Appendix 3: White Egypt
A collection of images from ancient Egyptian history, all of which clearly demonstrate the racial make-up of that society and how it changed - from a White racially dominated society in 3000 BC, to that civilization's swamping and overrunning by its Black Nubian and Semitic neighbors around 800 BC.
Above: Faking History. This statue is on prominent display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, amongst the Egyptian antiquities section. It purports to be a statue of Menuhotep II, 11th dynasty, circa 2000 BC. It shall be noted that the statue's head has overtly Negroid features. Even to the untrained observer, it is however obvious that the original head of the statue has long since been broken off, and replaced by a precariously balancing head, made even of a different shade stone. The ill fitting nature of the head and original break with the body can be clearly seen. A person with no knowledge of Egyptian history can tell that the head and body do not belong together - yet these two pieces are thrown together and presented to the public as representative of pharaohs circa 2000 BC. In reality, the head is likely to date from the 25th dynasty, or circa 700 BC, when Blacks had indeed overrun Egypt. * Update: Since this web page appeared, the Metropolitan Museum of Art has changed its display to read that the head and body of the scultpure are indeed from separate statues.
Above: A superb statue of a scribe, circa 2500 BC, painted limestone, currently in the Louvre Museum in Paris. The Egyptians followed the ancient convention of painting their males red and their females white.
Above: Tile inlays from the mortuary tomb of Ramses III, western Thebes, Medinet Habu, circa 1170 BC. The palace entrances were decorated at the bottom on both sides with representations of Egypt's enemies. From left to right: a Libyan, a Nubian and a Syrian. The first and third are Semites, the center figure a Black from the far south. As the racial demographics swung increasingly against the original White Egyptians, so more and more of these non-White types came to dominate Egyptian society - to the point where Egypt was finally submerged by the Nubians.
Above: This Egyptian wig, on display in the British Museum, London, dating from 1185 BC (19th dynasty) tells the tale of the change in racial make-up of Egyptian society. Made of pure human hair, knotted into a linen cap, the two types of hair used reveal the changing racial demographics of the country. On top, blonde hair, curled in place with beeswax, while underneath nestles Negroid hair, representing the increasing Nubian, or Black, population of that country. The style of the wig accurately reflects the changing racial make-up of Egypt at this time - within 300 years the last Whites would be miscegenated out of existence into a mixed race mass, and a Nubian pharaoh would be on the throne in the 25th dynasty. Immediately thereafter, ancient Egypt would collapse, unable to withstand marauding Assyrians or others, until even the Greek Macedonians would come to rule Egypt, giving rise to the famous Cleopatra.
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