved June 2, 2016 – via Google Books.
  225. ^ a b c d e f g h i Wilkinson, Toby A. H. (1999). Early dynastic Egypt. Routledge. p. 15.
  226. ^ a b c d e f g Massoulard, Emile (1949). Prehistory and Protohsitory of Egypt.
  227. ^ a b c d e f Zakrzewski, Sonia R. (2003). Population continuity or population change: Formation of the ancient Egyptian state. Highfield, Southampton: Department of Archaeology, University of Southampton.
  228. ^ a b c d e Smith, Stuart Tyson (February 1, 2001). Redford, Donald (ed.). Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt. Vol. 3. p. 28.
  229. ^ a b c d e Ehret, Christopher (2023). Ancient Africa: A Global History, to 300 CE. Princeton: Princeton University Press. pp. 83–86. ISBN 978-0-691-24409-9.
  230. ^ The peopling of ancient Egypt and the deciphering of Meroitic script : proceedings of the symposium held in Cairo from 28 January to 3 February 1974. Paris: Unesco. 1978. pp. 94–95. ISBN 92-3-101605-9.
  231. ^ a b Diop 1974, pp. 1, 27, 43, 51.
  232. ^ a b c Bernal, Martin (1987). Black Athena. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers University Press. p. 242. ISBN 978-0-8135-1276-1.
  233. ^ Mukhtār, Muḥammad Jamāl al-Dīn (1990). Ancient Civilizations of Africa. Currey. pp. 42–44. ISBN 978-0852550922. Retrieved June 2, 2016 – via Google Books.
  234. ^ The peopling of ancient Egypt and the deciphering of Meroitic script : proceedings of the symposium held in Cairo from 28 January to 3 February 1974. Paris: Unesco. 1978. pp. 86–87. ISBN 9231016059.
  235. ^ "However, during the discussion of the hypothesis of a homogeneous population, which was favoured by Professor Diop, and the hypothesis of a mixed population, which was supported by several other experts, it became clear that there was total disagreement" The peopling of ancient Egypt and the deciphering of Meroitic script : proceedings of the symposium held in Cairo from 28 January to 3 February 1974. Paris: UNESCO. 1978. p. 49. ISBN 92-3-101605-9.
  236. ^ Mukhtār, Muḥammad Jamāl al-Dīn (1990). Ancient Civilizations of Africa. Currey. p. 49. ISBN 978-0852550922. Retrieved June 2, 2016 – via Google Books.
  237. ^ Egypt in its African context : proceedings of the conference held at the Manchester Museum, University of Manchester, 2–4 October 2009. Oxford: Archaeopress. 2011. pp. 7–9. ISBN 978-1407307602.
  238. ^ . AFP. September 25, 2007. Archived from the original on February 13, 2012. Retrieved May 28, 2012.
  239. ^ Irwin, Graham W. (1977). Africans abroad: a documentary history of the Black Diaspora in Asia, Latin. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0231039369. Retrieved June 2, 2016 – via Google Books.
  240. ^ Schoch, Robert M. (1995). . robertschoch.net. Archived from the original on February 4, 2012. Retrieved May 29, 2012.
  241. ^ "Race in Antiquity: Truly Out of Africa | Dr. Molefi Kete Asante". Asante.net. Retrieved June 2, 2016.
  242. ^ Price, Hugh B. (September 26, 1991). "Was Cleopatra Black?". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved May 28, 2012.
  243. ^ Whitaker, Charles (February 2002). "Was Cleopatra Black?". Ebony. Retrieved May 28, 2012. The author cites a few examples of the claim, one of which is a chapter titled "Black Warrior Queens", published in 1984 in Black Women in Antiquity, part of The Journal of African Civilization series. It draws heavily on the work of J.A. Rogers.
  244. ^ Charen, Mona (February 14, 1994). "Afrocentric View Distorts History and Achievement by Blacks". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Retrieved May 29, 2012.
  245. ^ Herodotus (2003). Histories (Herodotus). London, England: Penguin Books. pp. 134–135. ISBN 978-0-14-044908-2.
  246. ^ a b Diop 1974, pp. 1, 27, 43, 51, 278, 288.
  247. ^ Najovits, Simson (2003). Egypt, Trunk of the Tree. Vol. II: A Modern Survey of and Ancient Land. Algora Publishing. ISBN 978-0-87586-256-9 – via Google Books.
  248. ^ a b Mokhtar, G. (1990). General History of Africa II: Ancient Civilizations of Africa. Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 1–118. ISBN 978-0-520-06697-7.
  249. ^ Najovits, Simson (2003). Egypt, Trunk of the Tree, Vol. II: A Modern Survey of and Ancient Land. Publishing. ISBN 978-0-87586-256-9 – via Google Books.
  250. ^ Lloyd, Alan B. (1993). Herodotus. Brill. p. 22. ISBN 978-9004077379. Retrieved June 2, 2016 – via Google Books.
  251. ^ Herodotus (2003). Histories (Herodotus). London, England: Penguin Books. pp. 103, 119, 134–135, 640. ISBN 978-0-14-044908-2.
  252. ^ Rawlinson, George (2018). The Histories of Herodotus. Scribe Publishing. ISBN 978-1787801714. black-skinned and have woolly hair
  253. ^ Asante Kete Molefi (1996). "European Racism Regarding Ancient Egypt," in Egypt in Africa, Theodore Celenko (ed). Indianapolis, Ind.: Indianapolis Museum of Art. pp. 116–117. ISBN 0-936260-64-5. The word Herodotus used for black-skinned, melanchroes, in the Greek, cannot be confused with white-, red-, or even brown-skinned. It means black skinned.
  254. ^ Diop 1974, pp. 241–242.
  255. ^ B. Lloyd, Alan (1993). Herodotus: Book II. Brill. p. 22. ISBN 90-04-04179-6.
  256. ^ Lefkowitz, Mary R.; Rogers, Guy Maclean (1996). Black Athena Revisited. UNC Press Books. p. 118. ISBN 978-0807845554. Retrieved June 2, 2016 – via Google Books.
  257. ^ Snowden, Frank M. (2014). "Bernal's 'Blacks' and the Afrocentrists". In Lefkowitz, Mary; Rogers, Guy Maclean (eds.). Black Athena Revisited. UNC Press Books. ISBN 978-1-4696-2032-9.
  258. ^ Keita S.O.Y. (1996). "The Diversity of Indigenous Africans," in Egypt in Africa, Theodore Celenko (ed). Indianapolis, Ind.: Indianapolis Museum of Art. pp. 104–105. ISBN 0-936260-64-5.
  259. ^ Diop 1974, pp. 2–5.
  260. ^ Diop, Cheikh Anta (1981). Civilization or Barbarism. Chicago, Illinois: Lawrence Hill Books. ISBN 978-1-55652-048-8.
  261. ^ Welsby, Derek (1996). The Kingdom of Kush. London: British Museum Press. p. 40. ISBN 978-0-7141-0986-2.
  262. ^ Heeren, A.H.L. (1838). Historical researches into the politics, intercourse, and trade of the Carthaginians, Ethiopians, and Egyptians. Michigan: University of Michigan Library. pp. 13, 379, 422–424. ASIN B003B3P1Y8.
  263. ^ Aubin, Henry (2002). The Rescue of Jerusalem. New York: Soho Press. pp. 94–96, 100–102, 118–121, 141–144, 328, 336. ISBN 978-1-56947-275-0.
  264. ^ Hansberry, William Leo (1977). African & Africans, African History Notebook, Vol. II. Maryland: Black Classic Press. pp. 103–113. ISBN 978-1574781540.
  265. ^ von Martels, Z. R. W. M. (1994). Travel Fact and Travel Fiction: Studies on Fiction, Literary Tradition. Brill. p. 1. ISBN 978-9004101128. Retrieved June 2, 2016 – via Google Books.
  266. ^ Sparks, Kenton L. (1998). Ethnicity and Identity in Ancient Israel: Prolegomena to the Study of Ethnic …. Eisenbrauns. p. 59. ISBN 978-1575060330. Retrieved June 2, 2016 – via Google Books.
  267. ^ Asheri, David; Lloyd, Alan; Corcella, Aldo (August 30, 2007). A Commentary on Herodotus. OUP Oxford. p. 74. ISBN 978-0198149569. Retrieved June 2, 2016 – via Google Books.
  268. ^ Roberts, Jennifer T. (June 23, 2011). Herodotus: A Very Short Introduction. OUP Oxford. p. 115. ISBN 978-0199575992. Retrieved June 2, 2016 – via Google Books.
  269. ^ Cameron, Alan (September 2, 2004). Greek Mythography in the Roman World. Oxford University Press. p. 156. ISBN 978-0198038214. Retrieved June 2, 2016 – via Google Books.
  270. ^ Marincola, John (December 13, 2001). Greek Historians. Cambridge University Press. p. 34. ISBN 978-0199225019. Retrieved June 2, 2016 – via Google Books.
  271. ^ Amoia, Alba Della Fazia; Knapp, Bettina Liebowitz (2002). Multicultural Writers from Antiquity to 1945: A Bio-bibliographical Sourcebook. Bloomsbury Academic. p. 171. ISBN 978-0313306877. Retrieved June 2, 2016 – via Google Books.
  272. ^ Farley, David G. (November 30, 2010). Modernist Travel Writing: Intellectuals Abroad. University of Missouri Press. p. 21. ISBN 978-0826272287. Retrieved June 2, 2016 – via Google Books.
  273. ^ Lloyd, Alan B. (1993). Herodotus. Brill. p. 1. ISBN 978-9004077379. Retrieved June 2, 2016 – via Google Books.
  274. ^ Nielsen, Flemming A. J. (1997). The Tragedy in History: Herodotus and the Deuteronomistic History. Bloomsbury. p. 41. ISBN 978-1850756880. Retrieved June 2, 2016 – via Google Books.
  275. ^ Herodotus: Oxford Bibliographies Online Research Guide. Oxford University Press. May 1, 2010. p. 21. ISBN 978-0199802869. Retrieved June 2, 2016 – via Google Books.
  276. ^ Diop 1974, pp. 236–243.
  277. ^ Ricard, Alain; Morgan, Naomi (2004). The Languages & Literatures of Africa: The Sands of Babel. James Currey. p. 14.
  278. ^ Snowden, Frank (1983). Before Color Prejudice. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-674-06380-8.
  279. ^ Diop 1974, pp. 6–42.
  280. ^ Diop 1974, pp. 112, 135–138.
  281. ^ DeMello, Margo (2007). Encyclopedia of Body Adornment. p. 150 – via Google Books. The ancient Egyptians practiced head binding as early as 3000 BCE,... the Mangbetu of the Congo also practiced head binding.
  282. ^ Diop 1974, pp. 1–9, 134–155.
  283. ^ Williams, Bruce (2011). Before the Pyramids. Chicago, Illinois: Oriental Institute Museum Publications. pp. 89–90. ISBN 978-1-885923-82-0.
  284. ^ . Oi.uchicago.edu. Archived from the original on January 27, 2014. Retrieved June 2, 2016.
  285. ^ O'Connor, David Bourke; Silverman, David P. (1995). Ancient Egyptian Kingship. Brill. ISBN 978-9004100411. Retrieved June 2, 2016 – via Google Books.
  286. ^ Diop, Cheikh Anta (1991). Civilization or Barbarism. Chicago, Illinois, USA: Lawrence Hill Books. pp. 103–105. ISBN 978-1-55652-048-8.
  287. ^ O'Connor, David (2011). Before the Pyramids. Chicago, Illinois: Oriental Institute Museum Publications. pp. 162–163. ISBN 978-1-885923-82-0.
  288. ^ Shaw, Ian (October 23, 2003). The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt. OUP Oxford. p. 446. ISBN 978-0191604621. Retrieved June 2, 2016 – via Google Books.
  289. ^ Wengrow, D. (May 25, 2006). The Archaeology of Early Egypt: Social Transformations in North-East Africa …. Cambridge University Press. p. 167. ISBN 978-0521835862. Retrieved June 2, 2016 – via Google Books.
  290. ^ Mitchell, Peter (2005). African Connections: An Archaeological Perspective on Africa and the Wider World. Rowman Altamira. p. 69. ISBN 978-0759102590. Retrieved June 2, 2016 – via Google Books.
  291. ^ Wilkinson, Toby A. H. (2001). Early Dynastic Egypt. Routledge. Page 194 probably. doi:10.4324/9780203024386. ISBN 978-0415260114.
  292. ^ Török, László (2009). Between Two Worlds: The Frontier Region Between Ancient Nubia and Egypt …. Brill. p. 577. ISBN 978-9004171978. Retrieved June 2, 2016.
  293. ^ Bianchi, Robert Steven (2004). Daily Life of the Nubians. Greenwood Publishing. p. 38. ISBN 978-0313325014. Retrieved June 2, 2016 – via Google Books.
  294. ^ Lefkowitz, Mary R.; Rogers, Guy MacLean (March 24, 2014). Black Athena Revisited. University of North Carolina Press Books. ISBN 978-1-4696-2032-9 – via Google Books.
  295. ^ Shaw, Ian (July 22, 2004). Ancient Egypt: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-157840-3 – via Google Books.
  296. ^ Blench, Roger (June 22, 2006). Archaeology, Language, and the African Past. Rowman Altamira. ISBN 978-0-7591-1421-0 – via Google Books.
  297. ^ Snowden, Frank M. Jr. (1997). (PDF). Arion. Third Series. Trustees of Boston University. 4 (3): 28–50. JSTOR 20163634. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 4, 2016.
  298. ^ De Montellano, Bernard R. Ortiz (1993). "Melanin, Afrocentricity, and Pseudoscience". Yearbook of Physical Anthropology. 36 (33–58): 33–58. doi:10.1002/ajpa.1330360604.
  299. ^ Chowdhury, Kanishka (1997). "Afrocentric Voices: Constructing Identities, [Dis]placing Difference". College Literature. 24 (2): 35–56. ISSN 0093-3139. JSTOR 25112296.
  300. ^ "Afrocentrism | Definition, Examples, History, Beliefs, & Facts". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved August 7, 2020.
  301. ^ Bay, Mia (2000). "The Historical Origins of Afrocentrism". Amerikastudien / American Studies. 45 (4): 501–512. ISSN 0340-2827. JSTOR 41157604.
  302. ^ Naville, Edouard (1907). "The Origin of Egyptian Civilisation". The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland. 37: 201–214. doi:10.2307/2843255. JSTOR 2843255.
  303. ^ Sanders 1969, pp. 521–523.
  304. ^ Diop 1974, pp. 5–9.
  305. ^ Sanders 1969, pp. 524–527.
  306. ^ Baum, Bruce. The Rise and Fall of the Caucasian Race: A Political History of Racial Identity. p. 108.
  307. ^ Morton, Samuel George (1844). "Egyptian Ethnography". Crania Ægyptiaca, Or, Observations on Egyptian Ethnography Derived from Anatomy, History and the Monuments – via Google Books.
  308. ^ Gliddon, George Robins (1844). Ancient Egypt: Her monuments, hieroglyphics, history and archaeology. p. 46.
  309. ^ Sanders 1969, pp. 525–532.
  310. ^ Seligman, C.G. (July–December 1913). "Some Aspects of the Hamitic Problem in the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan". The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland. 43: 593–705. doi:10.2307/2843546. JSTOR 2843546.
  311. ^ The Mediterranean Race: a Study of the Origins of European Peoples, 1901, pp. v–vi, "Preface", also p. 45.
  312. ^ Sergi, 1901, p. 250.
  313. ^ "Concepts of Race in the Historiography of Northeast Africa", Wyatt MacGaffey, The Journal of African History, Vol. 7, No. 1, 1966.
  314. ^ The Ancient Egyptians and the origin of Civilization, 1911, p. 69.
  315. ^ Smith, 1911, p. 25.
  316. ^ As according to Smith the hair of the "Proto-Egyptian was precisely similar to that of the brunet South European" and "presented no resemblance whatever to the so-called 'wooly' appearance and peppercorn-like arrangement of the Negro's hair". – Smith, 1911, p. 58.
  317. ^ "Neither in Sergi's nor in Elliot Smith's scheme are Brown and Mediterranean equivalent terms." – MacGaffey, 1966, p. 4.
  318. ^ Sanders 1969, p. 531.
  319. ^ MacGaffey, 1966, pp. 5–9.
  320. ^ Ehret, Christopher (June 20, 2023). Ancient Africa: A Global History, to 300 CE. Princeton: Princeton University Press. pp. 83–86. ISBN 978-0-691-24409-9.
  321. ^ History of Egypt, 1846, Part I, p. 3 "The Asiatic Origin of the Race.
  322. ^ a b Lefkowitz, Mary R.; Rogers, Guy MacLean (1996). Black Athena Revisited. UNC Press Books. p. 65. ISBN 978-0807845554. Retrieved June 2, 2016 – via Google Books.
  323. ^ Derry, D.E. (1956). "The Dynastic Race in Egypt". Journal of Egyptian Archaeology. 42: 80–85. doi:10.1177/030751335604200111. S2CID 194596267.
