African History: Explore The Amazing Timeline of The World’s Richest Continent - The History, Culture, Folklore, Mythology & More of Africa
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About this ebook
Journey into The Heart of Africa & Explore Over 2000 Years of History, People, Countries, Myths, Facts & More
From the birthplace of civilisation to modern times, African History tells the most exquisite tales of woe and wonder.
With a rich geography and fascinating history this continent is truly awe inspiring!
It's no wonder Africa has given rise to many of our languages, philosophies and legends which we honour to this day. Using reliable, fact-checked written resources and discoveries from world-renowned archeologists, History Brought Alive presents African History.
Journey with us on the shoulders of the very first peoples of Africa across a riveting timeline of events. Explore the true history, facts, myths and drama that will have you curling your toes in awe and anticipation.
Here is a small taster of what's inside this book:
- Major Figures, Key Events, Politics & Milestones in African History
- Fascinating Folktales, Myths & Legends, inc The Flying Tortoise, Lion & The Jackal, The Giants & Many More
- The Birth of Human Civilization - Learn About The Origins of Humanity in Africa
- Long Lost Kingdoms, inc Ancient Egypt, The Kingdom of Kush, The Land of Punt, Carthage, The Great Zimbabwe & Many More
- The Amazing Story of The Nubian Queen Who Fought Back Against Caesar's Powerful Roman Empire
- The Israelites & Their Amazing Journey Across The Nile River from Asia and into Africa, where they settled Nubia
- Rituals, Tribes & Traditions From Centuries of African Heritage
- The Zulu Wars - Epic Battles, Christianity & The British Empire In South Africa
And much, much more
Whether you're a history enthusiast or a curious reader...inside you will discover all you need to know about the true story of African History.
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African History - History Brought Alive
INTRODUCTION
In 1000 B.C.E, a San man lowered himself behind the bushes, turning his head quickly to his brother as he muttered a soft series of clicks. His hands gestured toward an Eland Cow grazing in the field afar, alone and unprotected. The brother replied, and a plan was formed between them. They hopped off to opposite sides of the field, prepared to chase the cow with the wind so that it wouldn’t sense the danger waiting (Balyage, 2000).
The men got into position, and a voice chanted the opening of the hunt.
The brother raced out. His cries scared the cow, and it fled. An arrow zoomed through the air, and a sudden thud raged through the quiet morning as it pierced the beast's chest.
The San man sent up a silent thank you to Kaggan, the great God, for he himself must have enabled them to find such a feast. The meat would never be finished among the members of his own family, but perhaps his neighbors and their families would enjoy the sentiment; after all, were it not for their relatives in the east, they may not have eaten at all last month.
Every part of the beast would be used. If it couldn’t be eaten, they would find a use for it. The hide would be turned into leather robes, and the bladder used to transport water.
He looked down at the ostrich egg strapped to his waist.
The hole on the edge suggested that its time had come to be used by his first wife in her jewelry making.
His eyes darted ahead, his brother’s chants of thanks distracted him from his thoughts.
He started off toward him.
Suddenly, his pace was interrupted by the sound of angry, vengeful words he could not fully understand. However, the tone and few similarities in dialect were enough for him to have recognized that these people believed him and his brother to be thieves.
He moved quickly to try to stop the argument starting between his brother and the strangers, but he was not fast enough.
He felt the wind beat into him, knocking his breath out as his brother fell to the ground, a blow dealt to his head.
What he and his family would not uncover for thousands of years was that the people who took revenge on his brother were the long-lost children of two starstruck lovers. The first partner belonged to his own tribe, and the second to a great enemy. Little did the tribes know, they had both come from one parent.
How was it that twins would become enemies and birth children who would ultimately destroy them?
African History tells the most exquisite tales of woe and wonder. They are the breathtaking originals of stories you may recognize from your textbooks on Ancient Egypt, Rome, and Greece. Ancient Africa is where it all started. As the birthplace of the human species, it’s only natural that Africa also gave rise to many of our languages, philosophies, myths, and legends.
History Brought Alive breaks into the most recent and unknown historical research around African history, to create a uniquely sincere and detailed timeline of events.
Using reliable resources managed by credible researchers, eyewitnesses, and aural keepers, History Brought Alive tells a true drama that will have you curling your toes in awe and anticipation.
While many texts are outdated, History Brought Alive uses recent material and new scientific evidence to solve mysteries that have been questioned for decades.
