Thursday, January 2, 2014

From Pangea To The Pyramids

Have you ever noticed how the Continents look like they could all fit together in a giant jigsaw puzzle? Well that’s because they were, all together that is, until about 200 million years ago. And then Pangaea, the super-continent, began to break apart.

The Earths surface, its "crust," is made up of a number of huge plates that are slowly, ever so slowly, shifting. Earthquakes are the sudden, violent release of the ferocious, pent-up energy this process produces. The African mainland is located on one huge "tectonic" plate. The Arabian peninsula, which is gradually pulling away from the continent, is on another. The narrow channel that is the Red Sea was made by the relentless rubbing together of these two tectonic plates.


The tension from this tear in the Earth's surface runs down the entire eastern half of the continent producing the Great Rift Valley, the longest "fault line" on earth. The Nile, longest river in the world, begins in the waters of the Great Lakes in the mountainous highlands at the center of the Great Rift Valley. It flows 4,000 miles north to empty out into the Mediterranean Sea.


One of the principal human attributes is the ability to make and use tools. The oldest fossil remains of tool-using creatures are found in the Ethiopian section of the Great Rift Valley. They are at least 5,000,000 years old... Science now informs us that all Europeans are descended from a group of no more than 50 Africans who left the continent between 60,000 and 27,000 years ago. And Asians, we are told, descended from people who left Africa 200,000 - 100,000 years ago.

For the last 6,000 years or so, the northern third of the continent has been drying, thereby becoming what we now call the Sahara Desert.  Over time, as conditions worsened, the population of the region converged on the lakes and waterways that remained, the mighty Nile River was the most important by far. Along its fertile banks, washed with thick black soil from the heart of Africa, there arose the earliest civilization.

Around 4,000 BC the Nile was lined with a series of agricultural communities which gradually grew in size and complexity.  By 3100 BC, two mighty kingdoms had developed in the last few hundred miles before the Nile reaches the Mediterranean. Today we know them as Upper and Lower Egypt. After a climactic conflict they were united as one, and the ruler of the two lands became known as the "Pharaoh." The Pharaohs, hundreds of kings and queens in scores of dynasties, would go on to rule Egypt for more than 3000 years. Soon after Egypt was unified, the Great Pyramids at Giza, near modern day Cairo were constructed to commemorate this landmark event.


Egyptian colonies and military power eventually extended far and wide, penetrating deep into southeastern Europe, southwest Asia, Arabia and much of the nearby Sahara. The Egyptians exchanged trade caravans with peoples throughout the continent and with communities as far away as Pakistan. Its believed that Egyptian ships reached Mexico on more than one occasion, but since the ocean currents move westward, they were unable to return.

The marooned Egyptians apparently settled in the Americas, establishing communities with the local peoples. The giant stone sculptures of the heads of African warriors (the Olmec heads), and the pyramids of ancient Mexico evidence Africas presence in the Americas centuries before the birth of Christ.


As for the Great Pyramids at Giza, they were built a thousand years before the birth of Abraham (father of the Arabs and the Jews), and about two thousand years before the legendary Trojan War memorialized by Homer in the epic poems the Illiad and the Odyssey.  About 2500 years after the pyramids were constructed, Socrates and other Greeks came as foreign students to study in the Egyptian university system. After returning to Greece, they were hailed as the first European philosophers.


The Nile Valley is the birthplace of writing, geometry and much of what we today call math and science. The story of Jesus Christ and Mary appears very much like a repeat of the Egyptian story of Isis and Horus.  Before the Roman Empire converted to Christianity, it followed Egyptian religion. The famous French cathedral, Notre Dame (Our Lady), is located at the site of a former temple to Isis during the reign of the Romans. (Isis was the Egyptian goddess said to be the mother of the god Horus.)

Over time as invaders swept into Egypt, from Asia and Europe, much of the original population of the Nile Valley dispersed throughout the continent. The Dogon of Nigeria are one such group. Their religious ceremonies center around the three stars in the Sirius constellation. The three pyramids at Giza form the same precise pattern as the three stars of Sirius. And the hollow shaft in the Great Pyramid at Giza is aimed at the brightest star in the Sirius constellation. (This clearly indicates that the Great Pyramid was, among other things, an observatory.)