  324. ^ Gardiner, Alan (1961). Egypt of the Pharaohs. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 392.
  325. ^ Shaw, Ian; Nicholson, Paul (1995). The Dictionary of Ancient Egypt. London: British Museum Press. p. 228.
  326. ^ Redford, Donald B. (1992). Egypt, Israel, and Canaan in Ancient Times. Princeton: Princeton University Press. p. 13.
  327. ^ Frank J.Yurco (1996). "The Origin and Development of Ancient Nile Valley Writing," in Egypt in Africa, Theodore Celenko (ed). Indianapolis, Ind.: Indianapolis Museum of Art. pp. 34–35. ISBN 0-936260-64-5.
  328. ^ Wengrow, David (2023). "Ancient Egypt and Nubian: Kings of Flood and Kings of Rain" in Great Kingdoms of Africa, John Parker (eds). [S.l.]: THAMES & HUDSON. pp. 1–40. ISBN 978-0500252529.
  329. ^ Epic encounters: culture, media, and U.S. interests in the Middle East – 1945–2000 by Melani McAlister
  330. ^ Lefkowitz, Mary R.; Rogers, Guy MacLean (1996). Black Athena Revisited. UNC Press Books. ISBN 978-0807845554.
  331. ^ "Kevin Hart's comedy tour stop in Cairo cancelled amid backlash over 'Afrocentric' comments". Yahoo News. February 26, 2023. Retrieved March 5, 2023.
  332. ^ "Egyptians Create Viral Hashtag Against Kevin Hart's Cairo Performance".
  333. ^ "The pyramids are not African. Zahi Hawass responds to Kevin Hart". CNN Arabic (in Arabic). December 16, 2022.
  334. ^ Samil, Nehar (2021). "Claims that Ancient Egyptians were black untrue: Zahi Hawass". Daily News Egypt. Retrieved September 8, 2022.
  335. ^ "Zahi Hawass Denies Egypt's Pyramids Were Built by Africa's Kushites | Sada Elbalad". see.news.

Sources

  • Ashton, Sally-Ann (Spring 2002), "Identifying the ROM's 'Cleopatra'", Rotunda: 36–39, from the original on May 19, 2020, retrieved March 27, 2018.
  • Bard, Kathryn A. (1992). "Ancient Egyptians and the issue of Race". Bostonia Magazine.: later part of Black Athena Revisited, 1996
  • Baum, Bruce (2006). The Rise and Fall of the Caucasian Race: A Political History of Racial Identity. New York University Press. ISBN 978-0-8147-9892-8.
  • Beard, Mary (March 16, 2009). "The skeleton of Cleopatra's sister? Steady on". The Times Literary Supplement.
  • Bradford, Ernle (2003), Cleopatra, Penguin Group, ISBN 978-0141390147
  • Campbell, John (1851). Negro-mania: Being an Examination of the Falsely Assumed Equality of the Various Races of Men. Campbell & Powers.
  • Candelora, Danielle (2022). Candelora, Danielle; Ben-Marzouk, Nadia; Cooney, Kathyln (eds.). Ancient Egyptian society: challenging assumptions, exploring approaches. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge. ISBN 978-0367434632.
  • Challis, Debbie (2013). The Archaeology of Race: The Eugenic Ideas of Francis Galton and Flinders Petrie. Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN 978-1472502193.
  • Jacques Joseph, Champollion-Figeac (1839). Égypte ancienne (in French). Firmin Didot frères.
  • Chasseboeuf, Constantin François de (1862). La loi naturelle ou Principes physiques de la morale déduits de l'organisation de l'homme et de l'univers [Natural Law or Physical Principles of Morality Deduced from the Organization of Man and the Universe] (in French). Davoine.
  • Chasseboeuf, Constantin François de (1787). Voyage en Syrie et en Egypte, pendant les années 1783, 1784 et 1785: avec deux cartes géographiques et deux planches gravées représentant les Ruines du Temple du Soleil à Balbek, et celles de la ville de Palmyre, dans le désert de Syrie [Travel in Syria and Egypt, during the years 1783, 1784 and 1785: with two geographical maps and two engraved plates representing the Ruins of the Temple of the Sun at Balbek, and those of the city of Palmyra, in the Syrian desert] (in French). Desenne.
  • Cheshire, Wendy (2011), "The Phantom Sister of Ptolemy Alexander", Enchoria, 32: 120–130
  • Dain, Bruce R. (2002). A Hideous Monster Of The Mind: American race theory in the early republic. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0674030145 – via Google Books.
  • Diop, Cheikh Anta (1974). The African Origin of Civilization. Chicago, Illinois: Lawrence Hill Books. ISBN 978-1-55652-072-3.
  • Dudley, Donald (1960). The Civilization of Rome. New York: New American Library. p. 57. ISBN 978-1258450540.
  • Ferroukhi, Mafoud (2001a), "197 Marble portrait, perhaps of Cleopatra VII's daughter, Cleopatra Selene, Queen of Mauretania", in Walker, Susan; Higgs, Peter (eds.), Cleopatra of Egypt: from History to Myth, Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press (British Museum Press), p. 219, ISBN 978-0691088358.
  • Goldsworthy, Adrian Keith (2010). Antony and Cleopatra. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0300165340.
  • Grant, Michael (1972). Cleopatra. Edison, NJ: Barnes & Noble Books. pp. 4, 5. ISBN 978-0880297257.
  • Jablonski, Nina (2012). Living Color: The Biological and Social Meaning of Skin Color. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-95377-2.
ancient, egyptian, race, controversy, this, article, about, history, controversy, about, race, ancient, egyptians, discussion, scientific, evidence, relating, race, ancient, egyptians, population, history, egypt, genetic, history, egypt, question, race, ancien. This article is about the history of the controversy about the race of the ancient Egyptians For discussion of the scientific evidence relating to the race of the ancient Egyptians see Population history of Egypt and Genetic history of Egypt The question of the race of ancient Egyptians was raised historically as a product of the early racial concepts of the 18th and 19th centuries and was linked to models of racial hierarchy primarily based on craniometry and anthropometry A variety of views circulated about the racial identity of the Egyptians and the source of their culture 5 The Ancient Egyptian classification of ancient peoples from left to right a Libyan a Nubian an Asiatic and an Egyptian Drawing by an unknown artist after a mural of the tomb of Seti I Copy by Heinrich Menu von Minutoli 1820 In terms of skin colour the Libyan has the lightest complexion followed by the Asiatic who is yellowish in appearance The Egyptian is reddish brown while the Nubian is black 1 Each group is also marked with their own distinctive hairstyles and clothing 2 The representation of ethnic groups in Egyptian iconography has been a source of dispute among scholars 3 4 Some scholars argued that ancient Egyptian culture was influenced by other Afroasiatic speaking populations in North Africa the Horn of Africa or the Middle East while others pointed to influences from various Nubian groups or populations in Europe In more recent times some writers continued to challenge the mainstream view some focusing on questioning the race of specific notable individuals such as the king represented in the Great Sphinx of Giza native Egyptian pharaoh Tutankhamun Egyptian Queen Tiye and Greek Ptolemaic queen Cleopatra VII citation needed Mainstream scholars reject the notion that Egypt was a white or black civilization they maintain that applying modern notions of black or white races to ancient Egypt is anachronistic 6 7 8 In addition scholars reject the notion implicit in the notion of a black or white Egypt hypothesis that Ancient Egypt was racially homogeneous instead skin color varied between the peoples of Lower Egypt Upper Egypt and Nubia who in various eras rose to power in Ancient Egypt Within Egyptian history despite multiple foreign invasions the demographics were not shifted substantially by large migrations 9 10 11 Contents 1 Background 2 Position of modern scholarship 3 Scholarly views on bias in the historical and modern interpretations in the race controversy 4 Present day controversies 4 1 Tutankhamun 4 2 Cleopatra 4 3 Great Sphinx of Giza 4 4 Kemet 4 5 Ancient Egyptian art 4 5 1 Table of Nations controversy 4 5 2 Fayyum mummy portraits 4 5 3 Black queen controversy 5 Historical hypotheses 5 1 Black Egyptian hypothesis 5 2 Asiatic race theory 5 3 Caucasian Hamitic hypothesis 5 4 Turanid race hypothesis 5 5 Dynastic race theory 6 Reactions in modern Egypt 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Sources 11 Further reading 12 External linksBackgroundIn the 18th century French philosopher and abolitionist Constantin Francois de Chassebœuf comte de Volney in a set of comments regarding the race of the ancient Egyptians wrote that the Copts are the proper representatives of the Ancient Egyptians due to their jaundiced and fumed skin which is neither Greek nor Arab their full faces their puffy eyes their crushed noses and their thick lips the ancient Egyptians were true Negroes of the same type as all native born Africans 12 Volney also said that the Sphinx gave him the key to the riddle as to why all the Egyptians he saw across the country have a bloated face puffed up eyes flat nose thick lips in a word the true face of the mulatto He wrote he was tempted to attribute it to the climate but upon visiting the Sphinx its appearance gave him the answer seeing that head typically negro in all its features 13 Volney saw it as the true solution to the enigma of how the modern Egyptians came to have their mulatto appearance He goes on to postulate the Copts were true negroes of the same stock as all the autochthonous peoples of Africa and they after some centuries of mixing must have lost the full blackness of its original color 14 Jacques Joseph Champollion Figeac criticized Volney and called his conclusion evidently forced and inadmissible 15 The leading French scientist of the 18th century Georges Cuvier considered the Egyptians to be Caucasian and it was with Cuvier that Augustus Granville sided in the dissection and first scientific autopsy of an ancient Egyptian mummy in 1825 16 Another early example of the controversy is an article published in The New England Magazine of October 1833 where the authors dispute a claim that Herodotus was given as authority for their being negroes They point out with reference to tomb paintings It may be observed that the complexion of the men is invariably red that of the women yellow but neither of them can be said to have anything in their physiognomy at all resembling the Negro countenance 17 In 1839 Jean Francois Champollion suggested that In the Copts of Egypt we do not find any of the characteristic features of the ancient Egyptian population The Copts are the result of crossbreeding with all the nations that successfully dominated Egypt It is wrong to seek in them the principal features of the old race 18 This memoir was made in the context of the first tribes that would have inhabited Egypt his opinion was noted after his return from Nubia In 1839 Champollion s and Volney s claims were disputed by Jacques Joseph Champollion Figeac who blamed a misunderstanding of the ancients for spreading a false impression of a Negro Egypt stating the two physical traits of black skin and woolly hair are not enough to stamp a race as negro 14 26 and the opinion that the ancient population of Egypt belonged to the Negro African race is an error long accepted as the truth Volney s conclusion as to the Negro origin of the ancient Egyptian civilization is evidently forced and inadmissible 15 Gaston Maspero a 19th century French Egyptologist stated that by the almost unanimous testimony of ancient Greek historians they Ancient Egyptians belonged to the African race which settled in Ethiopia 19 Heinrich Karl Brusch a 19th century German Egyptologist stated that according to ethnology the Egyptians appear to form a third branch of the Caucasian race and this much may be regarded as certain 20 E A Wallis Budge a 19th century British Egyptologist argued that There are many things in the manners and customs and religions of the historic Egyptians that suggest that the original home of their ancestors was in a country in the neighbourhood of Uganda and Land of Punt 21 The debate over the race of the ancient Egyptians intensified during the 19th century movement to abolish slavery in the United States as arguments relating to the justifications for slavery increasingly asserted the historical mental and physical inferiority of black people 22 For example in 1851 John Campbell directly challenged the claims by Champollion and others regarding the evidence for a black Egypt asserting There is one great difficulty and to my mind an insurmountable one which is that the advocates of the negro civilization of Egypt do not attempt to account for how this civilization was lost Egypt progressed and why because it was Caucasian 23 The arguments regarding the race of the Egyptians became more explicitly tied to the debate over slavery in the United States as tensions escalated towards the American Civil War 24 In 1854 Josiah C Nott with George Gliddon set out to prove that the Caucasian or white and the Negro races were distinct at a very remote date and that the Egyptians were Caucasians 25 Samuel George Morton a physician and professor of anatomy concluded that Negroes were numerous in Egypt but their social position in ancient times was the same that it now is in the United States that of servants and slaves 26 Position of modern scholarshipMain article Population history of Egypt See also DNA history of Egypt Modern scholars who have studied ancient Egyptian culture and population history have responded to the controversy over the race of the ancient Egyptians in various ways At the UNESCO Symposium on the Peopling of Ancient Egypt and the Deciphering of the Meroitic script in Cairo in 1974 the Black Hypothesis and the notion of a homogeneous population in Egypt was proposed by Cheikh Anta Diop in his chapter Origins of the Ancient Egyptians Numerous objections were made to the ideas propounded by Diop These objections revealed the extent of a disagreement which remained profound even though it was not voiced explicitly The disagreement was largely due to methodological issues 27 for example the insufficient data to enable provisional conclusions to be drawn with regard to the peopling of ancient Egypt and the successive phases through which it may have passed 28 The arguments for all sides are recorded in the UNESCO publication General History of Africa 29 with the Origin of the Egyptians chapter being written by Cheikh Anta Diop a proponent of the Black Hypothesis 30 Diop s chapter was credited in the general conclusion of the symposium report by the International Scientific Committee s Rapporteur Jean Devisse 31 as a painstakingly researched contribution consequently there was a real lack of balance in the discussion among participants 32 33 At the 1974 UNESCO conference several participants other than Diop and Obenga concluded that the Neolithic Egyptian population was indigenous to the Sahara and was made up of people from north and south of the Sahara who had a range of skin colors 34 35 The majority of participants in the conference disagreed with Diop s and Obenga s views 36 Similarly none of the participants voiced support for an earlier postulation that Egyptians were white with a dark even black pigmentation 14 43 although Professor Ghallab stated that the inhabitants of Egypt in Palaeolithic times were Caucasoids 14 44 A forthcoming General History of Africa Volume IX will update the pre existing volumes with recent research This volume will feature 60 historians from 28 countries Africa North America Europe Latin America Caribbean and Asia 37 38 Subsequent reviewers of the 1974 symposium debate and the UNESCO publication have presented a range of views on the outcome of the debate 39 40 41 42 According to Larissa Nordholt the majority of reviewers at the time saw Diop s chapter as discrediting the publication s scholarly reputation due to the suggested weight on politics 43 279 Larissa Nordholt argued that Diop s chapter was politically motivated having been published only due to being in line with UNESCO s political imperatives despite clashing with accepted historical methods and standards of academic rigor 44 Peter Shinnie reviewing the GHA volume wrote that It seems that UNESCO and the editor Mokhtar were embarrassed by the unscholarly and preposterous nature of Diop s views but were unable to reject his contribution 45 However Bethwell Allan Ogot a Kenyan historian and editor of UNESCO General History of Africa Volume 5 stated that Cheikh Anta Diop wrested Egyptian civilization from the Egyptologists and restored it to the mainstream of African history 46 Stephen Quirke argued that the UNESCO sponsored conference on the General History of Africa in 1974 did not change the Eurocentric climate of research and of the need to incorporate both African centred studies and White European academic perspectives He later outlined that research conferences and publications on the history and language of Kemet Egypt remain dominated beyond 90 by those brought up and trained in European not African societies and languages which include Arabic 47 Since the late 20th century as the science of human population genetics has advanced most biological anthropologists have come to reject the notion of race as having any validity in the study of human biology 48 49 Frank J Yurco outlined in a 1989 article that In short ancient Egypt like modern Egypt consisted of a very heterogeneous population 50 He also wrote in 1990 When you talk about Egypt it s just not right to talk about black or white To take the terminology here in the United States and graft it onto Africa is anthropologically inaccurate Yurco added that We are applying a racial divisiveness to Egypt that they would never have accepted They would have considered this argument absurd and that is something we could really learn from 51 Yurco wrote in 1996 that the peoples of Egypt the Sudan and much of North East Africa are generally regarded as a Nilotic continuity with widely ranging physical features complexions light to dark various hair and craniofacial types 52 Gamal Mokthar editor of the UNESCO General History of Africa wrote in 1990 that It is more than probable that the African strain black or light is preponderant in the Ancient Egyptian but in the present state of our knowledge it is impossible