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  3. Cleopatra wasn't black.

Cleopatra wasn't black.

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    iesa_t — 11 years ago(October 22, 2014 02:15 AM)

    No, wherever you got this from, it's not only wrong, but it's nonsense. First, Africa does not equal black people. Africa contained and still contains a range of feature types and skin colors, and it always did, even before persians or greeks, The idea that you seem to have clutched onto where everybody is magically black if you go 50 miles southwest is astonishing just for that. That entire area is extremely packed with people of various kinds and colors.
    The true black, not just mocha brown, people originated from the middle three-fifths of the continent, and this makes a lot of sense when you consider how that sits under the equator. People tend to be dark skinned around the equator, and lighter towards the poles, but migration does mix things up a bit.
    Egypt, however, has one of the longest, documented visual histories in the history of the world, painted on walls, carved in temples, brushed on papyrus, inlaid in goldthousands of years worth. Those are Egyptians on those walls, and they're tan, olive, or reddish tan, much like Native Americans in the southern states. They generally have sharp, delicate features, resembling europeans or asians with larger eyes, but in these images there are black people, with classic black features, and there would be: because they were visiting or captured from the areas they were native to, outside of Egypt. Many of those depicted are servants. Don't take that the wrong way though, because the other colors of Egyptians in those scenes are also servants. They were divided more by family ties than race. Everybody is a slave.
    I have been reading an uptick of people claiming things like Horus and Osirus were truly balck, take back the black gods, etcbut this is so repugnantly misleading just on the face of it: Horus is a hawk headed God, whose face is made of features. becauseHawk Head! He does not have a Black hawk head, whatever good that would do your movement, and his body is never represented as dark skinned like a nubian, and there are dark skinned people represented, but they are not the majority of the figures.
    Saying that Egyptians were black until they got rolled by outsiders is the kind of fantasy you have to be completely ignorant to believe. All of the records of ancient egypt left by the egyptians in paintings and sculptures over thousands of years strongely indicate the opposite. Sometimes they had Nubians over for a birthday party, and you can see the difference in the features side by side on the same wall. It's so clear, if you can be bothered to even look.

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      LadyofAzul — 11 years ago(January 08, 2015 06:39 AM)

      King Tut's grandmother,
      Queen Tiye, does look like a black African to me
      , so does her son, Akhenaten; and so does King Tut and her other grandchildren, plus her husband Amenhotep III looked black African too (
      who is known for marrying several foreign wives
      😞
      I honestly don't know how people could look at statues of Amenhotep III and Queen Tiye and say these people were Caucasian or White. Their various statues make them look like Sub-Saharan Africans; and King Tut is their grandson and his own statues have black African features
      (
      https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com:443/data.filmboards/images/upload/fnb7VR3.jpg
      ), yet there's still a huge debate on what race King Tut was. Even this king from the Third Dynasty looks black:
      https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com:443/data.filmboards/images/upload/fqwJlzs.jpg
      But either way, the whole Egyptian race thing debate could go on forever. I like to think of them as a multiracial society
      (
      Egypt today is pretty mixed, one Egyptian could look more Sub-Saharan or Middle Eastern than another; and they don't have demographics separating white from black, they are all Egyptian
      ).
      I mean, it's a civilization that's thousands of years old and was surrounded by other countries in the Mediterranean, the Middle East, and the Sahara, and, through the Kingdom of Kush, was connected to Sub-Saharan Africa. Egypt was conquered by a variety of different kingdoms/countries, ruled various other regions, and traded with many different groups of people. How could they not be multiracial?
      Now King Tut and his family could of been biracial
      but,
      I would not look at any one of their statues
      (
      and those of some other Ancient Egyptians
      ), and say,
      "
      Hey, that looks like a White person!
      "
      How other people do is beyond me. Anyways, I think one DNA testing company from Sweden tried to do some kind of
      DNA test on him and his father and grandfather and determined that they shared a Y-Haplogroup (
      R1b1 or R-M343
      ) with most Western Europeans
      , but that excludes their maternal lineage and
      doesn't really mean they were Caucasian themselves
      . It just that
      they could have had paternal Caucasian ancestry
      .
      The belief that this automatically makes him White, like some people say, is wrong.
      It's a 20,000-34,000 year old haplogroup and
      people of the Central Sahel Region of Africa (
      reaching all the way to Equatorial Guinea
      ) share this haplogroup as well that supposedly originated in the Middle East or South Asia.
      I think you could probably
      test nearly half of all Black American men and find their Y-Haplogroup or paternal line and match it to the ones shared by Western Europeans
      (
      I know you can for my dad because I had his paternal line tested. My father is black and hasn't had a white ancestor since my great-great-great grandfather who fathered my great-great grandfather with a woman from Guinea, West Africa, yet he is of the R1b1 haplogroup, specifically R-U106 which is descendant from R-M343
      ); most of the popular DNA testing companies say they find
      the average African American to be 20% European.
      West Africans have only been in America for a few hundred years, think of what that says about the black people in Africa and the admixture there. I think
      they tested Rameses III's DNA too
      (
      https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com:443/data.filmboards/images/upload/H5HqADU.jpg
      ) and
      found it to be closest to the Haplogroup E-V38 from E1b1 (
      a common Sub-Saharan African haplogroup said to originate in West Africa with a frequency rate of 90-100% from various West and South African tribes tested
      )
      , which can be found in many A
      frican males throughout all parts of Africa
      (
      West, Central, South, North, and East
      ) and
      the E-V38 haplogroup seems to be strongest in West and South Africans
      (
      like Yoruba, Mandinka, Bamileke, and several other Bantu tribes
      found in West and South Africa) and
      lowers the further east you go
      (
      though it's strongest at a 47% frequency rate in the nomadic
      Tuareg people from Niger
      in Northern and Eastern parts of Africa:
      http://i57.tinypic.com/alq7ev.png
      ). However, I believe they say
      DNA testing on mummies isn't 100% accurate
      . So, it appears the
      race of Ancient Egyptians is more complicated than just black or white
      .
      Africa is the most genetically diverse continent on Earth, so Egypt could have had pharaohs from many different haplogroups throughout the centuries
      (
      it is one of the oldest kingdoms on Earth
      ).