It's believed that in addition to the Dogon of Mali, the Gala of Nigeria, the Moors of North Africa and the Shona of Southern Africa, many, if not most, African peoples are descended from the Egyptians and the other pioneering peoples of the ancient Nile River Valley... (by Arthur Lewin, author of Africa Is Not A Country: It's A Continent!) See Stolen Legacy by George G.M. James,They Came Before Columbus by Ivan Van Sertima, The Destruction of Black Civilization by Chancellor Williams, Recasting Ancient Egypt in the African Context by Clinton Crawford, A History of the African People by Robert W. July, and the periodical The New Scientist, 5/9/1)

Far East Asian Languages Are Near African Languages

Written and Compiled by:  Onimisi Baiye
If you do an Internet image search, www.google.com on the following Nigerian names: Haruna, Sambo, Pankan, Kwashi, Imoko, Chika, Azuka, Ezuka, Koma, Zoro, Watanabe, Nene, Osato, Osaru, Okada, Edo, Baba, Emiko, Kano, Nana, Aya, Tami, Tai, Sada, Ikimi, Ume, you will more likely see a Japanese link than a Nigerian link.

The writing system of Japanese hides the striking similarities between Japanese and African languages. But on closer examination of the syllables that make up the Kanji character set, the syllables easily describe the Nigerian Languages.

Japanese festivals and dressing are very African in color combination. Also Shinto is about shrines, ancestors, mountain spirits, tree spirits, the so-called heathen religions that was used to justify the enslavement of Blacks.


Japanese were bleached out by invading Mongolians, that is why Southern Japanese people are darker-skinned than their northern counterparts.

Chinese and Korean map to the Calabar languages of South-Southern Nigeria. One has to listen to and see the physical stature someone from that part of Nigeria to have a feel of the similarities to Chinese and Koreans. Unfortunately, because of the Eurocentric nature of post-colonial Nigerians, the Calabar people cannot understand why Chinese and Koreans are their bleached-out descendants.  Martial Arts is of African origin.

The website www.legendarytimes.com uses legends to drill deep into prehistory because they are the only source of prehistory. However, scientific means are used to interpret these legends. My own contribution to ancient astronautics is based on the interpretation of the If a Oracle oral literature which uses symbolic language to describe the descent of Orunmila in a spacecraft. Simply put the descent of Gods from the skies was by a means, so technologically advanced that missionary interpretations portray it as magic. Technology is nature's gift to man. The First World was not a Cave World.   

JAPANESE-NIGERIAN LANGUAGE MAPPINGS 1.1

JAPANESE

ºE

ºN

NIGERIAN

1
Azuma-san (mountain)
140-141
37-38
Zuma Rock , Niger State
2
Tobi-shima (island)
139-140
39-40
Tobi: Rivers State male name
3
Akō(town)
134-135
34-35
Akō: Yoruba, excessive pride
4
Akan(town)
144-145
43-44
Akandu: Ibo male name
5
Ibara(town)
133-134
34-35
Ibarapa, Oyo State
6
Minna-jima (island)
124-125
24-25
Minna, Niger State
7
Obirin University,Tokyo


Obirin: Yoruba, female
8
Iwaya(town)
135-136
34-35
Iwaya, Yaba, Lagos State
9
Ago(town)
136-137
34-35
Ago: Yoruba, time
10
Kure(town)
132.33
34.15
Akure, Ondo State
11
Aso-san(mountain)
130-132
32-34
Aso Rock, Abuja FCT
12
Iō-jima(island)
140-142
24-26
Iyō: Yoruba, salt
13
Wada(town)
140.0
35.0
Wada: Hausa name
14
Ibuki(town)
136-137
35-36
Buki: Yoruba female name
15
Sanjō(town)
135-140
35-40
Ōbasanjō: Yoruba male name
16
Ōi(town)
138-140
34-36
Ōyi: Ebira, sunlight
17
Ōkada


Ōkada, Edo State
18
Watanabe


Watanabe: Southern Borno State name
19
Kōbe(city)
134.41
135.1
Achakōbe: Isoko,Delta State name
20
Machida


Maccido: Fulani, Sokoto State name
Compiled by Onimisi Baiye     onimisibaiye@yahoo.co.uk

JAPANESE-NIGERIAN LANGUAGE  MAPPINGS 1.2

JAPANESE

ºE

ºN

NIGERIAN

1
Ayama(town)
136.16
34.76
Ayama!: Yoruba exclamation
2
Akechi(town)
137.32
35.30
Nkechi: Igbo female name
3
Anjō(town)
137.80
34.94
Anjōrin: Yoruba name
4
Fuji-san(mountain in Tokyo)


Fuji: a Yoruba music
5
Haruna(town)
Haruna-san(mountain)


