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2008
| This book arose from Graham Campbell-Dunn’s research into Minoan Linear A. See his Who Were the Minoans? (2006). The syllabic sign system used on prehistoric Crete, he discovered, was related to the systems of pictographs found by Marçel Griaule in the Sudan, but also to Egyptian Hieroglyphics. Cretan customs, such as bulljumping, turned out also to have African parallels. Bullfighting took the author to Spain, Greece, Rome, and early India. Wherever bullfighting occurred other African practices....[more] |
2006
| Recent genetic research at Universidad Complutense, Madrid, has found no substantial evidence for an Aryan invasion of Europe. This invasion is a myth.
We use morphology to demonstrate that the Indo-European languages came out of Africa. They derive from an offshoot of the Niger-Congo group. Agglutination gradually lead to grammatical fusion, with fossilisation and loss of the prefixes. The primary elements were relatively independent monosyllables, used as prefixes, roots, infixes, suffixes....[more] |
2006
| This book applies archaeology, anthropology, comparative linguistics and genetics to the problem of Minoan origins. The evidence of all these disciplines leads to the same conclusion. The Minoans of ancient Crete were red men, like the Fulani, and lived in elaborate palaces with rain-courts, or impluvia, like the Yoruba. A genetic link between the Greeks on the one hand, and the Fulani and Mossi, has now been established. The Fulani and Yoruba share similar blood groups. The Minoans worshipped t....[more] |

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