Yeah during the LATE Dynastic period. When I talk about native Ancient Egyptian civilization I'm generally speaking about the Early Dynastic - New Kingdom period. After that Ancient Egyptian civilization gradually declined and was invaded by foreigners. Egypt experienced gene flow from the Near East over the course of its history but your argument is that Lower Egypt had a strong Near Eastern affinity since the pre-dynastic period, a claim you haven't supported with a shred of evidence.
No you said Egyptians didn't have a large Semitic presence in the population since Islam, you lied? Not surprised. I have provided evidence citing both Kemp and Keita among other sources. You also do not know that the Berbers held dynasties in Egypt during the Middle Kingdoms? Lower Egypt has always been mixed, yet you refuse to acknowledge this VERY SIMPLE fact. You say I misinterpreted Kemp and Keita and my other sources are not valid thinking you know better. As if whatever I say is wrong and whatever you say is right. You're nothing more than a biased nutcase.
You have the audacity to compare me to racists when I am an Egalitarian because you are a jackass. I won't sink to your level. You can't acknowledge simple facts simply because you are extremely biased. I won't call you a racist unless you say something blatantly racist but your Multiracialist perspective blinds you from reality.
You desperately want the Lower Egyptians to be Asiatics because you want Ancient Egypt to be regarded as a Multiracial civilization. I would concede that Lower Egyptians were light-skinned during the Dynastic period if only there was PROOF. So far you have not provided it and I have cited an authority debunking such a claim.
I have the audacity to call you a racist because you are a racist. Can someone who asserts the notion of race so strongly to prove something wrong and to steal a history of a people not be racist? I don't think so. You, sir, are a racist.
1. I'll use whatever wording I think is appropriate. This is a message board not an Egypotology Symposium and I'm not an anthropologist. Keita doesn't feel the word Black is useful and that's his prerogative but he clearly links the word in his studies to Saharo-Tropical variant, preferring the latter. Forgive me for using everyday speech.
Too bad the term "black" isn't even useful and is nothing more than a recent European term to keep other world people down.
2. Ofcourse there are light-skinned Africans.
Again, another shift in your argument. I referred to some Berbers who are genetically linked and biologically African and you say he is mistaken since there would be nothing to trigger such a variant. Again, you're contradictory claims leave you looking like the fool that you're made out to be.
3. Yes, tan and of Asiatic origin. But you have provided no evidence for this.
I have, time and time again. Except all you do is say that I interpreted wrong or my sources are disingenuous. It's not even worth it since you're going to be a downright





There is no population in existence where the shade of skintone between men and women is that dramatic. Maybe the Egyptians noticed slight color differences between men and women and used symbolism for the women but the point is that when both groups were depicted as brown in later periods it is reasonable to conclude that the yellow skintone of women was symbolic and not literal.
Look at the double standard you are setting for yourself, again. Men were depicted in their literal shade and women were depicted symbolically. Shift those posts.
You're getting really desperate. Some Egyptian art has faded and sometimes they used flesh tones that were more reddish but the bottomline is that they chose brown for their skintone rather than tan like their neighbors.
Faded? The intense and dry desert heat doesn't fade anything. Some were more reddish, that is not exactly dark skinned or even dark brown. Also, tan and brown aren't very different, it is reasonable to assume that this "light reddish" could have also been "tan" There is no big dividing line. Unless, of course, you're willing to admit there was a big dividing line and the Nubians are part of that line? In that event okay, but I'm sure you'll set another double standard and shift the goal posts once more like you did with the women and men color debate.
So now in your pathetic desperation you are trying to tell me what to think. Why do you need me to accept your claims? We can just agree to disagree. The fact is that
you haven't provided any evidence to back up your claims while I have. If you refuse to acknowledge this so be it.
I did provide claims, you just dismissed them. Alright, fine, you want me to accept us to agree to disagree that's fine too. But YOU CAN NOT say that I did not provide evidence to back up my claims, all you've done is show used posts contrived through photoshop. All I acknowledge is your biased account and misuse of your sources than preemptively passing the blame to me to avoid looking like a fool.
You don't have to take my word for it. It was confirmed by Paoli.
I thought you said you were a logical thinker? So of course you take a convenient fact made by some no-name because he backs up your mode of thinking and reject Keita when he makes a comment you do not support 'cause they're not Black enough. You said you were a logical thinker and thought for yourself, you didn't address my map question and isntead say, "well he said it, so it must be true." You're going to take the account of one guy over many Egyptologists and ignore geography and likely migration patterns. Good job, you truly are -truth-Afrocentric.
I wouldn't invest much in what the author of that blog has to say because she is a racialist with a biased agenda (disproving a Black African Egypt). She has been known for supporting racial differences in intelligence and has directly referenced the research of J Phillip Rushton on racial differences. She's not a credible source.
That being said what she claims is flat out wrong. The populations Keita mentioned are not any percentage Caucasian. You cannot split a genome up into racial percentages. This is a typical tactic of Eurocentrists to deny the indigenous variability of African populations. There are a few DNA studies which you'll also find cited on that blog which support such theories about Caucasian admixture in African populations but they are conceptually flawed and have been superseded by more recent research.
Of course an ad hominem attack followed by a "not credible" decry. This is the mark of an Afrocentrist. The proper mode would of been to accept this fact and argue the genetic diversity of East Africans, and still to this day, shows many Upper Egyptians and some Nubians have straight and wavy hair due to the drier air and slightly weaker sun. But you couldn't admit that, could you? Of course not.
Such notions have also been debunked on evolutionary grounds.....
Evolution does not take place within decades, quit acting like you know anything about biology.
Mathilda is also wrong that ALL anthropologists described the hair as Caucasian. Joann Fletcher, who described the Ancient Egyptian hair as cymotrichous (wavy hair), has gone on record as saying that she doesn't use terms like Caucasian and Negroid.
I'm personally skeptical of the idea that the hair straightens under burial conditions myself. It seems a bit far fetched and that webpage I linked to is biased itself. I would very much like to consult an expert on this issue, preferably one who has conducted tests on Ancient Egyptian hair in the 21st century as alot of 20th century anthropologists used racial models when assessing hair morphology.
What's wrong cupcake, they don't look like you?