to say more 53 Egyptologist Miriam Lichtheim in 1990 wrote that The Egyptians were not Nubians and the original Nubians were not black Nubia gradually became black because black peoples migrated northward out of Central Africa 54 Bernard R Ortiz De Montellano wrote in 1993 The claim that all Egyptians or even all the pharaohs were black is not valid Most scholars believe that Egyptians in antiquity looked pretty much as they look today with a gradation of darker shades toward the Sudan 9 Christopher Ehret wrote in 1996 Ancient Egyptian civilization was in ways and to an extent usually not recognized fundamentally African The evidence of both language and culture reveals these African roots The origins of Egyptian ethnicity lay in the areas south of Egypt 55 Nancy Lovell wrote in 1999 that studies of skeletal remains indicate that the physical characteristics of ancient southern Egyptians and Nubians were within the range of variation for both ancient and modern indigenous peoples of the Sahara and tropical Africa and that the distribution of population characteristics seems to follow a clinal pattern from south to north which may be explained by natural selection as well as gene flow between neighboring populations Lovell outlined that In general the inhabitants of Upper Egypt and Nubia had the greatest biological affinity to people of the Sahara and more southerly areas She also wrote that the archaeological and inscriptional evidence for contact between Egypt and Syro Palestine suggests that gene flow between these areas was very likely and that the early Nile Valley populations were part of an African lineage but exhibiting local variation 56 Stuart Tyson Smith wrote in 2001 Any characterization of race of the ancient Egyptians depends on modern cultural definitions not on scientific study Thus by modern American standards it is reasonable to characterize the Egyptians as black while acknowledging the scientific evidence for the physical diversity of Africans He continues Ancient Egyptian practices show strong similarities to modern African cultures including divine kingship the use of headrests body art circumcision and male coming of age rituals all suggesting an African substratum or foundation for Egyptian civilisation 57 Smith also wrote in 2004 Egyptian art depicts Nubians with stereotypical dark skin facial features hairstyles and dress all very different from Egyptians and the other two ethnic groups Asiatics and Libyans 58 He adds that no single material correlate no matter how abundantly represented unambiguously reflects ethnic group affiliation 59 Sonia Zakrzewski who wrote in 2003 studied skeletal samples from the Badarian period to the Middle Kingdom in Upper Egypt The raw data suggested that the Ancient Egyptians in general had tropical body plans but that their proportions were actually super negroid i e the limb indices are relatively longer than in many African populations She proposed that the apparent development of an increasingly African body plan over time may also be due to Nubian mercenaries being included in the Middle Kingdom sample Although she noted that in spite of the differences in tibiae lengths among the Badarian and Early Dynastic samples that all samples lie relatively clustered together as compared to the other populations Zakrzewski concluded that the results must remain provisional due to the relatively small sample sizes and the lack of skeletal material that cross cuts all social and economic groups within each time period 60 Donald B Redford wrote in 2004 that The old notion of waves of races flowing up the Nile Valley effecting cultural change and improvement is now known to be as erroneous as it was simplistic New ideas need not come by means of invasion occasionally they are indigenous and may parallel similar discoveries elsewhere which are wholly unrelated 61 Robert Morkot wrote in 2005 that The ancient Egyptians were not white in any European sense nor were they Caucasian we can say that the earliest population of ancient Egypt included African people from the upper Nile African people from the regions of the Sahara and modern Libya and smaller numbers of people who had come from south western Asia and perhaps the Arabian peninsula 62 Barry J Kemp wrote in 2007 that the black white argument though politically understandable is an oversimplification that hinders an appropriate evaluation of the scientific data on the ancient Egyptians since it does not take into consideration the difficulty in ascertaining complexion from skeletal remains It also ignores the fact that Africa is inhabited by many other populations besides Bantu related Negroid groups He wrote that in reconstructions of life in ancient Egypt modern Egyptians would therefore be the most logical and closest approximation to the ancient Egyptians Kemp also wrote that sample populations available from northern Egypt from before the 1st Dynasty Merimda Maadi and Wadi Digla turn out to be significantly different from sample populations from early Palestine and Byblos suggesting a lack of common ancestors over a long time and the anthropological measurements of ancient Egyptians male limb length proportions had grouped them with Africans rather than with Europeans 63 Barbara Mertz wrote in 2011 Egyptian civilization was not Mediterranean or African Semitic or Hamitic black or white but all of them It was in short Egyptian 64 Kathryn Bard wrote in 2014 Egyptians were the indigenous farmers of the lower Nile valley neither black nor white as races are conceived of today 65 Federico Puigdevall and Albert Canagueral wrote in 2017 There are defenders of the theory that the pharaohs were black and there are those who maintain they had Caucasian origins Neither theory is provable 66 Nicky Nielsen wrote in 2020 Ancient Egypt was neither black nor white and the repeated attempt by advocates of either ideology to seize the ownership of ancient Egypt simply perpetuates an old tradition one of removing agency and control of their heritage from the modern population living along the banks of the Nile 67 Marc Van De Mieroop wrote in 2021 Some scholars have tried to determine what Egyptians could have looked like by comparing their skeletal remains with those of recent populations but the samples are so limited and the interpretations so fraught with uncertainties that this is an unreliable approach He concluded that ancient Egypt s location at the edge of northeast Africa and its geography as a corridor between that continent and Asia opened it up to influences from all directions in terms of both culture and of demography 68 S O Y Keita wrote in 2022 on the origins and the identity of the Ancient Egyptians He examined various forms of evidence which included archaeology historical linguistics and biological data to determine the population affinities He concluded that various disciplines indicate the groundings of Egypt within Northeastern Africa and the ancient Egyptians were a people and society that emerged in the Saharo Nilotic region of Northeast Africa 69 Keita also reviewed studies on the biological affinities of the Ancient Egyptian population and wrote in 1993 that the original inhabitants of the Nile Valley were primarily a variety of indigenous Northeast Africans from the areas of the desiccating Sahara and more southerly areas He also added that whilst Egyptian society became more socially complex and biologically varied the ethnicity of the Niloto Saharo Sudanese origins did not change 70 William Stiebling and Susan Helft wrote in 2023 on the historical debate concerning the race and ethnicity of the ancient Egyptians in light of recent evidence They argued that the physical appearances would have varied along a continuum from the Delta to the Nile s source regions in the south The authors specified that some ancient Egyptians looked more Middle Eastern and others looked more Sudanese or Ethiopians of today and some may even have looked like other groups in Africa The authors reached the view that Egypt was a unique civilization with genetic and cultural ties linking it to other African cultures to its south and west and to Mediterranean and Near Eastern cultures to its north 71 Scholarly views on bias in the historical and modern interpretations in the race controversyVarious scholars have highlighted the role of colonial racism in shaping the attitudes of early Egyptologists and criticised the continued over representation of North American and European perspectives in the field 72 73 74 42 75 Diop in his work The African Origin of Civilization argued that the prevailing views in Egyptology were driven by biased scholarship and colonial attitudes 76 77 Similarly Bruce Trigger wrote that early modern scholarship on the Nile Valley populations had been marred by a confusion of race language and culture and by an accompanying racism 78 Stuart Tyson Smith wrote in 2018 that a common practice among Egyptologists was to divorce Egypt from its proper northeast African context instead framing it as fundamentally part of a Near Eastern or Mediterranean economic social and political sphere hardly African at all or at best a crossroad between the Near East the eastern Mediterranean and Africa which carries with it the implication that it is ultimately not really part of Africa He explicitly criticises Van De Mieroop s comments that ancient Egypt was clearly in Africa it was not so clearly of Africa as reflecting long standing Egyptological biases He concluded that the interrelated cultural features shared between northeast African dynamic and Pharaonic Egypt are not survivals or coincidence but shared traditions with common origins in the deep past 79 Andrea Manzo wrote in 2022 that early Egyptologists had situated the origins of dynastic Egypt within a broad Hamitic horizon that characterised several regions of Africa and that these views had continued to dominate in the second half of the twentieth century Manzo stated more recent studies had pointed out the relevance of African elements to the rise of Egyptian culture following earlier suggestions on Egyptian kingship and religion by Henri Frankfort which countered the traditional view that considered Egypt more closely linked to the Near East than to the rest of Africa 80 Ehret recounted in 2023 that the previous two centuries of Western scholarship had presented Egypt as an offshoot of earlier Middle Eastern developments He continued to argue that these old ideas had influenced the attitudes of scholars in other disciplines such as genetics and their approaches even when existing archaeological linguistic and biological anthropological evidence had determined the founding locales of Ancient Egypt to be the descendants of longtime populations in Northeastern Africa which included Nubia and the northern Horn of Africa 81 Genetic studies have been criticised by several scholars for a range of methodological problems and providing misleading racial classifications 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 Boyce and Keita argued that certain studies have adopted a selective approach in sampling such as using samples drawn mostly from northern Lower Egypt which has historically had the presence of more foreigners from the Mediterranean and the Near East and using those samples as representing the rest of Egypt Thus excluding the darker south or Upper Egypt which presents a false impression of Egyptian variability The authors also note that chromosomal patterns have featured inconsistent labelling such as Haplotype V as seen the with use of misleading terms like Arabic to describe it implying this haplotype is of Middle Eastern origins However when the haplotype V variant is looked at in context it does have a very high prevalence in African countries above the Sahara and in Ethiopia 89 In 2022 Danielle Candelora criticised how modern DNA studies are misused for political and racist agendas As an example she cites the media echo about the Schuenemann genome study published in 2017 which was sensationalized in the media as proof that Egyptians were not black Africans in spite of its methodological limits and taken by white suprematists as scientific evidence to justify their view on the achievements of the Ancient Egyptian civilisation Candelora also noted that the media overlooked methodological limitations with the study such as the untested sampling methods small sample size and problematic comparative data 90 However an unpublished follow up study in 2022 sampled six different excavation sites along the entire length of the Nile Valley spanning 4000 years of Egyptian history and the 18 high quality mitochondrial genomes that were reconstructed which the authors argued supported the results from the 2017 Schuenemann genome study 91 Present day controversiesToday the issues regarding the race of the ancient Egyptians are troubled waters which most people who write about ancient Egypt from within the mainstream of scholarship avoid 92 The debate therefore takes place mainly in the public sphere and tends to focus on a small number of specific issues Tutankhamun nbsp Mask of TutankhamunSeveral scholars including Diop have claimed that Tutankhamun was black and have protested that attempted reconstructions of Tutankhamun s facial features as depicted on the cover of National Geographic magazine have represented the king as too white Among these writers was Chancellor Williams who argued that King Tutankhamun his parents and grandparents were black 93 Forensic artists and physical anthropologists from Egypt France and the United States independently created busts of Tutankhamun using a CT scan of the skull Biological anthropologist Susan Anton the leader of the American team said the race of the skull was hard to call She stated that the shape of the cranial cavity indicated an African while the nose opening suggested narrow nostrils which is usually considered to be a European characteristic The skull was thus concluded to be that of a North African 94 Other experts have argued that neither skull shapes nor nasal openings are a reliable indication of race 95 Although modern technology can reconstruct Tutankhamun s facial structure with a high degree of accuracy based on CT data from his mummy 96 97 determining his skin tone and eye color is impossible The clay model was therefore given a coloring which according to the artist was based on an average shade of modern Egyptians 98 nbsp Tiye grandmother of TutankhamunTerry Garcia National Geographic s executive vice president for mission programs said in response to some of those protesting against the Tutankhamun reconstruction The big variable is skin tone North Africans we know today had a range of skin tones from light to dark In this case we selected a medium skin tone and we say quite up front This is midrange We will never know for sure what his exact skin tone was or the color of his eyes with 100 certainty Maybe in the future people will come to a different conclusion 99 When pressed on the issue by American activists in September 2007 the Secretary General of the Egyptian Supreme Council of Antiquities Zahi Hawass stated Tutankhamun was not black 100 In a November 2007 publication of Ancient Egypt magazine Hawass asserted that none of the facial reconstructions resemble Tut and that in his opinion the most accurate representation of the boy king is the mask from his tomb 101 The Discovery Channel commissioned a facial reconstruction of Tutankhamun based on CT scans of a model of his skull back in 2002 102 103 Stuart Tyson Smith Egyptologist and professor of anthropology at University of California Santa Barbara in 2008 expressed criticism of the forensic reconstruction in a journal review noting that Tutankhamun s face was very light skinned which reflected a bias among media outlets He further added that Egyptologists have been strangely reluctant to admit that the ancient Egyptians were rather dark skinned Africans especially the farther south one goes 104 In 2011 the genomics company iGENEA launched a Tutankhamun DNA project based on genetic markers that it indicated it had culled from a Discovery Channel special on the pharaoh According to the firm the microsatellite data suggested that Tutankhamun belonged to the haplogroup R1b1a2 the most common paternal clade among males in Western Europe Carsten Pusch and Albert Zink who led the unit that had extracted Tutankhamun s DNA chided iGENEA for not liaising with them before establishing the project After examining the footage they also concluded that the methodology the company used was unscientific with Putsch calling them simply impossible 105 nbsp A painted wooden figure of Tutankhamun found in his royal tombA 2020 DNA study by Gad Hawass et al analysed mitochondrial and Y chromosomal haplogroups from Tutankhamun s family members of the 18th Dynasty using comprehensive control procedures to ensure quality results They found that the Y chromosome haplogroup of the family was R1b which originated in Europe and which today makes up 50 90 of the genetic pool of modern western Europeans The mitochondrial haplogroup was K which is most likely also part of a Near Eastern lineage The profiles for Tutankhamun and Amenhotep III were incomplete and the analysis produced differing probability figures despite having concordant allele results 106 Because the relationships of these two mummies with the KV55 mummy had previously been confirmed in an earlier study the haplogroup prediction of both mummies could be derived from the full profile of the KV55 data The 20th Dynasty pair of Ramesses III and his son were found to have the haplogroup E1b1a which has its highest frequencies in modern populations from West Africa and Central Africa but which is rare among North Africans and nearly absent in East Africa 106 Genetic analysis indicated the following haplogroups Amenhotep III YDNA R1b mtDNA H2b Tutankhamun YDNA R1b mtDNA K Akhenaten YDNA R1b mtDNA K Tiye mtDNA K Yuya G2a mtDNA K Thuya mtDNA KIn 2010 Hawass et al undertook detailed anthropological radiological and genetic studies as part of the King Tutankhamun Family