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        ContinentalOp — 10 years ago(July 19, 2015 10:02 AM)

        The Ancient Egyptians were Black Africans, and not 'Middle Easterns', also know as Arabs.
        Actually the Egyptians were an Afro-Asiatic group related to Arabs. And most modern Egyptians are Arabized Egyptians, not actual Arabs. It is for this reason that many spoke of the same families that speak Arabic used to speak Coptic, and a minority still speak it.
        They were Black
        Only if we use ''black'' to mean darker Afro-Asiatic people. The Afro-Asiatic people of Egyptian are related to Arabs and Berbers. They are not closely related to Sub-Saharan Africans.
        Formerly KingAngantyr

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          shmn — 19 years ago(October 18, 2006 04:15 AM)

          funny becuz the exact opposite (could) be true, namely that she was of arian race, considering that Cleopatra was from the Ptolemaus family, one of the 4 generals who took a forth of the greek empire, made by Alexander The Great (a blonde boy)
          nuff said?

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            isabellabruno000 — 14 years ago(November 04, 2011 07:21 PM)

            Nobody really knows what she looked like.
            Upon doing some research on her origins, I'm beginning to visualize her looking rather like your average italian female of today. Dark hair, dark eyes and olive skin.
            The Ptolemy dynasty was descended from the Greek Macedonian Ptolemy Soter, established as ruler of Egypt by Alexander the Great's conquest of Egypt in 305 B.C.E. (In other words, they were imperialist outsiders.) Many of their marriages were incestuous, with brothers marrying sisters - but not all the children born are known to have had both fathers and mothers who were Ptolemies.
            We are not certain of the heritage of Cleopatra's mother or her paternal grandmother. That leaves 50% to 75% of her genetic heritage unknown and ripe for speculation.
            Is there any evidence that either her mother or paternal grandmother was a black African? No. "We don't know the heritage of" means just that. We don't know.
            Is there any evidence that either of those women were not black Africans? No, by the same reasoning.

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              psteve321 — 14 years ago(November 08, 2011 06:34 AM)

              Nobody really knows what she looked like.
              Upon doing some research on her origins, I'm beginning to visualize her looking rather like your average italian female of today. Dark hair, dark eyes and olive skin.
              The Ptolemy dynasty was descended from the Greek Macedonian Ptolemy Soter, established as ruler of Egypt by Alexander the Great's conquest of Egypt in 305 B.C.E. (In other words, they were imperialist outsiders.) Many of their marriages were incestuous, with brothers marrying sisters - but not all the children born are known to have had both fathers and mothers who were Ptolemies.
              We are not certain of the heritage of Cleopatra's mother or her paternal grandmother. That leaves 50% to 75% of her genetic heritage unknown and ripe for speculation.
              Is there any evidence that either her mother or paternal grandmother was a black African? No. "We don't know the heritage of" means just that. We don't know.
              Is there any evidence that either of those women were not black Africans? No, by the same reasoning.
              Yes we do know the heritage of both her mother and paternal grandmother and they were NOT black Africans. They were of Greek-Macedonian ancestry more then likely Ptolemaic Princess and Queens themselves because the Ptolemies were very xenophobic and didn't inter marry or produce heirs to their Dynasties with people who were NOT like them. Plus we have plenty of descriptions and depictions of what Cleopatra looked like and she was not black African or mixed black or whatever, all her ancient depictions from her lifetime clearly show a white woman with fair complexion and auburnish hair color, which by the way fair coloring was very common among the Ptolemies.

