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"The
first inhabitants of China seem also to have been the 'Negritos.' Unmixed 'Negroes'
with no connection with Africa still live in Southern China, " is an incredible
point presented by J.A. Rogers in his book, SEX AND RACE, Vol. 1. H. Imbert,
a French anthropologist who lived in the Far East, says in "Les Negritos de
la Chine". "The Negroid races peopled at some time all the South of India, Indo-China
and China. The South of Indo-China actually has now pure Negritos as the Semangs
and mixed as the Malays and the Sakais…"
Similarly, this scholar declares:
"In the earliest Chinese history, several texts
in classic books spoke of these diminutive blacks; thus the Tcheu-Li composed
under the dynasty of Tcheu (1122-249 B. C.) gives a description of the inhabitants
with black and oily skin… The Prince Liu-Nan, who died in 122 B.C., speaks of
a kingdom of diminutive blacks in the southwest of China."
Moreover, he states:
"In the first epochs of Chinese history, the Negrito
type peopled all the south of the country and even in the island of Hai-Nan,
as we have attempted to prove in our study on the Negritos, on Black men of
this island. Chinese folklore speaks often of these Negroes, and mentions an
Empress of China named Li (373-397A.D.), consort of the Emperor Hsiao Wn Wen,
who is spoken of as being a Negro." Professor Chang Hsing-Lang revealed in an
article entitled, "The importation of Negro Slaves to China under the Tang Dynasty
A.D. 618-907," that: Even the sacred Manchu dynasty shows this Negro strain..
The lower part of the face of the Emperor Pu-yi of Manchukuo, direct descendant
of the Manchu rulers of China, is most distinctly Negroid. "Chinese chroniclers
report that a Negro Empire existed in the South of China at the dawn of that
country's history."
CHEIKH ANTA DIOP
AFRICAN ORIGIN OF CIVILIZATION
(Myth or Reality)
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The Political & Spiritual Purpose of the
Holy Land
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Citing the works of Kwang-Chih Chang, The Archaeology
of Ancient China, (Yale University Press) and Irwin Graham, Africans Abroad
(Columbia University Press), R. Rashidi makes the point. There is evidence of
substantial populations of Blacks in early China. Archaeological studies have
located a black substraum in the earliest periods of Chinese history, "and reports
of major kingdom ruled by Blacks are frequently in Chinese documents."
HOTEP: It was unfortunate but understandable that
J.A.Rogers did not know that the Blacks of China were connected to the peoples
of AFRICA. The early migration of Africans were: (The Eastward Equatorial Migrations
by sea.) Africans first migrated from East Africa from around the regions of
Ethiopia and Somalia to, Yemen, Oman, Southern India, Burma, China, Malaysia,
The Philippines, Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, Australia, The Solomon Islands
and all the little islands in between.
The migrations and trading westward by sea started
declining only about 11,000 years ago, when world sea level rose, recovering
from the last deep marine regression caused by global cooling and the locking-up
of water in continental glaciers. Then there were the Northern migrations, from
Ethiopia through the Saudi Arabian region. Then the migrations down the Nile.
Those that Traveled over land mixed with other Africans who went through physiological
changes then entered china looking different. All people on this earth are connected
to the Indigenous African people and the migrations of people today can be proven
not only by examining the historical records, but by DNA research.
Newly
Released Study Traces Arrival of First Chinese
12.11 p.m. ET (1611 GMT) September 29, 1998
WASHINGTON — Genetic studies that show the first
modern human arrived in China about 60,000 years ago support the theory that
people first evolved in Africa, researchers say. In a study published Tuesday
in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, scientists say that
an analysis of genetic samples from throughout Asia suggests that people there
sprang from common ancestors, the modern humans who appeared first in Africa
and then spread throughout the world. "Our work shows that modern humans first
came to southeast Asia and then moved later to northern China," said Li Jin,
a population geneticist at the University of Texas in Houston. "This supports
the idea that modern humans originated in Africa."
THE AFRICAN PRESENCE IN THE ANCIENT FAR EAST " .
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Jin said the study is based on analysis of the
gene patterns from 43 different ethnic groups in China and Asia. He said the
technique gives an indication of how people moved and mixed over thousands of
generations. Migration clues are carried in genetic patterns, called
micro-satellites,
that change rapidly over time. By analyzing these changes and linking them to
earlier genetic patterns, researchers are able to plot the migration of ancient
humans. Based on the research, Jin said it appears that modern humans first
moved from central Asia, following the Indian Ocean coastline across India,
to southeast Asia. Later, they moved to south China. Descendants of these original
Chinese then migrated north and northwest, populating northern China, Siberia
and eventually the Americas.
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Nigeria: Gate in construction |
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"This is important research because it supports
the out-of-Africa theory about the origin of modern humans," said Ranjan Deka,
a population genetics researcher at the University of Cincinnati. Deka said
the results of the study weaken an alternative theory that modern humans arose
independently on different continents at about the same time. If this were true,
he said, there would be little or no genetic continuity among the various populations
of the world. Instead, said Deka, the findings by Jin and his colleagues show
genetic continuity in China, even though that vast country has dozens of different
ethnic populations and more than 200 different languages. Jin said he believes
modern human migration into Asia was probably affected by glaciers that invaded
much of the Northern Hemisphere during an ice age that lasted thousands of years.
It may have been only after the glaciers retreated,
more than 15,000 years ago, that modern humans were able to migrate to far northern
Asia and across the Bering Strait to the Americas. Although the island nation
of Japan is assumed by many to have been historically composed of an essentially
homogenous population, the accumulated evidence places the matter in a vastly
different light. A Japanese proverb states that: "For a Samurai to be brave,
he must have a bit of Black blood." Another recording of the proverb is: "Half
the blood in one's veins must be Black to make a good Samurai." Sakanouye Tamura
Maro, a Black man, became the first Shogun of Japan. In China, an Africoid presence
in visible from remote antiquity. The Shang, for example, China's first dynasts,
are described as having "black and oily skin." The famous Chinese sage Lao-Tze
was "black in complexion."
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