Project The objectives included attempting to determine familial relationships among 11 royal mummies of the New Kingdom as well to research for pathological features including potential inherited disorders and infectious diseases 107 In 2022 S O Y Keita analysed 8 Short Tandem loci STR data published as part of these studies by Hawass et al using an algorithm that only has three choices Eurasians sub Saharan Africans and East Asians Using these three options Keita concluded that the majority of the samples which included the genetic remains of Tutankhamun showed a population affinity with sub Saharan Africans in one affinity analysis However Keita cautioned that this does not mean that the royal mummies lacked other affiliations which he argued had been obscured in typological thinking Keita further added that different data and algorithms might give different results which reflects the complexity of biological heritage and the associated interpretation 108 According to historian William Stiebling and archaeologist Susan N Helft conflicting DNA analysis conducted by different research teams on ancient Egyptians such as the Amarna royal mummies which included the remains of Tutankhamun has led to a lack of consensus on the genetic makeup of the ancient Egyptians and their geographic origins 109 Cleopatra Main article Ethnicity of Cleopatra The race and skin color of Cleopatra VII the last active Hellenistic ruler of the Macedonian Greek Ptolemaic dynasty of Egypt established in 323 BC has also caused some debate 110 although generally not in scholarly sources 111 For example the article Was Cleopatra Black was published in Ebony magazine in 2012 112 and an article about Afrocentrism from the St Louis Post Dispatch mentions the question too 113 Mary Lefkowitz Professor Emerita of Classical Studies at Wellesley College traces the main origins of the black Cleopatra claim to the 1946 book by J A Rogers called World s Great Men of Color although noting that the idea of Cleopatra as black goes back to at least the 19th century 114 115 Lefkowitz refutes Rogers hypothesis on various scholarly grounds The black Cleopatra claim was further revived in an essay by afrocentrist John Henrik Clarke chair of African history at Hunter College entitled African Warrior Queens 116 Lefkowitz notes the essay includes the claim that Cleopatra described herself as black in the New Testament s Book of Acts when in fact Cleopatra had died more than sixty years before the death of Jesus Christ 116 nbsp The Berlin Cleopatra now in the Altes Museum 1st century BC 117 Scholars identify Cleopatra as essentially of Greek ancestry with some Persian and Sogdian Iranian ancestry based on the fact that her Macedonian Greek family the Ptolemaic dynasty had intermingled with the Seleucid aristocracy of the time 118 Michael Grant states that Cleopatra probably had not a drop of Egyptian blood and that she would have described herself as Greek 119 Duane W Roller notes that there is absolutely no evidence that Cleopatra was racially black African as claimed by what he dismisses as generally not credible scholarly sources 111 although he speculates Cleopatra may have been one fourth Egyptian 120 Part of Roller s argument rests on a speculated earlier marriage between Psenptais II and a certain Berenice once argued to possibly be a daughter of Ptolemy VIII However this speculation was refuted by Egyptologist Wendy Cheshire 121 122 Cleopatra s official coinage which she would have approved and the three portrait busts of her which are considered authentic by scholars all match each other and they portray Cleopatra as a Greek woman 123 124 125 126 127 Polo writes that Cleopatra s coinage presents her image with certainty and asserts that the sculpted portrait of the Berlin Cleopatra head is confirmed as having a similar profile 124 Similar to the Berlin Cleopatra other Roman sculpted portraits of Cleopatra include diadem wearing marble heads now located in the Vatican Museums and Archaeological Museum of Cherchell although the latter may instead be a depiction of her daughter Cleopatra Selene II 128 129 130 Aside from Hellenistic art native Egyptian artworks of Cleopatra include the Bust of Cleopatra in the Royal Ontario Museum 131 as well as stone carved reliefs of the Temple of Hathor in the Dendera Temple complex in Egypt depicting Cleopatra and Caesarion as ruling pharaohs providing offerings to Egyptian deities 132 133 In his Kleopatra und die Caesaren 2006 Bernard Andreae contends that this Egyptian basalt statue is like other idealized Egyptian portraits of the queen and does not contain realistic facial features and hence adds little to the knowledge of Cleopatra s appearance 134 In 2009 a BBC documentary speculated that Cleopatra might have been part North African This was based largely on the claims of Hilke Thur of the Austrian Academy of Sciences who in the 1990s had examined a headless skeleton of a female child in a 20 BC tomb in Ephesus modern Turkey together with the old notes and photographs of the now missing skull Thur hypothesized the body as that of Arsinoe half sister to Cleopatra 135 136 Arsinoe and Cleopatra shared the same father Ptolemy XII Auletes but may have had different mothers 137 with Thur claiming the alleged African ancestry came from the skeleton mother To date it has never been definitively proved that the skeleton is that of Arsinoe IV Furthermore craniometry as used by Thur to determine race is based in scientific racism that is now generally considered a pseudoscience that supported exploitation of groups of people to perpetuate racial oppression and distorted future views of the biological basis of race 138 When a DNA test attempted to determine the identity of the child it was impossible to get an accurate reading since the bones had been handled too many times 139 and the skull had been lost in Germany during World War II Numerous studies have shown that cranial variation has a low correlation with race and rather that cranial variation was strongly correlated with climate variables note 1 Mary Beard states that the age of the skeleton is too young to be that of Arsinoe the bones said to be that of a 15 18 year old child with Arsinoe being around her mid twenties at her death 155 The 2023 Netflix documentary series Queen Cleopatra which appears to depict Cleopatra as black spurred a lawsuit in Egypt claiming that the documentary was distorting the reality in order to promote Afrocentrism and that Netflix s programs were not in line with Egyptian or Islamic values 156 Similarly an article published by The Telegraph criticized the Netflix documentary stating that Cleopatra was Greek and not a tool in Netflix s war on history 157 Classics scholar Rebecca Futo Kennedy contends that discussing whether someone was black or white is anachronistic and that asking this question says more about modern political investments than attempting to understand antiquity on its own terms 158 Great Sphinx of Giza nbsp The Sphinx in profile in 2010The identity of the model for the Great Sphinx of Giza is unknown 159 Most experts 160 believe that the face of the Sphinx represents the likeness of the Pharaoh Khafra although a few Egyptologists and interested amateurs have proposed different hypotheses citation needed An early description of the Sphinx typically negro in all its features is recorded in the travel notes of a French scholar Volney who visited Egypt between 1783 and 1785 161 along with French novelist Gustave Flaubert 162 A similar description was given in the well known book 163 by Vivant Denon where he described the sphinx as the character is African but the mouth the lips of which are thick 164 Following Volney Denon and other early writers numerous Afrocentric scholars such as Du Bois 165 166 167 Diop 168 and Asante 169 have characterized the face of the Sphinx as Black or Negroid American geologist Robert M Schoch has written that the Sphinx has a distinctive African Nubian or Negroid aspect which is lacking in the face of Khafre 170 171 but he was described by others such as Ronald H Fritze and Mark Lehner of being a pseudoscientific writer 172 173 David S Anderson writes in Lost City Found Pyramid Understanding Alternative Archaeologies and Pseudoscientific Practices that Van Sertima s claim that the sphinx was a portrait statue of the black pharaoh Khafre is a form of pseudoarchaeology not supported by evidence 174 He compares it to the claim that Olmec colossal heads had African origins which is not taken seriously by Mesoamerican scholars such as Richard Diehl and Ann Cyphers 175 full citation needed Kemet km in Egyptian hieroglyphs km biliteral kmt place kmt people Ancient Egyptians referred to their homeland as Kmt conventionally pronounced as Kemet According to Cheikh Anta Diop the Egyptians referred to themselves as Black people or kmt and km was the etymological root of other words such as Kam or Ham which refer to Black people in Hebrew tradition 14 27 176 A review of David Goldenberg s The Curse of Ham Race and Slavery in Early Judaism Christianity and Islam states that Goldenberg argues persuasively that the biblical name Ham bears no relationship at all to the notion of blackness and as of now is of unknown etymology 177 Diop 178 William Leo Hansberry 178 and Aboubacry Moussa Lam 179 have argued that kmt was derived from the skin color of the Nile valley people which Diop claimed was black 14 21 26 The claim that the ancient Egyptians had black skin has become a cornerstone of Afrocentric historiography 178 At the UNESCO Symposium in 1974 Sauneron Obenga and Diop concluded that KMT and KM meant black 14 40 However Sauneron clarified that the adjective Kmtyw means people of the black land rather than black people and that the Egyptians never used the adjective Kmtyw to refer to the various black peoples they knew of they only used it to refer to themselves 180 Mainstream scholars hold that kmt means the black land or the black place and that this is a reference to the fertile black soil that was washed down from Central Africa by the annual Nile inundation By contrast the barren desert outside the narrow confines of the Nile watercourse was called dsrt conventionally pronounced deshret or the red land 178 181 Raymond Faulkner s Concise Dictionary of Middle Egyptian translates kmt into Egyptians 182 Gardiner translates it as the Black Land Egypt 183 Ancient Egyptian art Main article Art of ancient Egypt nbsp Painting on the sarcophagus of Queen Ashayet showing the queen with both Egyptian and Nubian servants nbsp Painting of the opening of the mouth ceremony being performed on a mummy before the tomb Anubis attending the mummy of the deceased Ancient Egyptian tombs and temples contained thousands of paintings sculptures and written works which reveal a great deal about the people of that time However their depictions of themselves in their surviving art and artifacts are rendered in sometimes symbolic rather than realistic pigments As a result ancient Egyptian artifacts provide sometimes conflicting and inconclusive evidence of the ethnicity of the people who lived in Egypt during dynastic times 184 185 In their own art Egyptians are often represented in a color that is officially called dark red according to Diop 186 Arguing against other theories Diop quotes Champollion Figeac who states one distinguishes on Egyptian monuments several species of blacks differing with respect to complexion which makes Negroes black or copper colored 187 Regarding an expedition by King Sesostris Cherubini states the following concerning captured southern Africans except for the panther skin about their loins are distinguished by their color some entirely black others dark brown 188 University of Chicago scholars assert that Nubians are generally depicted with black paint but the skin pigment used in Egyptian paintings to refer to Nubians can range from dark red to brown to black 189 This can be observed in paintings from the tomb of the Egyptian Huy as well as Ramses II s temple at Beit el Wali 190 Also Snowden indicates that Romans had accurate knowledge of negroes of a red copper colored complexion among African tribes 191 nbsp Men from The Land of Punt carrying gifts tomb of RekhmireStuart Tyson Smith Egyptologist and professor of anthropology at University of California Santa Barbara wrote in 2001 that The scene of an expedition to Punt from Queen Hatshepsuis mortuary complex at Deir el Bahri shows Puntites with red skin and facial features similar to Egyptians long or bobbed hair goatee beards and kilts 192 Conversely in 2003 Najovits wrote that Egyptian art depicted Egyptians on the one hand and Nubians and other blacks on the other hand with distinctly different ethnic characteristics and depicted this abundantly and often aggressively The Egyptians accurately arrogantly and aggressively made national and ethnic distinctions from a very early date in their art and literature 193 He continues There is an extraordinary abundance of Egyptian works of art which clearly depicted sharply contrasted reddish brown Egyptians and black Nubians 193 nbsp Inner back side of the sarcophagus of Ashayet a Nubian wife of Mentuhotep II in the 11th Dynasty 194 depicting her with male and female Egyptian servants facsimile by Charles K Wilkinson In 2003 David O Connor and Andrew Reid remarked that Puntite and Egyptian males are assigned similarly reddish skins but Nubians typically have darker one and Libyans at most periods have light coloured yellowish skin Initially Nubians and Puntities may have been shown as fairly similar in appearance and dress short linen kilts but by ca 1400 BC they are distinctly different 195 Barbara Mertz in 2011 wrote in Red Land Black Land Daily Life in Ancient Egypt The concept of race would have been totally alien to them Ancient Egyptians The skin color that painters usually used for men is a reddish brown Women were depicted as lighter in complexion 196 perhaps because they didn t spend so much time out of doors Some individuals are shown with black skins I cannot recall a single example of the words black brown or white being used in an Egyptian text to describe a person She gives the example of one of Thutmose III s sole companions who was Nubian or Kushite In his funerary scroll he is shown with dark brown skin instead of the conventional reddish brown used for Egyptians 64 Table of Nations controversy nbsp The Table of Nations from Lepsius First row left to right Aamu Asiatics Nehesu Nubians and Themehu Libyans second row a deity Reth Egyptians Aamu Asiatics However Manu Ampim a professor at Merritt College specializing in African and African American history and culture claims in the book Modern Fraud The Forged Ancient Egyptian Statues of Ra Hotep and Nofret that many ancient Egyptian statues and artworks are modern frauds that have been created specifically to hide the fact that the ancient Egyptians were black while authentic artworks that demonstrate black characteristics are systematically defaced or even modified Ampim repeatedly makes the accusation that the Egyptian authorities are systematically destroying evidence that proves that the ancient Egyptians were black under the guise of renovating and conserving the applicable temples and structures He further accuses European scholars of wittingly participating in and abetting this process 197 198 Ampim has a specific concern about the painting of the Table of Nations in the Tomb of Ramesses III KV11 The Table of Nations is a standard painting that appears in a number of tombs and they were usually provided for the guidance of the soul of the deceased 184 199 Among other things it described the four races of men as follows translation by E A Wallis Budge 199 The first are RETH the second are AAMU the third are NEHESU and the fourth are THEMEHU The RETH are Egyptians the AAMU are dwellers in the deserts to the east and north east of Egypt the NEHESU are the black races and the THEMEHU are the fair skinned Libyans The archaeologist Karl Richard Lepsius documented many ancient Egyptian tomb paintings in his work Denkmaler aus Aegypten und Aethiopien 200 In 1913 after the death of Lepsius an updated reprint of the work was produced edited by Kurt Sethe This printing included an additional section called the Erganzungsband in German which incorporated many illustrations that did not appear in Lepsius original work One of them plate 48 illustrated one example of each of the four nations as depicted in KV11 and shows the Egyptian nation and the Nubian nation as identical to each other in skin color and dress Ampim has declared that plate 48 is a true reflection of the original painting and that it proves that the ancient Egyptians were identical in appearance to the Nubians even though he admits no other examples of the Table of Nations show this similarity He has further accused Euro American writers of attempting to mislead the public on this issue 201 The late Egyptologist Frank J Yurco visited the tomb of Ramesses III KV11 and in a 1996 article on the Ramesses III tomb reliefs he pointed out that the depiction of plate 48 in the Erganzungsband section is not a correct depiction of what is actually painted on the walls of the tomb Yurco notes instead that plate 48 is a pastiche of samples of what is on the tomb walls arranged from Lepsius notes after his death and that a picture of a Nubian person has erroneously been labeled in the pastiche as an Egyptian person Yurco points also to the much more recent photographs of Erik Hornung as a correct depiction of the actual paintings 202 Erik Hornung The Valley of the Kings Horizon of Eternity 1990 Yurco later concluded that Egyptian iconography reflected various complexions and that current scholarship in Egyptology not acknowledged often by Afrocentrists has demonstrated that the Egyptians were most closely related to Saharan Africans culturally and linguistically and that such Mesopotamian influence can be inferred came through the Nile Delta town of Buto as part of long distance trade 203 He also noted that the Egyptians made distinctions between groups