Haruna: Hausa male name
6
Chikage


Chika: Igbo name
7
Chi-Chi


Chi-Chi: Igbo name
8
Toki(town)
137.16
35.30
Toki Hotel, Port-Harcourt, Rivers State 
9
Izu(peninsula)
138-140
34-36
Izu: Igbo word
10
Saitama(district)
138-140
36-38
Maitama, Abuja
11
Zen(Japanese Buddhism)


Izen: Ebira, here
12
Kata(karate martial arts
sequence)


Kata: Ebira, strength
13
Miko


Emiko: Itsekiri name
14
Kanno


Kano State
15Ogi  Ogi: Yoruba, fermented corn
16
Zaki(town)
135-140
35-40
Zaki-Biam, Benue State
17
Edo(former name of Tokyo)


Edo State
18
Sango(town)
135.70
34.32
Sango-Otta, Ogun State
19
Ebetsu(town)
140-145
40-45
Egbesu: shrine in Bayelsa State
20
Shinkawa(town)
136.94
35.80
Shinkafi: Hausa name

Compiled by Onimisi Baiye     onimisibaiye@yahoo.co.uk




























JAPANESE – NIGERIAN LANGUAGE MAPPINGS 1.3

 

JAPANESE

ºE

ºN

NIGERIAN

1
Shōgun(medieval supreme warlod)


Sẹgun pron. ‘shegun’:
Yoruba, to win a battle
2
Jimmu(first emperor,660B.C.)


Jimoh: Yoruba, friday
3
Sambo


Sambo: Northern male name
4
Ishii


Ishi, Calabar, Cross-River
5
Kishi


Kẹshi, Yoruba male name
6
Ago(town)
136-137
34-35
Ago: Yoruba, time
7
Yashika


Yashi, Katsina State
8
Koma


Koma, Taraba State
9
Zuru


Zuru, Kebbi State
10
Abashiri(town)
144.3
44.0
Aba, Abia State
11
Obira(town)
141.6
44.0
Ebira, Kogi State
12
Tosa(town)
133.5
33.5
Tosan: Yoruba female name
13
Izena-jima(island)
128.0
26.8
Izenan: Ebira, over here
14
Kume-shima(island)
126.8
26.4
Akume: Idoma name
15
Okino-Erabu-shima(island)
128.5
27.4
Okino: Ebira Name
16
Takara-jima(island)
139.2
29.2
Akara: Yoruba, bean cake
17
Kuro-shima(island)
129.9
36.8
Kuroko, Okene, Kogi State
18
Rumoi(town)
141.6
43.9
Rumomoi, Port-Harcourt
19
Ondo(town)
132.5
34.2
Ondo State
20
Yame(town)
130.5
33.2
Nyame: Taraba State Name
Compiled by Onimisi Baiye     onimisibaiye@yahoo.co.uk


JAPANESE-NIGERIAN LANGUAGE MAPPINGS 2.1.2

 f- female  m- male s- surname

‘Half the blood in one’s veins must be Black in order to make a good Samurai.’

Japanese Names

Nigerian Names

1
Rẹmi f
Rẹmilẹkun f Yoruba ‘wipe my tears’
2
Chikuma f
Chukwuma (Chi ukwu ma) m Igbo ‘[bigger] god knows’
3
Tai fm
Taiwo Yoruba ‘first of twins’
4
Fumi f
Funmilayọ f Yoruba ‘gave me joy’
5
Ginko f
Ginika mf Igbo ‘what is greater than [this?’
6
Goro m
Goro Hausa kolanut
7
Ibi s
Ibi Yoruba ‘place’
8
Omezo
Ọmẹiza  Ebira ‘has done well’
9
Eijiro f
Ẹjiro  Urhobo ‘praise’
10
Gombei m
Gombe State
11
Baba s
Baba ‘family head’
12
Chika f ‘wisdom’
Chika mf Igbo ‘god is greater’
13
Akẹmi f ‘bright and beautiful’
Oluwakẹmi f Yoruba ‘god bless me’ 
14
Koruba s 
Yoruba 
15
Ohka s 
Orka Tiv 
16
Kaima s 
Kaiama Ijaw 
17 
Amaya s 
Amayo s Ẹdo 
18 
Tọmori s 
Tọmori Yoruba  
19
Emiko 
Ẹmiko Itshekiri 
20
Kano
Kano Hausa



Compiled by Onimisi Baiye   onimisibaiye@yahoo.co.uk