Great time and empathy have been put into providing an accurate telling of events. While many historical accounts can be seen as disjointed, History Brought Alive strives to provide a coherent and believable flow of events.
History Brought Alive writes from the perspective of the people of Africa in an attempt to protect and preserve history as they know it to be. For who would know it better?
This book relays a detailed account of how Ancient Africa was developed, starting with its very first inhabitants. The book takes on the difficult task of piecing together the pathways taken by Homo sapiens and in doing so, presents one of the most fully structured current presentations of Ancient Africa. The book encapsulates the newest findings by world-renowned archeologists into an exciting and riveting time capsule that will leave you feeling as though you are watching from over the shoulders of the first Bantu speakers as you journey with them through their migratory patterns, cry over their losses and marvel at the Kingdoms formed in their victories.
This book will change the way you view Ancient Africa.
Every account you know, every story you have ever been told, is only half the truth.
Ancient Africa might just be the greatest land ever known.
CHAPTER 1
HOMO SAPIENS IN AFRICA
In 1925, a black man working in a mine in Buxton, South Africa, wiped the hot sweat from his head. He shivered, his body reacting to the lime chemicals he had been submerged in for weeks (Tietz, 2018).
He stretched out his hands, and leaning his shovel in between his legs, he clapped away the dust that had resided on his fingers, painting them whiter than he had ever remembered seeing them before.
His wife would complain if she saw him like this and tell him to wash the grit out from his nails.
He would have if he had expected that he would catch less dirt on them.
Wondering for a moment if he and his daughter were alright back home at his village, he pulled his shoulders back and smacked his shovel back into the dirt, kicking the spade in deeper. Leaning into the handle, he reaped the earth from its grave.
His eyes grew wide and his chest tightened as the face of a small child stared back at him…
Perhaps showing this to the management might afford him a raise large enough to see his family over the weekend for the first time in months.
The Tuang child handed over to Raymond Dart became the first form of scientific evidence that humans were derived from apelike ancestors.
After the discovery, a series of diverging bone fragments were uncovered in the area now known as The Cradle of Humankind, the place our ancestors are believed to have congregated.
Africa was an abundant paradise of streams and animals and an agreeable climate in comparison to some of the harsher and colder landscapes of the time. Africa was the perfect place for creatures to explore and live. Africa, during Pangaea, was a place considered now to be, the Eden from the Bible.
These creatures grew, the stronger and wiser individuals being the last to survive during such intense times, governed by ever-present carnivores and environmental disturbances. These stronger and reasonably more intelligent individuals banded together and, over time, evolved to create a new species of hominid. The last of human ancestors is understood to be Homo sapiens, though, with today's research in genetics, it’s not uncommon to hear of people having partial Neanderthal genes.
Despite the coalition of genetic makeup, the first evolutionary groups reported are the San and the Hadza who are believed to have lived approximately 20,000 years ago.
What happened to the rest?
There must have been so many Homo sapiens in Africa, how could there only be two groups that were documented?
Africa has a rich and fascinating history that is difficult to translate into a set timeline. Exactly how, when, and where the groups recognized in society today came to be, we may never know. But the most common consensus is that Homo sapiens, who emerged approximately 200,000 years ago, evolved in Africa from Homo erectus, who emerged approximately 2 million years ago and then were struck by a heated change in the environment (Penn, 2019).
Where the land was once dry and pliable, it became soft, wet, and watery. Homo erectus tried to escape the clutches of their submerged environment but perished.
It is believed that Homo sapiens and Neanderthals lost their ancestors’ more peaceful nature thanks to the growth of their prefrontal cortexes, which heightened their cognition and made these newly evolved species more territorial and aggressive than those before them.
The last of Homo erectus was believed to have been found in the north of Africa, submerged in the aftermath of an earth collapse.
Homo erectus never made it out and became extinct one hundred thousand years ago.
Neanderthals and Homo sapiens never felt the need to migrate beyond Java. They were smarter, more organized, and more structured in their planning than Homo erectus. Their new, wet environment suited them fine.
Despite the similarities in their biology, Homo sapiens had a larger prefrontal cortex, making them more intelligent and violent than the Neanderthals.
Though the groups could presumably live in harmony as long as they remained out of one another's way, Homo sapiens possessed one significant ability beyond the rest that ultimately led to the fall of their companions. Homo sapiens possessed the ability