from Nubia such as Nhsy and Mdja with the former group described as darker with frizzy hair and wore a distinctive dress 203 Ampim nonetheless continues to argue that plate 48 shows accurately the images that stand on the walls of KV11 and he categorically accuses both Yurco and Hornung of perpetrating a deliberate deception for the purposes of misleading the public about the true race of the ancient Egyptians 201 Fayyum mummy portraits nbsp nbsp nbsp The naturalistic Fayum mummy portraits show the diversity of Egyptians in the Roman period The Roman era Fayum mummy portraits attached to coffins containing the latest dated mummies discovered in the Faiyum Oasis represent a population of both native Egyptians and those with mixed Greek heritage 204 The dental morphology of the mummies align more with the indigenous North African population than Greek or other later colonial European settlers 205 Black queen controversy The late British Africanist Basil Davidson stated Whether the Ancient Egyptians were as black or as brown in skin color as other Africans may remain an issue of emotive dispute probably they were both Their own artistic conventions painted them as pink but pictures on their tombs show they often married queens shown as entirely black being from the south 206 207 nbsp Queen Ahmose Nefertari of the 18th DynastyAhmose Nefertari is an example In most depictions of Ahmose Nefertari she is pictured with black skin 208 209 while in some instances her skin is blue 210 or red 211 In 1939 Flinders Petrie said an invasion from the south established a black queen as the divine ancestress of the XVIIIth dynasty 212 207 He also said a possibility of the black being symbolic has been suggested 212 and Nefertari must have married a Libyan as she was the mother of Amenhetep I who was of fair Libyan style 212 In 1961 Alan Gardiner in describing the walls of tombs in the Deir el Medina area noted in passing that Ahmose Nefertari was well represented in these tomb illustrations and that her countenance was sometimes black and sometimes blue He did not offer any explanation for these colors but noted that her probable ancestry ruled out that she might have had black blood 210 In 1974 Diop described Ahmose Nefertari as typically negroid 14 17 In the controversial book Black Athena the hypotheses of which have been widely rejected by mainstream scholarship Martin Bernal considered her skin color in paintings to be a clear sign of Nubian ancestry 213 In 1981 Michel Gitton noted that while in most artistic depictions of the queen she is pictured with black complexion 214 84 there are other cases in which she is shown with a pink golden blue or dark red skin color 214 74 5 Gitton called the issue of Ahmose Nefertari s black color a serious gap in the Egyptological research which allows approximations or untruths 214 2 He pointed out that there is no known depiction of her painted during her lifetime she is represented with the same light skin as other represented individuals in tomb TT15 before her deification the earliest black skin depiction appears in tomb TT161 circa 150 years after her death 214 11 12 23 74 5 215 125 Barbara Lesko wrote in 1996 that Ahmose Nefertari was sometimes portrayed by later generations as having been black although her coffin portrait gives her the typical light yellow skin of women 216 nbsp A plate from Monumenti dell Egitto e della Nubia The gods shown here have varying skin tones including yellow brown blue and black In 2003 Betsy Bryan wrote in The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt that the factors linking Amenhotep I and his mother with the necropolis region with deified rulers and with rejuvenation generally was visually transmitted by representations of the pair with black or blue skin both colours of resurrection 217 In 2004 Aidan Dodson and Dyan Hilton recognized in a later depiction of the queen the black skin of a deity of resurrection in connection to her role as a patron goddess of the Theban necropolis 215 125 Scholars such as Joyce Tyldesley Sigrid Hodel Hoenes and Graciela Gestoso Singer argued that the skin color of Ahmose Nefertari is indicative of her role as a goddess of resurrection since black is both the color of the fertile land of Egypt and that of Duat the underworld 208 Singer recognizes that Some scholars have suggested that this is a sign of Nubian ancestry 208 Singer also states a statuette of Ahmose Nefertari at the Museo Egizio in Turin which shows her with a black face though her arms and feet are not darkened thus suggesting that the black coloring has an iconographic motive and does not reflect her actual appearance 218 90 219 208 220 78 79 In 2014 Margaret Bunson wrote that the unusual depictions of Ahmose Nefertari in blue black tones of deification reflect her status and cult 221 In a wooden votive statue of Ahmose Nefertari currently in the Louvre museum her skin was painted red 211 a color commonly seen symbolizing life or a higher being or elevated status 57 Historical hypothesesSince the second half of the 20th century typological and hierarchical models of race have increasingly been rejected by scientists and most scholars have held that applying modern notions of race to ancient Egypt is anachronistic 222 223 224 The current position of modern scholarship is that the Egyptian civilization was an indigenous Nile Valley development see population history of Egypt 225 226 52 227 228 229 At the UNESCO symposium in 1974 several participants concluded that the ancient Egyptian population was indigenous to the Nile Valley and was made up of people from north and south of the Sahara who were differentiated by their color 34 230 Black Egyptian hypothesis Further information Kerma culture Kingdom of Kush and Twenty fifth Dynasty of Egypt The Black Egyptian hypothesis is the hypothesis that ancient Egypt was a Black homogeneous civilization 231 232 At a UNESCO symposium in 1974 there was consensus that Ancient Egypt was indigenous to Africa 32 However Diop s hypothesis that Ancient Egypt was a Black civilization was met with numerous objections in 1974 which revealed a disagreement which remained profound even though it was not voiced explicitly In respect of certain sequences the criticisms arose out of the line of argument put forward 233 The majority of the objections raised were of methodological nature which ranged from the need for reliable statistical data to further research projects in several fields such as archaeology and physical anthropology before final conclusions on the peopling of Egypt could be made 234 There was also total disagreement from the majority of scholars in the 1974 conference 36 on the hypothesis that Ancient Egypt had been a homogenous population until Persian times with several scholars favouring the hypothesis of a mixed population 235 236 Subsequent reviewers of the 1974 symposium debate and the UNESCO publication have presented a range of views on the outcome of the debate 39 40 41 42 Larissa Nordholt argued that Diop s chapter was politically motivated having been published only due to being in line with UNESCO s political imperatives despite clashing with accepted historical methods and standards of academic rigor Nordholdt argued that Diop s views aligned with the decolonization efforts of the General History of Africa but that he premised his arguments on outdated racialism which classified humanity into distinct groups with a biological essence However she did state that the contributors did come to a general consensus that the Egyptians could not have been white in the same way that Europeans were and the dissemination of Diop s ideas contributed to a wider recognition that the Ancient Egypt was an African civilisation although his methods were not considered entirely permissible by most of the other GHA historians 44 According to Larissa Nordholdt Many reviewers however still objected to what they identified as an overtly political ideology within the GHA They did not necessarily object to the flavour of that ideology but rather to the presence of a political agenda as such Often Diop s chapter seemed to serve as a catalyst for that sentiment 43 268 279 Peter Shinnie reviewing the General History of Africa volume wrote that It seems that UNESCO and the editor Mokhtar were embarrassed by the unscholarly and preposterous nature of Diop s views but were unable to reject his contribution 45 However Bethwell Allan Ogot a Kenyan historian and editor of UNESCO General History of Africa Volume 5 stated that Cheikh Anta Diop wrested Egyptian civilization from the Egyptologists and restored it to the mainstream of African history 46 Stephen Quirke argued that the UNESCO sponsored conference on the General History of Africa in 1974 did not change the Eurocentric climate of research and of the need to incorporate both African centred studies and White European academic perspectives He later outlined that research conferences and publications on the history and language of Kemet Egypt remain dominated beyond 90 by those brought up and trained in European not African societies and languages which include Arabic 237 The Black Egyptian hypothesis includes a particular focus on links to Sub Saharan cultures and the questioning of the race of specific notable individuals from Dynastic times including Tutankhamun 238 the person represented in the Great Sphinx of Giza 231 239 240 and the Greek Ptolemaic queen Cleopatra 241 242 243 244 Advocates of the Black African model rely heavily on writings from Classical Greek historians including Strabo Diodorus Siculus Ammianus Marcellinus and Herodotus Advocates claim that these classical authors referred to Egyptians as Black with woolly hair note 2 The Greek word used was melanchroes and the English language translation of this Greek word is disputed being translated by many as dark skinned 249 250 and by many others as black note 3 note 6 Other claims used to support the Black Hypothesis included anthropological measurements of Egyptian mummies testing melanin levels in a small sample of mummies 14 20 37 276 language affinities between ancient Egyptian language and sub saharan languages 14 28 39 41 54 55 277 interpretations of the origin of the name Kmt conventionally pronounced Kemet used by the ancient Egyptians to describe themselves or their land depending on points of view 14 27 38 40 biblical traditions 278 14 27 28 shared B blood group between Egyptians and West Africans 14 37 and interpretations of the depictions of the Egyptians in numerous paintings and statues 279 The hypothesis also claimed cultural affiliations such as circumcision 280 matriarchy totemism hair braiding head binding 281 and kingship cults 282 Artifacts found at Qustul near Abu Simbel Modern Sudan in 1960 64 were seen as showing that ancient Egypt and the A Group culture of Nubia shared the same culture and were part of the greater Nile Valley sub stratum 283 284 285 286 287 but more recent finds in Egypt indicate that the Qustul rulers probably adopted emulated the symbols of Egyptian pharaohs 288 289 290 291 292 293 Authors and critics state the hypothesis is primarily adopted by Afrocentrists 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 The current position of modern scholarship is that the Egyptian civilization was an indigenous Nile Valley development see population history of Egypt 225 226 52 227 228 229 Asiatic race theory This theory was the most dominant view from the Early Middle Ages c 500 AD until the early 19th century 5 302 163 The descendants of Ham were traditionally considered to be the darkest skinned branch of humanity either because of their geographic allotment to Africa or because of the Curse of Ham 303 163 Thus Diop cited Gaston Maspero Moreover the Bible states that Mesraim son of Ham brother of Chus Kush and of Canaan came from Mesopotamia to settle with his children on the banks of the Nile 304 By the 20th century the Asiatic race theory and its various offshoots were abandoned but were superseded by two related theories the Eurocentric Hamitic hypothesis asserting that a Caucasian racial group moved into North and East Africa from early prehistory subsequently bringing with them all advanced agriculture technology and civilization and the Dynastic race theory proposing that Mesopotamian invaders were responsible for the dynastic civilization of Egypt c 3000 BC In sharp contrast to the Asiatic race theory neither of these theories proposes that Caucasians were the indigenous inhabitants of Egypt 305 At the UNESCO Symposium on the Peopling of Ancient Egypt and the Deciphering of the Meroitic Script in Cairo in 1974 none of the participants explicitly voiced support for any theory where Egyptians were Caucasian with a dark pigmentation 14 43 29 The current position of modern scholarship is that the Egyptian civilization was an indigenous Nile Valley development see population history of Egypt 225 226 52 227 228 229 Caucasian Hamitic hypothesis Further information Hamites nbsp 1889 ethnographic map of Africa showing the supposed Hamites in white The Caucasian hypothesis which has been rejected by mainstream scholarship is the hypothesis that the Nile valley was originally peopled by a branch of the Caucasian race 306 It was proposed in 1844 by Samuel George Morton who acknowledged that Negroes were present in ancient Egypt but claimed they were either captives or servants 307 George Gliddon 1844 wrote Asiatic in their origin the Egyptians were white men of no darker hue than a pure Arab a Jew or a Phoenician 308 The similar Hamitic hypothesis which has been rejected by mainstream scholarship developed directly from the Asiatic Race Theory and argued that the Ethiopid and Arabid populations of the Horn of Africa were the inventors of agriculture and had brought all civilization to Africa It asserted that these people were Caucasians not Negroid It also rejected any Biblical basis despite using Hamitic as the theory s name 309 Charles Gabriel Seligman in his Some Aspects of the Hamitic Problem in the Anglo Egyptian Sudan 1913 and later works argued that the ancient Egyptians were among this group of Caucasian Hamites having arrived in the Nile Valley during early prehistory and introduced technology and agriculture to primitive natives they found there 310 The Italian anthropologist Giuseppe Sergi 1901 believed that ancient Egyptians were the Eastern African Hamitic branch of the Mediterranean race which he called Eurafrican According to Sergi the Mediterranean race or Eurafrican contains three varieties or sub races the African Hamitic branch the Mediterranean proper branch and the Nordic depigmented branch 311 Sergi maintained in summary that the Mediterranean race excluding the depigmented Nordic or white is a brown human variety neither white nor Negroid but pure in its elements that is to say not a product of the mixture of Whites with Negroes or Negroid peoples 312 Grafton Elliot Smith modified the theory in 1911 313 stating that the ancient Egyptians were a dark haired brown race 314 most closely linked by the closest bonds of racial affinity to the Early Neolithic populations of the North African littoral and South Europe 315 and not Negroid 316 Smith s brown race is not synonymous or equivalent with Sergi s Mediterranean race 317 The Hamitic Hypothesis was still popular in the 1960s and late 1970s and was supported notably by Anthony John Arkell and George Peter Murdock 318 319 At the UNESCO Symposium on the Peopling of Ancient Egypt and the Deciphering of the Meroitic Script in Cairo in 1974 none of the participants explicitly voiced support for any theory where Egyptians were Caucasian with a dark pigmentation 14 43 29 The current position of modern scholarship is that the Egyptian civilization was an indigenous Nile Valley development see population history of Egypt 225 226 52 228 227 320 Turanid race hypothesis Further information Turanid race The Turanid race hypothesis which has been rejected by mainstream scholarship is the hypothesis that the ancient Egyptians belonged to the Turanid race linking them to the Tatars It was proposed by Egyptologist Samuel Sharpe in 1846 who was inspired by some ancient Egyptian paintings which depict Egyptians with sallow or yellowish skin He said From the colour given to the women in their paintings we learn that their skin was yellow like that of the Mongul Tartars who have given their name to the Mongolian variety of the human race The single lock of hair on the young nobles reminds us also of the Tartars 321 The current position of modern scholarship is that the Egyptian civilization was an indigenous Nile Valley development see population history of Egypt 225 226 52 227 228 229 Dynastic race theory Main article Dynastic race theory Further information Egypt Mesopotamia relations The Dynastic race theory which has been rejected by modern scholarship is the hypothesis that a Mesopotamian force had invaded Egypt in predynastic times imposed itself on the indigenous Badarian people and become their rulers 225 322 The Mesopotamian founded state or states were supposed to have conquered both Upper and Lower Egypt and founded the First Dynasty of Egypt The theory was proposed in the early 20th century by Flinders Petrie who deduced that skeletal remains found at pre dynastic sites at Naqada Upper Egypt indicated the presence of two different races with one race differentiated physically by a noticeably larger skeletal structure and cranial capacity 323 Petrie also noted new architectural styles the distinctly Mesopotamian niched facade architecture pottery styles cylinder seals and a few artworks as well as numerous predynastic rock and tomb paintings depicting Mesopotamian style boats symbols and figures Based on plentiful cultural evidence Petrie concluded that the invading ruling elite was responsible for the seemingly sudden rise of Egyptian civilization In the 1950s the dynastic race theory was widely accepted 226 322 225 While there is clear evidence the Naqada II culture borrowed abundantly from Mesopotamia the Naqada II period had a large degree of continuity with the