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                foton — 21 years ago(February 11, 2005 02:01 PM)

                I am Egyptian woman myself ,and please let me sort somethings about my country as it hurts me so much to read all those horrible misconcepts about Egypt & Egyptian people !
                First of all Cleopatra is AN Egyptian Queen ,but she ruled Egypt during plotemey era . Some would wonder why she is Egyptian then???!!
                Egypt is like a crucible it absorbs every new comer to it and after mixing with its people you are Egyptian to the bones . In fact people here still have the same features and skin colour of the ancient Egyptiansm and their way of life (Which Westerns like to call Pharoes ) Pharoes were ancient Egyptians also . And they are not black by the way . We don't discrimnate people here by the colour of their skin and catgories them into black & white !!!! You can find a blonde, a brunette and black walking down the street and they are all the same thing Egyptians .
                Another thing I was so frustrated and disgusted about what other thnik of Cleopatra . Egyptian women are very strong and respectable and they are no prostiutes !!! It hurts any Egyptian woman to see such a degrading portayal of women in her country as this completely is bare from truth.

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                    JrJordan — 19 years ago(November 05, 2006 11:59 AM)

                    If Cleopatra hadn't murdered Arsinoe, Arsinoe would have murdered her. Besides, thats alot of conjecture. The only thing known for sure is that Cleopatra wanted Caesar to have Arsinoe killed, because she would be dangerous if left alive. And since Arsinoe was an active supporter of Caesar's murderers, Cleopatra was right.
                    Besides, it was part and parcel of being a Ptolemy to murder family members

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                        JrJordan — 19 years ago(November 14, 2006 02:25 PM)

                        They crowned her Queen of Egypt when they went East..and she declared that they were hero's for killing Ceasar. Thats pretty self-explanatory as to where she stood on the whole subject.
                        Besides the pointArsinoe was a nobody. Who cares that Cleopatra murdered her? I'd rather read stories and history books with Cleopatra in them, then Arsinoe.

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                              webmaster-1348 — 21 years ago(February 16, 2005 03:56 PM)

                              Cleopatra was not a Black women. She was a Greek born in Egypt. It's a common misconception since she was born in Egypt.
                              Trina said: <<< Actually, people in Egypt are Mid-Eastern>>>
                              The Ancient Egyptians were Black Africans, and not 'Middle Easterns', also know as Arabs. The Arabs along with Macedonians and Persians, ect invaded Egypt. None of those people are indigenous to Egypt. Arabs are NOT aboriginal people of Egypt.
                              Foton-You are NOT a decendent of Ancient Egyptians. And, yes, Egyptians were Black, much like the whole continent of Africa. I recommend you engage in some research beyond modern 'history'.
                              Jared-
                              We DO know who the ancient Egyptians were. They were Black. No amount of supremacy, whether its from Whites or Arabs or Blacks, will deter historical accuracy.

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                                    ak6909 — 20 years ago(June 23, 2005 02:09 PM)

                                    You need to study about the Ancient Egyptians a little further. Look at some photagraphs or something. By now everyone knows they were black. You were left behind or blind to the truth. Black is not just a skin colorit is a state of mind (ignorance). Even as mixed as the modern Egyptians are today they are still blackwhatever their shade. I suggest you read Chiekh Anta Diop's book "African Origins of Civilization: Myth or Reality". IT IS AN EYE OPENER!

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                                          eby205 — 20 years ago(December 03, 2005 02:27 PM)

                                          First of all, very little is known for certain about Cleopatra. She was definitely of Macedonian descent. Alexander the Great conquered Egypt and died at the age of 33, after which his general divided up his territory, and Ptolemy I got Egypt and started the Ptolemaic line. Cleopatra MIGHT have had some Egyptian blood in her; while generally the Ptolemies married their sisters, this was not always the case. However, it is extremely unlikely that Cleopatra was even slightly Egyptian, since Alexandria had a very large and very affluent Greek community under the Ptolemies. Contemporary depictions of herin busts, coins, etc., show a woman with bulgy eyes, a crooked nose, and a long neck (she was, after all, very inbred).
                                          Despite her Greek descent, she was the first of the Ptolemies to speak colloquial Egyptian, and she clearly identified herself as Egyptianshe believed that she was a reincarnation of Isis (not unusual for Egyptian kings, who all identified themselves with Horus/Osiris and Amun-Re).
                                          And really, no one knows whether the ancient Egyptians were white or black or Middle-Eastern. Previously to the Ptolemaic period, the Nubians (who were black) had invaded Egypt and served as kings for a short time, before being ousted by the Libyans (who were white). But technically both Nubians and Libyans were Egyptians, so ancient Egyptians' skin color really depended on where you were in Egypt.

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