Naqada I period 324 and the changes which did happen during the Naqada periods happened over significant amounts of time 325 The most commonly held view today is that the achievements of the First Dynasty were the result of a long period of cultural and political development 225 and the current position of modern scholarship is that the Egyptian civilization was an indigenous Nile Valley development 225 226 52 326 227 229 Frank Yurco stated that depictions of pharonic iconography such as the royal crowns Horus falcons and victory scenes were concentrated in the Upper Egyptian Naqada culture and A Group Nubia He further elaborated that Egyptian writing arose in Naqadan Upper Egypt and A Group Nubia and not in the Delta cultures where the direct Western Asian contact was made which further vititates the Mesopotamian influence argument 327 According to David Wengrow the A Group polity of the late 4th millenninum BCE is poorly understood since most of the archaeological remains are submerged underneath Lake Nasser 328 The Senegalese Egyptologist Cheikh Anta Diop fought against the dynastic race theory with his own Black Egyptian theory and claimed among other things that Eurocentric scholars supported the dynastic race theory to avoid having to admit that Ancient Egyptians were black 329 Martin Bernal proposed that the dynastic race theory was conceived by European scholars to deny Egypt its African roots 330 Reactions in modern EgyptIn 2023 American comedian Kevin Hart s planned tour of Egypt was cancelled after an uproar on Egyptian social media over Afrocentric claims made by Hart about Egyptian history 331 In response to the Hart controversy Egyptian Egyptologist Zahi Hawass stated that Africans have nothing to do with the pyramids scientifically 332 333 Hawass has previously commented on the race controversy and expressed the view that the Ancient Egyptians were not black and We believe that the origin of Ancient Egyptians was purely Egyptian based on the discovery made by British Egyptologist Flinders Petrie at Naqada and this is why the Ancient Egyptian civilisation did not occur in Africa it occurred only here 334 Hawass had also affirmed that No Africans built the pyramids because Kushites didn t exist at the period when the pyramids were built and dismissed the notions that Egyptians are Black Africans despite our presence in Africa 335 See alsoAfrican historiography Afrocentrism Biological anthropology Demographics of Egypt DNA history of Egypt Dynastic race theory Egyptomania Egyptian nationalism Eurocentrism Genetic history of the Middle East Genetic history of Africa Hamitic hypothesis History of anthropology Historical race concepts Indo Aryan Migration controversy Pharaonism Scientific racism UNESCO General History of AfricaNotes In 1912 Franz Boas argued that cranial shape was heavily influenced by environmental factors and could change within a few generations under differing conditions thereby making the cephalic index an unreliable indicator of inherited influences such as ethnicity 140 Gravlee Bernard and Leonard 2003 141 142 Beals Smith and Dodd 1984 and Williams and Armelagos 2005 similarly posited that race and cranial variation had low correlations and proposed that cranial variation was instead strongly correlated with climate variables 143 144 Brace 1993 differentiated adaptive cranial traits from non adaptive cranial traits asserting that only the non adaptive cranial traits served as reliable indicators of genetic relatedness between populations 145 This was further corroborated in studies by von Cramon Taubadel 2008 2009a 2011 146 147 148 Clement and Ranson 1998 estimated that cranial analysis yields a 77 95 rate of accuracy in determining the racial origins of human skeletal remains 149 FORDISC an interactive discriminant functions program 150 is used by forensic anthropologists to assist in the creation of a decedent s biological profile when only parts of the cranium are available The software uses discriminant function analysis to sort individuals into specific groups that are defined by certain criteria 151 by comparing potential profiles to data contained in a database of skeletal measurements of modern humans 152 However a 2009 study found that even in favourable circumstances FORDISC 3 0 can be expected to classify no more than 1 percent of specimens with confidence 153 In 2012 research presented at the 81st Annual Meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists concluded that ForDisc ancestry determination was not always consistent that the program does not perform to expectations and that it should be used with caution 154 245 246 247 316 321 232 52 53 248 21 246 232 52 53 248 15 60 251 252 253 259 260 1 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 Diop said Herodotus applied melanchroes to both Ethiopians and Egyptians and melanchroes is the strongest term in Greek to denote blackness 254 According to historian and classicist to Alan B Lloyd there is no linguistic justification for relating the term Melanchroes to blacks since it could denote any colour from bronzed to black LSJ p 1094 b 255 Snowden claims that Diop is distorting his classical sources and is quoting them selectively 256 According to Snowden both Egyptians and Ethiopians as melanes but mentions only Ethiopians not Egyptians as having exceedingly woolly hair In short Ethiopians whose skin was the blackest and whose hair was the woolliest or most tightly curled of all mankind were the only people in classical texts who correspond roughly to the concept of blacks or Negroes as generally understood in modern usage 257 Keita specified that the historical accounts of the ancient Greeks were of limited value as they were not working within modern science and it remained unclear if distinctions between Egyptians and Ethiopians were cultural rather than biological at certain times He also added that some Greeks reported that Egypt was an Ethiopian colony 258 There is dispute about the historical accuracy of the works of Herodotus some scholars support the reliability of Herodotus note 4 while other scholars regard his works as being unreliable as historical sources particularly those relating to Egypt note 5 References Burrell Kevin 2019 Cushite Ethnic Identity in the Context of Ancient Egypt Cushites in the Hebrew Bible Brill Publishing p 99 doi 10 1163 9789004418769 004 ISBN 978 90 04 41876 9 S2CID 214258815 Eaverly Mary Ann 2013 Tan Men Pale Women Color and Gender in Archaic Greece and Egypt a Comparative Approach University of Michigan Press p 35 ISBN 978 0 472 11911 0 Matic Uros November 2020 Ethnic Identities in the Land of the Pharaohs Past and Present Approaches in Egyptology Elements in Ancient Egypt in Context doi 10 1017 9781108885577 ISBN 978 1108885577 S2CID 229429843 Sabbahy Lisa 2019 All things ancient Egypt an encyclopedia of the ancient Egyptian world Santa Barbara California pp 158 160 ISBN 978 1440855122 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b Sanders 1969 pp 521 532 Lefkowitz Mary R Rogers Guy Maclean 1996 Black Athena Revisited UNC Press Books p 162 ISBN 978 0807845554 Retrieved May 28 2016 via Google Books Bard Kathryn A Shubert Steven Blake 1999 Encyclopedia of the Archaeology of Ancient Egypt Routledge p 329 ISBN 978 0415185899 Retrieved May 28 2016 via Google Books Howe Stephen 1999 Afrocentrism Mythical Pasts and Imagined Homes Verso p 19 ISBN 978 1859842287 Retrieved May 28 2016 via Google Books a b Montellano Bernard R Ortiz De 1993 Melanin afrocentricity and pseudoscience American Journal of Physical Anthropology 36 S17 33 58 doi 10 1002 ajpa 1330360604 ISSN 1096 8644 Slavery Genocide and the Politics of Outrage MERIP March 6 2005 Retrieved March 8 2020 Brace C Loring Tracer David P Yaroch Lucia Allen Robb John Brandt Kari Nelson A Russell 1993 Clines and clusters versus Race a test in ancient Egypt and the case of a death on the Nile American Journal of Physical Anthropology 36 S17 1 31 doi 10 1002 ajpa 1330360603 Chasseboeuf 1787 pp 74 77 Diop 1974 p 27 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Mokhtar G 1990 General History of Africa II Ancient Civilizations of Africa Berkeley CA University of California Press pp 1 118 ISBN 978 0 520 06697 7 a b Milton amp Bandia 2009 p 215 Riggs Christina 2014 Unwrapping Ancient Egypt A amp C Black p 71 ISBN 978 0 85785 677 7 Original Papers Ancient Egyptians The New England Magazine 5 4 273 280 October 1833 Jacques Joseph 1839 p 27 Diop Cheikh Anta 1991 Civilization or barbarism an authentic anthropology Firs ed Brooklyn New York pp Foreword pp 1 10 ISBN 1556520484 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Morkot Robert 2005 The Egyptians An Introduction Psychology Press p 8 ISBN 978 0 415 27103 5 Diop Cheikh Anta 1991 Civilization or barbarism an authentic anthropology Brooklyn New York pp Foreword pp 1 10 ISBN 978 1 55652 048 8 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Baum 2006 pp 106 108 Campbell 1851 pp 10 12 Baum 2006 pp 105 108 Baum 2006 p 108 Baum 2006 p 105 The peopling of ancient Egypt and the deciphering of Meroitic script proceedings of the symposium held in Cairo from 28 January to 3 February 1974 Paris Unesco 1978 pp 81 82 ISBN 92 3 101605 9 The peopling of ancient Egypt and the deciphering of Meroitic script proceedings of the symposium held in Cairo from 28 January to 3 February 1974 Paris Unesco 1978 pp 73 88 ISBN 9231016059 a b c UNESCO Symposium on the Peopling of Ancient Egypt and the Deciphering of the Meroitic Script Proceedings Paris 1978 pp 3 134 Ancient civilizations of Africa Abridged ed London J Currey 1990 p 43 ISBN 0852550928 Mokhtar Gamal 1990 Ancient Civilizations of Africa Unesco International Scientific Committee for the Drafting of a General History of Africa Currey pp 33 34 ISBN 978 0 85255 092 2 a b Ancient civilizations of Africa Abridged ed London J Currey 1990 pp 43 46 ISBN 0852550928 The peopling of ancient Egypt and the deciphering of Meroitic script proceedings of the symposium held in Cairo from 28 January to 3 February 1974 Paris UNESCO 1978 pp 86 93 94 99 ISBN 92 3 101605 9 a b Mukhtar Muḥammad Jamal al Din 1990 Ancient Civilizations of Africa Currey p 46 ISBN 978 0852550922 Retrieved June 2 2016 The peopling of ancient Egypt and the deciphering of Meroitic script proceedings of the symposium held in Cairo from 28 January to 3 February 1974 London Karnak House 1997 pp 94 95 ISBN 978 0907015994 a b Macgaffey Wyatt 1991 Who Owns Ancient Egypt The Journal of African History 32 3 515 519 doi 10 1017 S0021853700031595 ISSN 1469 5138 S2CID 162117991 The majority especially the Egyptians disagreed with the views of Diop and Obenga Intergovernmental Council of the Management of Social Transformations Programme 16th Paris 2023 unesdoc unesco org Report by the Intergovernmental Council on the activities of the Management of Social Transformation MOST Programme in 2022 2023 unesdoc unesco org a b Apena Adeline October 1 1994 G Mokhtar ed UNESCO General History of Africa Comparative Civilizations Review 31 31 ISSN 0733 4540 a b Brett Michael 1982 The UNESCO History Volume Two The Journal of African History 23 1 117 120 doi 10 1017 S0021853700020284 S2CID 245909418 a b Wilks Ivor 1982 Book Reviews UNESCO General History of Africa The International Journal of African Historical Studies 15 2 283 285 doi 10 2307 218551 JSTOR 218551 a b c Kamugisha Aaron July 2003 Finally in Africa Egypt from Diop to Celenko Race amp Class 45 1 31 60 doi 10 1177 0306396803045001002 ISSN 0306 3968 S2CID 145514370 a b Nordholt Larissa Schulte 2021 Africanising African history decolonisation of knowledge in UNESCO s general history of Africa 1964 1998 PhD thesis Leiden University pp 539 551 a b Schulte Nordholt Larissa 2021 Multiple Hamitic Theories and Black Egyptians Negotiating Tensions between Standards of Scholarship and Political Imperatives in UNESCO s General History of Africa 1964 1998 History of Humanities 6 2 449 469 doi 10 1086 715866 hdl 1887 3242830 ISSN 2379 3163 S2CID 244133991 a b Shinnie Peter L Jewsiewicki B 1981 Ki Zerbo J UNESCO Mokhtar G eds The UNESCO History Project L Histoire monument ou l histoire conscience Canadian Journal of African Studies 15 3 539 551 doi 10 2307 484734 ISSN 0008 3968 JSTOR 484734 a b Ogot Bethwell 2011 African Historiography From colonial historiography to UNESCO s general history of Africa p 72 S2CID 55617551 Egypt in its African context proceedings of the conference held at the Manchester Museum University of Manchester 2 4 October 2009 Oxford Archaeopress 2011 pp 7 9 ISBN 978 1407307602 American Anthropological Association Statement on Race American Anthropologist Arlington County American Anthropological Association 100 1998 Occasionally re included in other volumes afterwards Biological Aspects of Race American Journal of Physical Anthropology New York John Wiley amp Sons 101 1996 Archived from the original on March 12 2017 Were the Ancient Egyptians Black or White The BAS Library September 1989 Retrieved February 22 2022 The ancient Egyptians like their modern descendants were of varying complexions of color from the light Mediterranean type like Nefertiti to the light brown of Middle Egypt to the darker brown of Upper Egypt to the darkest shade around Aswan and the First Cataract region where even today the population shifts to Nubian Ancient and modern Egyptian hair ranges from straight to wavy to woolly in color it varies from reddish brown to dark brown to black Lips range from thin to full Many Egyptians possess a protrusive jaw Noses vary from high bridged straight to arched or even hooked to flat bridged with bulbous to broad nostrils In short ancient Egypt like modern Egypt consisted of a very heterogeneous population Specter Michael February 26 1990 Was Nefertiti Black Bitter Debate Erupts Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved February 22 2022 a b c d e f g Yurco Frank 1996 An Egyptological Review In Lefkowitz Mary R Rogers Guy MacLean eds Black Athena Revisited The University of North Carolina Press pp 62 100 Mokthar Gamar 1990 Ancient Civilizations of Africa Vol 2 Unesco General History of Africa abridged Abridged ed London J Currey pp 1 30 ISBN 978 0852550922 Duhon Sells Rose M Pitts Emma Thomas 1994 A Vision of Multicultural Education for the Year 2000 E Mellen Press p 30 ISBN 978 0 7734 9427 5 Christopher Ehret 1996 Ancient Egyptian as an African Language Egypt as an African Culture in Egypt in Africa Theodore Celenko ed Indianapolis Ind Indianapolis Museum of Art pp 25 27 ISBN 0 936260 64 5 Lovell Nancy C 1999 Egyptians physical anthropology of In Bard Kathryn A Shubert Steven Blake eds Encyclopedia of the Archaeology of Ancient Egypt London pp 328 331 ISBN 0415185890 a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b Smith Stuart Tyson 2001 Redford Donald ed The Oxford encyclopedia of ancient Egypt Vol 3 Oxford University Press pp 27 28 Wretched Kush Ethnic Identities and Boundaries in Egypt s Nubian Empire by Stuart Tyson Smith pp 5 8 Routledge 2004 ISBN 978 1134200931 Wretched Kush Ethnic Identities and Boundaries in Egypt s Nubian Empire by Stuart Tyson Smith p 36 Routledge 2004 ISBN 978 1134200931 Zakrzewski Sonia R 2003 Variation in Ancient Egyptian Stature and Body Proportions PDF American Journal of Physical Anthropology 121 3 219 29 doi 10 1002 ajpa 10223 PMID 12772210 Read at 1 Redford 2004 p 1 Morkot Robert 2005 The Egyptians an introduction New York Routledge pp 10 13 ISBN 0415271045 Kemp Barry J 2007 Ancient Egypt Anatomy of a Civilisation Routledge pp 46 58 ISBN 978 1134563883 a b Mertz Barbara 2011 Red Land Black Land Daily Life in Ancient Egypt HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 06 208716 4 via Google Books Lefkowitz Mary R Rogers Guy MacLean 2014 Black Athena Revisited University of North Carolina Press Books ISBN 978 1 4696 2032 9 Puigdevall Federico Canagueral Albert December 15 2017 The Secrets of Ancient Egypt Egyptian Pyramids and the Secrets of the Pharaohs Cavendish Square Publishing LLC p 68 ISBN 978 1 5026 3329 3 Nielsen Nicky 2020 Egyptomaniacs How We Became Obsessed with Ancient Epypt Pen and Sword History ISBN 978 1 5267 5404 2 Van de Mieroop Marc 2021 A history of ancient Egypt 2nd ed Chichester West Sussex pp 5 6 ISBN 978 1119620877 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Keita Shomarka 2022 Ancient Egyptian Origins and Identity In Ancient Egyptian society challenging assumptions exploring approaches Abingdon Oxon pp 111 122 ISBN 978 0367434632 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Keita S O Y 1993 Studies and Comments on Ancient Egyptian Biological Relationships History in Africa 20 129 154 doi 10 2307 3171969 ISSN 0361 5413 JSTOR 3171969 S2CID 162330365 Jr William H Stiebing Helft Susan N 2023 Ancient Near Eastern History and Culture Taylor amp Francis pp 209 212 ISBN 978 1 000 88066 3 Egypt in its African context proceedings of the conference held at the Manchester Museum University of Manchester 2 4 October 2009 Oxford Archaeopress 2011 pp 1 115 ISBN 978 1407307602 Sedra Paul 2004 Imagining an Imperial Race Egyptology in the Service of Empire Comparative Studies of South Asia Africa and the Middle East 24 1 249 259 doi 10 1215 1089201X 24 1 251 ISSN 1548 226X S2CID 143690935 Walker J D 1995 The Misrepresentation of Diop s Views Journal of Black Studies 26 1 77 85 doi 10 1177 002193479502600106 ISSN 0021 9347 JSTOR 2784711 S2CID 144667194 Young Robert J C Black Athena and Colonial Discourse Robert J C PDF fileEgypt in America Black Athena Racism and Colonial Discourse Robert J C Young Colonial discourse analysis was initiated Victor Cilius October 1992 Book reviews Civilization or Barbarism an authentic anthropology Race amp Class 34 2 98 100 doi 10 1177 030639689203400214 ISSN 0306 3968 S2CID 145646841 Clarke John Henrik 1974 Cheikh Anta Diop and the New Light on African History Transition 46 74 76 doi 10 2307 2934962 ISSN 0041 1191 JSTOR 2934962 S2CID 156002419 Trigger Bruce 1978 Nubian Negro Black Nilotic in Sylvia Hochfield and Elizabeth Riefstahl eds Africa in Antiquity the arts of Nubia and the Sudan Vol 1 Smith Stuart Tyson January 1 2018 Gift of the Nile Climate Change the Origins of Egyptian Civilization and Its Interactions within Northeast Africa Across the Mediterranean Along the Nile Studies in Egyptology Nubiology and Late Antiquity Dedicated to Laszlo Torok Budapest 325 345 Manzo Andrea 2022 Ancient Egypt in its African context economic networks social and cultural interactions Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 1 50 ISBN 978 1009074544 Ehret Christopher June 20 2023 Ancient Africa A Global History to 300 CE Princeton Princeton University Press pp 83 86 167 169 ISBN 978 0 691 24409 9 Archived from the original on March 22 2023 Retrieved March 20 2023 Lieberman Leonard Jackson Fatimah Linda C 1995 Race and Three Models of Human Origin American Anthropologist 97 2 231 242 doi 10 1525 aa 1995 97 2 02a00030 ISSN 0002 7294 JSTOR 681958 Celenko Theodore 1996 The Geographical Origins and Population Relationships of Early Ancient Egyptians In Egypt in Africa Indianapolis Ind Indianapolis Museum of Art pp 20 33 ISBN 0936260645 Ryan A Brown and George J Armelagos 2001 Apportionment of racial diversity A review Evolutionary Anthropology 10 Issue 1 34 40 34 40 doi 10 1002 1520 6505 2001 10 1 lt 34 AID EVAN1011 gt 3 0 CO 2 P S2CID 22845356 Eltis David Bradley Keith R Perry Craig Engerman Stanley L Cartledge Paul Richardson David 2021 The Cambridge World History of Slavery Volume 2 AD 500 AD 1420 Cambridge University Press p 150 ISBN 978 0 521 84067 5 via Google Books Candelora 2022 pp 101 122 Keita S O Y Kittles Rick A 1997 The Persistence of Racial Thinking and the Myth of Racial Divergence American Anthropologist 99 3 534 544 doi 10 1525 aa 1997 99 3 534 ISSN 0002 7294 JSTOR 681741 Ehret Christopher 2023 Ancient Africa A Global History to 300 CE Princeton Princeton University Press pp 83 86 167 169 ISBN 978 0 691 24409 9 Keita S O Y Boyce A J 2005 Interpreting Geographical Patterns of Y Chromosome Variation History in Africa 32 221 246 doi 10 1353 hia 2005 0013 S2CID 163020672 Retrieved March 3 2022 Candelora 2022 pp 101 111 Human mitochondrial haplogroups and ancient DNA preservation across Egyptian history Urban et al 2021 PDF ISBA9 9th International Symposium on Biomolecular Archaeology 2021 p 126 In a previous study we assessed the genetic history of a single site Abusir el Meleq from 1388 BCE to 426 CE We now focus on widening the geographic scope to give a general overview of the population genetic background focusing on mitochondrial haplogroups present among the whole Egyptian Nile River Valley We collected 81 tooth hair bone and soft tissue samples from 14 mummies and 17 skeletal remains The samples span approximately 4000 years of Egyptian history and originate from six different excavation sites covering the whole length of the Egyptian Nile River Valley NGS 127 based ancient DNA 8 were applied to reconstruct 18 high quality mitochondrial genomes from 10 different individuals The determined mitochondrial haplogroups match the results from our Abusir el Meleq study Kemp 2006 p 47 Williams Chancellor 1987 The Destruction of Black Civilization Chicago Third World Press p 110 ISBN 978 0 88378 030 5 A New Look at King Tut The Washington Post May 11 2005 Retrieved May 11 2012 Eskandary Hossein Nematollahi Mahani Seyed Noureddin Zangiabadi Nasser January 5 2012 Skull Indices in a Population Collected From Computed Tomographic Scans of Patients with Head Trauma Journal of Craniofacial Surgery 20 2 545 550 doi 10 1097 SCS 0b013e31819b9f6e PMID 19305252 S2CID 206050171 Retrieved May 1 2012 Discovery com Archived from the original on February 20 2009 Science museum images Sciencemuseum org uk Archived from the original on May 27 2012 Retrieved May 1 2012 King Tut s New Face Behind the Forensic Reconstruction National Geographic October 28 2010 Archived from the original on May 14 2005 Retrieved May 1 2012 Henerson Evan June 15 2005 King Tut s skin colour a topic of controversy U Daily News L A Life Archived from the original on October 30 2006 Retrieved August 5 2006 Tutankhamun was not black Egypt antiquities chief AFP September 25 2007 Archived from the original on February 13 2012 Retrieved February 27 2012 Welcome to Ancient Egypt Magazine s Web Site Ancientegyptmagazine com Retrieved June 2 2016 Photographic image Wikimedia Commons JPG Commons wikimedia org December 10 2007 Retrieved May 1 2012 Tutankhamun beneath the mask Sciencemuseum org uk Retrieved May 1 2012 Smith Stuart Tyson January 1 2008 Review of From Slave to Pharaoh The Black Experience of Ancient Egypt by Donald Redford Near Eastern Archaeology 71 3 King Tut Related to Half of European Men Maybe Not Live Science August 3 2011 Retrieved December 27 2016 a b Yehia Z Gad October 2020 Insights from ancient DNA analysis of Egyptian human mummies clues to disease and kinship Human Molecular Genetics Volume 30 Issue R1 1 March 2021 Pages R24 R28 2 Archived 2 May 2021 at the Wayback Machine Maternal and Paternal Lineages in King Tutankhamun s Family Guardian of Ancient Egypt Studies in Honor of Zahi Hawass Vol I pp 497 518 2020 3 Archived 9 May 2021 at the Wayback Machine Hawass Zahi Gad Yehia Z Ismail Somaia Khairat Rabab Fathalla Dina Hasan Naglaa Ahmed Amal Elleithy Hisham Ball Markus Gaballah Fawzi Wasef Sally Fateen Mohamed Amer Hany Gostner Paul Selim Ashraf February 17 2010 Ancestry and Pathology in King Tutankhamun s Family JAMA 303 7 638 647 doi 10 1001 jama 2010 121 ISSN 0098 7484 PMID 20159872 Keita S O Y September 2022 Ideas about Race in Nile Valley Histories A Consideration of Racial Paradigms in Recent Presentations on Nile Valley Africa from Black Pharaohs to Mummy Genomest Journal of Ancient Egyptian Interconnections Jr William H Stiebing Helft Susan N 2023 Ancient Near Eastern History and Culture Taylor amp Francis pp 209 212 ISBN 978 1 000 88066 3 Price Hugh B September 26 1991 Was Cleopatra Black The Baltimore Sun Retrieved May 28 2012 a b Roller 2010 Whitaker Charles February 2002 Was Cleopatra Black Ebony Archived from the original on March 9 2007 Retrieved September 11 2023 The author cites a few examples of the claim one of which is a chapter titled Black Warrior Queens published in 1984 in Black Women in Antiquity part of The Journal of African Civilization series It draws heavily on the work of J A Rogers Charen Mona February 14 1994 Afrocentric View Distorts History and Achievement by Blacks St Louis Post Dispatch Retrieved May 29 2012 Lefkowitz 1992 pp 36 40 Rogers J A 2011 World s Great Men of Color Vol I Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 1451650549 a b Lefkowitz 1992 pp 40 41 Roller 2010 pp 54 174 175 Samson 1990 p 104 Schiff 2011 pp 2 28 35 36 42 Preston 2009 pp 22 77 Goldsworthy 2010 pp 8 127 128 Jones 2006 p xiii Kleiner 2005 p 22 Tyldesley 2008 pp 30 235 236 Grant 1972 p 5 Roller 2010 pp 15 18 166 Cheshire 2011 pp 20 30 Lippert 2013 p 33 Schiff 2011 pp 2 41 42 a b Pina Polo 2013 pp 185 186 Kleiner 2005 pp 151 153 155 Bradford 2003 pp 14 17 Watterson 2020 p 15 Roller 2003 p 139 Ferroukhi 2001a p 219 Kleiner 2005 pp 155 156 Ashton 2002 p 39 Kleiner 2005 p 87 Roller 2010 pp 113 114 176 177 Pina Polo 2013 p 194 footnote 11 Foggo Daniel March 15 2009 Found the sister Cleopatra killed The Times London Retrieved April 15 2010 Also in the news Cleopatra s mother was African BBC News March 16 2009 Retrieved June 2 2016 Fielding Sarah Johnson Christopher D 1994 The Lives of Cleopatra and Octavia Bucknell University Press p 154 ISBN 978 0 8387 5257 9 Phrenology and Scientific Racism in the 19th Century Vassar College Word Press March 5 2017 Archived from the original on February 28 2018 Retrieved January 16 2019 Have Bones of Cleopatra s Murdered Sister Been Found Live Science Retrieved April 7 2017 Boas 1912 Changes in Bodily Form of Descendants of Immigrants American Anthropologist 14 3 530 562 doi 10 1525 aa 1912 14 3 02a00080 PMC 2986913 Boas s Changes in Bodily Form The Immigrant Study Cranial Plasticity and Boas s Physical Anthropology PDF Archived from the original PDF on April 21 2004 Retrieved April 21 2004 Gravlee Clarence C Bernard H Russell Leonard William R 2003 Heredity Environment and Cranial Form A Re Analysis of Boas s Immigrant Data PDF American Anthropologist 105 1 123 136 doi 10 1525 aa 2003 105 1 125 hdl 2027 42 65137 Lieberman Leonard How Caucasoids Got Such Big Crania and How They Shrank PDF Archived from the original PDF on September 2 2009 Forensic Misclassification of Ancient Nubian Crania Implications for Assumptions about Human Variation Brace et al Clines and clusters versus race 1993 von Cramon Taubadel N 2011 The relative efficacy of functional and developmental cranial modules for reconstructing global human population history American Journal of Physical Anthropology 146 1 83 93 doi 10 1002 ajpa 21550 PMID 21710659 von Cramon Taubadel N Lycett S J 2008 Human cranial variation fits iterative founder effect model with African origin American Journal of Physical Anthropology 136 1 108 113 doi 10 1002 ajpa 20775 PMID 18161847 von Cramon Taubadel N 2009a Congruence of individual cranial bone morphology and neutral molecular affinity patterns in modern humans American Journal of Physical Anthropology 140 2 205 215 doi 10 1002 ajpa 21041 PMID 19418568 Wilkinson Caroline 2004 Forensic Facial Reconstruction Cambridge University Press p 84 ISBN 978 0521820035 Retrieved June 2 2015 via Google Books Dennis Dirkmaat publishes new book on forensic anthropology Computer Weekly News May 31 2012 Archived from the original on March 29 2015 Retrieved November 27 2014 via HighBeam Research Ousley Stephen Jantz Richard 2014 Ch 15 Fordisc 3 and Statistical Methods for Estimating Sex and Ancestry In Dirkmaat Dennis ed A Companion to Forensic Anthropology John Wiley amp Sons pp 311 329 Ousley S D and R L Jantz 2005 FORDISC 3 0 Personal Computer Forensic Discriminant Functions University of Tennessee Archived July 5 2008 at the Wayback Machine Elliott Marina Collard Mark November 11 2009 Fordisc and the determination of ancestry from cranial measurements Biology Letters The Royal Society 2009 5 849 852 doi 10 1098 rsbl 2009 0462 PMC 2827999 PMID 19586965 Poster Elliott and Collard 2012 Going head to head FORDISC vs CRANID in the determination of ancestry from craniometric data meeting physanth org Archived from the original on April 19 2021 Retrieved October 22 2015 The skeleton of Cleopatra s sister Steady on The Times Literary Supplement March 15 2009 Archived from the original on March 17 2009 Retrieved June 12 2018 Egyptian lawyer sues Netflix over Queen Cleopatra Egypt Independent April 18 2023 Retrieved April 20 2023 Daouda Marie April 20 2023 Cleopatra was Greek not a tool in Netflix s war on real history The Telegraph retrieved April 22 2023 Was Cleopatra Black A New Netflix Series Is Reviving an Old Controversy Time Magazine April 20 2023 Retrieved April 20 2023 Uncovering Secrets of the Sphinx Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved May 24 2020 Curran Brian A January 1 1998 The Hypnerotomachia Poliphili and Renaissance Egyptology Word amp Image 14 1 2 156 185 doi 10 1080 02666286 1998 10443948 ISSN 0266 6286 Volney C F 1807 Voyage en Syrie et en Egypte pendant les annees 1783 1784 et 1785 Paris Paris Chez Courcier imprimeur libraire p 71 Flaubert Gustave Flaubert in Egypt ed Francis Steegmuller London Penguin Classics 1996 ISBN 978 0 14 043582 5 a b c Foster Herbert J 1974 The Ethnicity of the Ancient Egyptians Journal of Black Studies 5 2 175 191 doi 10 1177 002193477400500205 JSTOR 2783936 S2CID 144961394 Denon Vivant 1803 Travels in Upper and Lower Egypt General Bonaparte pp 269 270 the character is African but the mouth the lips of which are thick Irwin Graham W 1977 Africans abroad a documentary history of the Black Diaspora in Asia Latin Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0231039369 Retrieved June 2 2016 via Google Books Du Bois W E B 2001 The Negro University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 978 0812217759 Retrieved June 2 2016 via Google Books Ben Jochannan Yosef Black man of the Nile and his family pp 109 110 Diop 1974 pp Frontispiece 27 43 51 53 Asante Molefi Kete 1996 European Racism Regarding Ancient Egypt Egypt in Africa Indianapolis Indiana University Press p 117 ISBN 978 0 936260 64 8 Schoch Robert M 1995 Great Sphinx Controversy robertschoch net Archived from the original on February 4 2012 Retrieved May 29 2012 Fortean Times No 79 London February 1995 pp 34 39 Fritze Ronald H 2009 Invented Knowledge False History Fake Science and Pseudo Religions Reaktion Books ISBN 978 1 86189 430 4 via Google Books Scholars Dispute Claim That Sphinx Is Much Older The New York Times February 9 1992 Card Jeb J Anderson David S 2016 Lost City Found Pyramid Understanding Alternative Archaeologies and Pseudoscientific Practices University of Alabama Press ISBN 978 0 8173 1911 3 via Google Books Diehl 2004 p 112 Cyphers 1996 p 156 Diop 1974 pp 246 248 Levine Molly Myerowitz 2004 David M Goldenberg The Curse of Ham Race and Slavery in Early Judaism Christianity and Islam Bryn Mawr Classical Review Archived from the original on October 25 2016 Retrieved February 4 2013 a b c d Shavit 2001 148 Aboubacry Moussa Lam L Egypte ancienne et l Afrique in Maria R Turano et Paul Vandepitte Pour une histoire de l Afrique 2003 pp 50 amp 51 Mukhtar Muḥammad Jamal al Din 1990 Ancient Civilizations of Africa Currey p 10 ISBN 978 0852550922 Retrieved June 2 2016 Kemp 2006 p 21 Faulkner Raymond 2002 A Concise Dictionary of Middle Egyptian Oxford Griffith Institute p 286 Gardiner Alan 1957 1927 Egyptian Grammar Being an Introduction to the Study of Hieroglyphs 3rd ed Griffith Institute Oxford ISBN 978 0 900416 35 4 a b Book of Gates Archived from the original on February 7 2009 Retrieved February 9 2009 Booth Charlotte 2007 The Ancient Egyptians for Dummies p 217 ISBN missing Diop 1974 p 48 Diop 1974 p 55 Diop 1974 pp 58 59 Nubia Gallery The Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago Archived from the original on January 3 2014 Retrieved September 10 2012 Emberling Geoff 2011 Nubia Ancient Kingdoms of Africa New York The Institute for the Study of the Ancient World pp 22 23 36 37 ISBN 978 0 615 48102 9 Snowden Frank 1970 Blacks in Antiquity Cambridge Massachusetts The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press p 3 Smith Stuart Tyson February 1 2001 Redford Donald ed Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt Volume 3 pp 28 29 a b Egypt Trunk of the Tree A Modern Survey of an Ancient Land Vol 2 by Simson Najovits p 318 Liszka Kate October 8 2018 Discerning Ancient Identity The Case of Aashyet s Sarcophagus JE 47267 Journal of Egyptian History 11 1 2 185 207 doi 10 1163 18741665 12340047 ISSN 1874 1657 S2CID 240026775 O Connor David Reid Andrew 2003 Ancient Egypt in Africa Cavendish Publishing p 13 ISBN 978 1 84314 758 9 Digital Collections The New York Public Library still image Dynastie IV Pyramiden von Giseh Jizah Grab 24 Grabkammer No 2 im K Museum zu Berlin 1849 1856 The New York Public Library Astor Lenox and Tilden Foundations Retrieved August 19 2020 Sertima Ivan Van ed 1994 Ra Hotep and Nofret Modern Forgeries in the Cairo Museum Egypt Child of Africa pp 207 212 AFRICANA STUDIES Manuampim com Retrieved May 1 2012 a b The Book of Gates The Book of Gates Chapter VI The Gate Of Teka Hra The Fifth Division of the Tuat Sacred texts com Retrieved May 1 2012 Digital Collections The New York Public Library still image Neues Reich Dynastie XIX Theben Thebes Bab el Meluk Biban el Muluk Grab Sethos I Plan No XVII a d Raum D Forsetzung von Bl 135 c Pfeiler aus Raum J d Ecke aus Raum M c und d jetzt im K Mus zu Berlin 1849 1856 The New York Public Library Astor Lenox and Tilden Foundations Retrieved August 20 2020 a b Africana Studies Tomb of Rameses III Manuampim com Retrieved May 1 2012 Yurco Frank 1996 Two Tomb Wall Painted Reliefs of Ramesses III and Sety I and Ancient Nile Valley Population Diversity In Celenko Theodore ed Egypt in Africa a b Yurco Frank 1996 Celenko Theodore ed Egypt in Africa Indianapolis Ind Indianapolis Museum of Art p 110 ISBN 0253332699 Bagnall R S 2000 Walker Susan ed Ancient Faces Mummy Portraits in Roman Egypt Metropolitan Museum of Art Publications New York Routledge p 27 Irish J D April 2006 Who were the ancient Egyptians Dental affinities among Neolithic through postdynastic peoples American Journal of Physical Anthropology 129 4 529 543 doi 10 1002 ajpa 20261 PMID 16331657 Davidson Basil 1991 African Civilization Revisited From Antiquity to Modern Times Africa World Press a b Digital Collections The New York Public Library still image Neues Reich Theben Thebes Der el Medinet Dayr al Madinah Site Stuckbild aus Grab 10 jetzt im K Museum zu Berlin 1849 1856 The New York Public Library Astor Lenox and Tilden Foundations Retrieved August 19 2020 a b c d Graciela Gestoso Singer Ahmose Nefertari The Woman in Black Terrae Antiqvae January 17 2011 Gitton Michel 1973 Ahmose Nefertari sa vie et son culte posthume Ahmose Nefertari her life and her posthumous cult Ecole Pratique des Hautes etudes 5e Section Sciences Religieuses in French 85 82 84 doi 10 3406 ephe 1973 20828 ISSN 0183 7451 a b Gardiner Alan H 1961 Egypt of the Pharaohs an introduction Oxford Oxford University Press p 175 a b The deified former queen Ahmose Nefertari protectress of royal tomb workers www louvre fr a b c Petrie 1939 p 155 Martin Bernal 1987 Black Athena Afroasiatic Roots of Classical Civilization The Fabrication of Ancient Greece 1785 1985 vol I New Jersey Rutgers University Press a b c d Gitton Michel 1981 L epouse du dieu Ahmes Nefertary documents sur sa vie et son culte posthume The god s wife Ahmes Nefertary documents on her life and her posthumous cult in French 2nd ed Besancon Universite de Franche Comte ISBN 978 2 251 60172 4 a b Dodson Aidan Hilton Dyan 2004 The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt London Thames amp Hudson ISBN 0 500 05128 3 The Remarkable Women of Ancient Egypt by Barbara S Lesko p 14 B C Scribe Publications 1996 ISBN 978 0 930548 13 1 Betsy Bryan p 213 The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt edited by Ian Shaw OUP Oxford 2003 ISBN 978 0 19 280458 7 Tyldesley Joyce Chronicle of the Queens of Egypt Thames amp Hudson 2006 ISBN 0 500 05145 3 Hodel Hoenes S amp Warburton D trans Life and Death in Ancient Egypt Scenes from Private Tombs in New Kingdom Thebes Cornell University Press 2000 p 268 Vassilika Emili 2009 I capolavori del Museo Egizio di Torino The masterpieces of the Egyptian Museum of Turin in Italian Florence Fondazione Museo delle antichita egizie di Torino ISBN 978 88 8117 950 3 Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt by Margaret Bunson Pg 17 Infobase Publishing 2014 ISBN 978 1 4381 0997 8 Lefkowitz Mary R Rogers Guy Maclean 1996 Black Athena Revisited UNC Press Books p 162 ISBN 978 0807845554 Retrieved June 2 2016 via Google Books Bard Kathryn A Shubert Steven Blake 1999 Encyclopedia of the Archaeology of Ancient Egypt Routledge p 329 ISBN 978 0415185899 Retrieved June 2 2016 via Google Books Howe Stephen 1999 Afrocentrism Mythical Pasts and Imagined Homes Verso p 136 ISBN 978 1859842287 Retrieved June 2 2016 via Google Books a b c d e f g h i Wilkinson Toby A H 1999 Early dynastic Egypt Routledge p 15 a b c d e f g Massoulard Emile 1949 Prehistory and Protohsitory of Egypt a b c d e f Zakrzewski Sonia R 2003 Population continuity or population change Formation of the ancient Egyptian state Highfield Southampton Department of Archaeology University of Southampton a b c d e Smith Stuart Tyson February 1 2001 Redford Donald ed Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt Vol 3 p 28 a b c d e Ehret Christopher 2023 Ancient Africa A Global History to 300 CE Princeton Princeton University Press pp 83 86 ISBN 978 0 691 24409 9 The peopling of ancient Egypt and the deciphering of Meroitic script proceedings of the symposium held in Cairo from 28 January to 3 February 1974 Paris Unesco 1978 pp 94 95 ISBN 92 3 101605 9 a b Diop 1974 pp 1 27 43 51 a b c Bernal Martin 1987 Black Athena New Brunswick New Jersey Rutgers University Press p 242 ISBN 978 0 8135 1276 1 Mukhtar Muḥammad Jamal al Din 1990 Ancient Civilizations of Africa Currey pp 42 44 ISBN 978 0852550922 Retrieved June 2 2016 via Google Books The peopling of ancient Egypt and the deciphering of Meroitic script proceedings of the symposium held in Cairo from 28 January to 3 February 1974 Paris Unesco 1978 pp 86 87 ISBN 9231016059 However during the discussion of the hypothesis of a homogeneous population which was favoured by Professor Diop and the hypothesis of a mixed population which was supported by several other experts it became clear that there was total disagreement The peopling of ancient Egypt and the deciphering of Meroitic script proceedings of the symposium held in Cairo from 28 January to 3 February 1974 Paris UNESCO 1978 p 49 ISBN 92 3 101605 9 Mukhtar Muḥammad Jamal al Din 1990 Ancient Civilizations of Africa Currey p 49 ISBN 978 0852550922 Retrieved June 2 2016 via Google Books Egypt in its African context proceedings of the conference held at the Manchester Museum University of Manchester 2 4 October 2009 Oxford Archaeopress 2011 pp 7 9 ISBN 978 1407307602 Tutankhamun was not black Egypt antiquities chief AFP September 25 2007 Archived from the original on February 13 2012 Retrieved May 28 2012 Irwin Graham W 1977 Africans abroad a documentary history of the Black Diaspora in Asia Latin Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0231039369 Retrieved June 2 2016 via Google Books Schoch Robert M 1995 Great Sphinx Controversy robertschoch net Archived from the original on February 4 2012 Retrieved May 29 2012 Race in Antiquity Truly Out of Africa Dr Molefi Kete Asante Asante net Retrieved June 2 2016 Price Hugh B September 26 1991 Was Cleopatra Black The Baltimore Sun Retrieved May 28 2012 Whitaker Charles February 2002 Was Cleopatra Black Ebony Retrieved May 28 2012 The author cites a few examples of the claim one of which is a chapter titled Black Warrior Queens published in 1984 in Black Women in Antiquity part of The Journal of African Civilization series It draws heavily on the work of J A Rogers Charen Mona February 14 1994 Afrocentric View Distorts History and Achievement by Blacks St Louis Post Dispatch Retrieved May 29 2012 Herodotus 2003 Histories Herodotus London England Penguin Books pp 134 135 ISBN 978 0 14 044908 2 a b Diop 1974 pp 1 27 43 51 278 288 Najovits Simson 2003 Egypt Trunk of the Tree Vol II A Modern Survey of and Ancient Land Algora Publishing ISBN 978 0 87586 256 9 via Google Books a b Mokhtar G 1990 General History of Africa II Ancient Civilizations of Africa Berkeley University of California Press pp 1 118 ISBN 978 0 520 06697 7 Najovits Simson 2003 Egypt Trunk of the Tree Vol II A Modern Survey of and Ancient Land Publishing ISBN 978 0 87586 256 9 via Google Books Lloyd Alan B 1993 Herodotus Brill p 22 ISBN 978 9004077379 Retrieved June 2 2016 via Google Books Herodotus 2003 Histories Herodotus London England Penguin Books pp 103 119 134 135 640 ISBN 978 0 14 044908 2 Rawlinson George 2018 The Histories of Herodotus Scribe Publishing ISBN 978 1787801714 black skinned and have woolly hair Asante Kete Molefi 1996 European Racism Regarding Ancient Egypt in Egypt in Africa Theodore Celenko ed Indianapolis Ind Indianapolis Museum of Art pp 116 117 ISBN 0 936260 64 5 The word Herodotus used for black skinned melanchroes in the Greek cannot be confused with white red or even brown skinned It means black skinned Diop 1974 pp 241 242 B Lloyd Alan 1993 Herodotus Book II Brill p 22 ISBN 90 04 04179 6 Lefkowitz Mary R Rogers Guy Maclean 1996 Black Athena Revisited UNC Press Books p 118 ISBN 978 0807845554 Retrieved June 2 2016 via Google Books Snowden Frank M 2014 Bernal s Blacks and the Afrocentrists In Lefkowitz Mary Rogers Guy Maclean eds Black Athena Revisited UNC Press Books ISBN 978 1 4696 2032 9 Keita S O Y 1996 The Diversity of Indigenous Africans in Egypt in Africa Theodore Celenko ed Indianapolis Ind Indianapolis Museum of Art pp 104 105 ISBN 0 936260 64 5 Diop 1974 pp 2 5 Diop Cheikh Anta 1981 Civilization or Barbarism Chicago Illinois Lawrence Hill Books ISBN 978 1 55652 048 8 Welsby Derek 1996 The Kingdom of Kush London British Museum Press p 40 ISBN 978 0 7141 0986 2 Heeren A H L 1838 Historical researches into the politics intercourse and trade of the Carthaginians Ethiopians and Egyptians Michigan University of Michigan Library pp 13 379 422 424 ASIN B003B3P1Y8 Aubin Henry 2002 The Rescue of Jerusalem New York Soho Press pp 94 96 100 102 118 121 141 144 328 336 ISBN 978 1 56947 275 0 Hansberry William Leo 1977 African amp Africans African History Notebook Vol II Maryland Black Classic Press pp 103 113 ISBN 978 1574781540 von Martels Z R W M 1994 Travel Fact and Travel Fiction Studies on Fiction Literary Tradition Brill p 1 ISBN 978 9004101128 Retrieved June 2 2016 via Google Books Sparks Kenton L 1998 Ethnicity and Identity in Ancient Israel Prolegomena to the Study of Ethnic Eisenbrauns p 59 ISBN 978 1575060330 Retrieved June 2 2016 via Google Books Asheri David Lloyd Alan Corcella Aldo August 30 2007 A Commentary on Herodotus OUP Oxford p 74 ISBN 978 0198149569 Retrieved June 2 2016 via Google Books Roberts Jennifer T June 23 2011 Herodotus A Very Short Introduction OUP Oxford p 115 ISBN 978 0199575992 Retrieved June 2 2016 via Google Books Cameron Alan September 2 2004 Greek Mythography in the Roman World Oxford University Press p 156 ISBN 978 0198038214 Retrieved June 2 2016 via Google Books Marincola John December 13 2001 Greek Historians Cambridge University Press p 34 ISBN 978 0199225019 Retrieved June 2 2016 via Google Books Amoia Alba Della Fazia Knapp Bettina Liebowitz 2002 Multicultural Writers from Antiquity to 1945 A Bio bibliographical Sourcebook Bloomsbury Academic p 171 ISBN 978 0313306877 Retrieved June 2 2016 via Google Books Farley David G November 30 2010 Modernist Travel Writing Intellectuals Abroad University of Missouri Press p 21 ISBN 978 0826272287 Retrieved June 2 2016 via Google Books Lloyd Alan B 1993 Herodotus Brill p 1 ISBN 978 9004077379 Retrieved June 2 2016 via Google Books Nielsen Flemming A J 1997 The Tragedy in History Herodotus and the Deuteronomistic History Bloomsbury p 41 ISBN 978 1850756880 Retrieved June 2 2016 via Google Books Herodotus Oxford Bibliographies Online Research Guide Oxford University Press May 1 2010 p 21 ISBN 978 0199802869 Retrieved June 2 2016 via Google Books Diop 1974 pp 236 243 Ricard Alain Morgan Naomi 2004 The Languages amp Literatures of Africa The Sands of Babel James Currey p 14 Snowden Frank 1983 Before Color Prejudice Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press p 3 ISBN 978 0 674 06380 8 Diop 1974 pp 6 42 Diop 1974 pp 112 135 138 DeMello Margo 2007 Encyclopedia of Body Adornment p 150 via Google Books The ancient Egyptians practiced head binding as early as 3000 BCE the Mangbetu of the Congo also practiced head binding Diop 1974 pp 1 9 134 155 Williams Bruce 2011 Before the Pyramids Chicago Illinois Oriental Institute Museum Publications pp 89 90 ISBN 978 1 885923 82 0 The Nubia Salvage Project The Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago Oi uchicago edu Archived from the original on January 27 2014 Retrieved June 2 2016 O Connor David Bourke Silverman David P 1995 Ancient Egyptian Kingship Brill ISBN 978 9004100411 Retrieved June 2 2016 via Google Books Diop Cheikh Anta 1991 Civilization or Barbarism Chicago Illinois USA Lawrence Hill Books pp 103 105 ISBN 978 1 55652 048 8 O Connor David 2011 Before the Pyramids Chicago Illinois Oriental Institute Museum Publications pp 162 163 ISBN 978 1 885923 82 0 Shaw Ian October 23 2003 The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt OUP Oxford p 446 ISBN 978 0191604621 Retrieved June 2 2016 via Google Books Wengrow D May 25 2006 The Archaeology of Early Egypt Social Transformations in North East Africa Cambridge University Press p 167 ISBN 978 0521835862 Retrieved June 2 2016 via Google Books Mitchell Peter 2005 African Connections An Archaeological Perspective on Africa and the Wider World Rowman Altamira p 69 ISBN 978 0759102590 Retrieved June 2 2016 via Google Books Wilkinson Toby A H 2001 Early Dynastic Egypt Routledge Page 194 probably doi 10 4324 9780203024386 ISBN 978 0415260114 Torok Laszlo 2009 Between Two Worlds The Frontier Region Between Ancient Nubia and Egypt Brill p 577 ISBN 978 9004171978 Retrieved June 2 2016 Bianchi Robert Steven 2004 Daily Life of the Nubians Greenwood Publishing p 38 ISBN 978 0313325014 Retrieved June 2 2016 via Google Books Lefkowitz Mary R Rogers Guy MacLean March 24 2014 Black Athena Revisited University of North Carolina Press Books ISBN 978 1 4696 2032 9 via Google Books Shaw Ian July 22 2004 Ancient Egypt A Very Short Introduction Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 157840 3 via Google Books Blench Roger June 22 2006 Archaeology Language and the African Past Rowman Altamira ISBN 978 0 7591 1421 0 via Google Books Snowden Frank M Jr 1997 Misconceptions about African Blacks in the Ancient Mediterranean World Specialists and Afrocentrists PDF Arion Third Series Trustees of Boston University 4 3 28 50 JSTOR 20163634 Archived from the original PDF on March 4 2016 De Montellano Bernard R Ortiz 1993 Melanin Afrocentricity and Pseudoscience Yearbook of Physical Anthropology 36 33 58 33 58 doi 10 1002 ajpa 1330360604 Chowdhury Kanishka 1997 Afrocentric Voices Constructing Identities Dis placing Difference College Literature 24 2 35 56 ISSN 0093 3139 JSTOR 25112296 Afrocentrism Definition Examples History Beliefs amp Facts Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved August 7 2020 Bay Mia 2000 The Historical Origins of Afrocentrism Amerikastudien American Studies 45 4 501 512 ISSN 0340 2827 JSTOR 41157604 Naville Edouard 1907 The Origin of Egyptian Civilisation The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland 37 201 214 doi 10 2307 2843255 JSTOR 2843255 Sanders 1969 pp 521 523 Diop 1974 pp 5 9 Sanders 1969 pp 524 527 Baum Bruce The Rise and Fall of the Caucasian Race A Political History of Racial Identity p 108 Morton Samuel George 1844 Egyptian Ethnography Crania AEgyptiaca Or Observations on Egyptian Ethnography Derived from Anatomy History and the Monuments via Google Books Gliddon George Robins 1844 Ancient Egypt Her monuments hieroglyphics history and archaeology p 46 Sanders 1969 pp 525 532 Seligman C G July December 1913 Some Aspects of the Hamitic Problem in the Anglo Egyptian Sudan The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland 43 593 705 doi 10 2307 2843546 JSTOR 2843546 The Mediterranean Race a Study of the Origins of European Peoples 1901 pp v vi Preface also p 45 Sergi 1901 p 250 Concepts of Race in the Historiography of Northeast Africa Wyatt MacGaffey The Journal of African History Vol 7 No 1 1966 The Ancient Egyptians and the origin of Civilization 1911 p 69 Smith 1911 p 25 As according to Smith the hair of the Proto Egyptian was precisely similar to that of the brunet South European and presented no resemblance whatever to the so called wooly appearance and peppercorn like arrangement of the Negro s hair Smith 1911 p 58 Neither in Sergi s nor in Elliot Smith s scheme are Brown and Mediterranean equivalent terms MacGaffey 1966 p 4 Sanders 1969 p 531 MacGaffey 1966 pp 5 9 Ehret Christopher June 20 2023 Ancient Africa A Global History to 300 CE Princeton Princeton University Press pp 83 86 ISBN 978 0 691 24409 9 History of Egypt 1846 Part I p 3 The Asiatic Origin of the Race a b Lefkowitz Mary R Rogers Guy MacLean 1996 Black Athena Revisited UNC Press Books p 65 ISBN 978 0807845554 Retrieved June 2 2016 via Google Books Derry D E 1956 The Dynastic Race in Egypt Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 42 80 85 doi 10 1177 030751335604200111 S2CID 194596267 Gardiner Alan 1961 Egypt of the Pharaohs Oxford Oxford University Press p 392 Shaw Ian Nicholson Paul 1995 The Dictionary of Ancient Egypt London British Museum Press p 228 Redford Donald B 1992 Egypt Israel and Canaan in Ancient Times Princeton Princeton University Press p 13 Frank J Yurco 1996 The Origin and Development of Ancient Nile Valley Writing in Egypt in Africa Theodore Celenko ed Indianapolis Ind Indianapolis Museum of Art pp 34 35 ISBN 0 936260 64 5 Wengrow David 2023 Ancient Egypt and Nubian Kings of Flood and Kings of Rain in Great Kingdoms of Africa John Parker eds S l THAMES amp HUDSON pp 1 40 ISBN 978 0500252529 Epic encounters culture media and U S interests in the Middle East 1945 2000 by Melani McAlister Lefkowitz Mary R Rogers Guy MacLean 1996 Black Athena Revisited UNC Press Books ISBN 978 0807845554 Kevin Hart s comedy tour stop in Cairo cancelled amid backlash over Afrocentric comments Yahoo News February 26 2023 Retrieved March 5 2023 Egyptians Create Viral Hashtag Against Kevin Hart s Cairo Performance The pyramids are not African Zahi Hawass responds to Kevin Hart CNN Arabic in Arabic December 16 2022 Samil Nehar 2021 Claims that Ancient Egyptians were black untrue Zahi Hawass Daily News Egypt Retrieved September 8 2022 Zahi Hawass Denies Egypt s Pyramids Were Built by Africa s Kushites Sada Elbalad see news SourcesAshton Sally Ann Spring 2002 Identifying the ROM s Cleopatra Rotunda 36 39 archived from the original on May 19 2020 retrieved March 27 2018 Bard Kathryn A 1992 Ancient Egyptians and the issue of Race Bostonia Magazine later part of Black Athena Revisited 1996 Baum Bruce 2006 The Rise and Fall of the Caucasian Race A Political History of Racial Identity New York University Press ISBN 978 0 8147 9892 8 Beard Mary March 16 2009 The skeleton of Cleopatra s sister Steady on The Times Literary Supplement Bradford Ernle 2003 Cleopatra Penguin Group ISBN 978 0141390147 Campbell John 1851 Negro mania Being an Examination of the Falsely Assumed Equality of the Various Races of Men Campbell amp Powers Candelora Danielle 2022 Candelora Danielle Ben Marzouk Nadia Cooney Kathyln eds Ancient Egyptian society challenging assumptions exploring approaches Abingdon Oxon Routledge ISBN 978 0367434632 Challis Debbie 2013 The Archaeology of Race The Eugenic Ideas of Francis Galton and Flinders Petrie Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 978 1472502193 Jacques Joseph Champollion Figeac 1839 Egypte ancienne in French Firmin Didot freres Chasseboeuf Constantin Francois de 1862 La loi naturelle ou Principes physiques de la morale deduits de l organisation de l homme et de l univers Natural Law or Physical Principles of Morality Deduced from the Organization of Man and the Universe in French Davoine Chasseboeuf Constantin Francois de 1787 Voyage en Syrie et en Egypte pendant les annees 1783 1784 et 1785 avec deux cartes geographiques et deux planches gravees representant les Ruines du Temple du Soleil a Balbek et celles de la ville de Palmyre dans le desert de Syrie Travel in Syria and Egypt during the years 1783 1784 and 1785 with two geographical maps and two engraved plates representing the Ruins of the Temple of the Sun at Balbek and those of the city of Palmyra in the Syrian desert in French Desenne Cheshire Wendy 2011 The Phantom Sister of Ptolemy Alexander Enchoria 32 120 130 Dain Bruce R 2002 A Hideous Monster Of The Mind American race theory in the early republic Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674030145 via Google Books Diop Cheikh Anta 1974 The African Origin of Civilization Chicago Illinois Lawrence Hill Books ISBN 978 1 55652 072 3 Dudley Donald 1960 The Civilization of Rome New York New American Library p 57 ISBN 978 1258450540 Ferroukhi Mafoud 2001a 197 Marble portrait perhaps of Cleopatra VII s daughter Cleopatra Selene Queen of Mauretania in Walker Susan Higgs Peter eds Cleopatra of Egypt from History to Myth Princeton N J Princeton University Press British Museum Press p 219 ISBN 978 0691088358 Goldsworthy Adrian Keith 2010 Antony and Cleopatra New Haven CT Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300165340 Grant Michael 1972 Cleopatra Edison NJ Barnes amp Noble Books pp 4 5 ISBN 978 0880297257 Jablonski Nina 2012 Living Color The Biological and Social Meaning of Skin Color University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 95377 2 span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.