Lejja/Nsukka Iron Smelting Technology Calls for a Rewriting of History
The implication of this discovery is far-reaching for human history. It calls for a rewriting of the world’s History books to enshrine the achievements of the Prehistoric Nsukka iron smelters of Enugu State, Nigeria. Any nation that was the world’s “first” in the development of iron technology, was, without doubt, the Super power of the ancient world, for it was the discovery of iron that fast-tracked world civilization in every respect. Iron technology brought about the development of Agriculture, trade and commerce. It encouraged the drive for the building of empires through warfare and conquests. I buoyed the drive for expansion and migrations, all of which are present in Nsukka mythologies. As the Oldest Super power of the Old world, the Igbo natural drive for itinerant trading and merchandizing would have easily made Nsukka, nay Enugu zone and Igbo land a global center of trade, commerce, industrialization, empire-building, education, military prowess and other forms of development.
It is claimed the global root of metallurgy and of civilization itself lies in Sumer. It is also claimed that the Bantus who occupy over two-thirds of Sub-Saharan Africa were migrants “from South-Eastern Nigeria” and that it was their possession of iron technology that facilitated their migration and their development of Agriculture. The Bantu are said to have left South-Eastern Nigeria ca. 2,000 B.C. The presence of iron smelting technology in Lejja by 4,000 B.C. explains the Bantu connection to South-Eastern Nigeria.
It is claimed the global root of metallurgy and of civilization itself lies in Sumer. It is also claimed that the Bantus who occupy over two-thirds of Sub-Saharan Africa were migrants “from South-Eastern Nigeria” and that it was their possession of iron technology that facilitated their migration and their development of Agriculture. The Bantu are said to have left South-Eastern Nigeria ca. 2,000 B.C. The presence of iron smelting technology in Lejja by 4,000 B.C. explains the Bantu connection to South-Eastern Nigeria.
Samples of slag and bloom from ancient industrial furnaces in Lejja, Nsukka in Igbo land date back 4,000 B.C. - UK Archaeology Department
According to Professor E. E. Okafor, the Dean of Archaeology at the University of Nigeria, new dating of samples of slag and bloom from ancient industrial furnaces in Lejja, Nsukka in Igbo land sent to UK for dating by the Archaeology Department at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, recently returned with a shocking date of 4,000 B.C.! By 4,000 B.C. Sumerian civilization in the Middle East, which is supposedly older than Egyptian civilization, was in its infancy, while Igbo people were making metal in industrial furnaces and piling up masses of slag and bloom that question to this very day the generally accepted notions of the origin of civilization.
WHAT WAS THE WORLD LIKE IN 4000 BC WHEN IGBO WERE ALREADY USING FURNACES ON INDUSTRIAL CAPACITY TO PRUDUCE METAL IN LEJJA NSUKKA IN IGBO LAND.
Samples of slag and bloom from ancient industrial furnaces in Lejja, Nsukka in Igbo land date back 4,000 B.C. - UK Archaeology Department
According to Professor E. E. Okafor, the Dean of Archaeology at the University of Nigeria, new dating of samples of slag and bloom from ancient industrial furnaces in Lejja, Nsukka in Igbo land sent to UK for dating by the Archaeology Department at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, recently returned with a shocking date of 4,000 B.C.! By 4,000 B.C. Sumerian civilization in the Middle East, which is supposedly older than Egyptian civilization, was in its infancy, while Igbo people were making metal in industrial furnaces and piling up masses of slag and bloom that question to this very day the generally accepted notions of the origin of civilization.
According to Professor E. E. Okafor, the Dean of Archaeology at the University of Nigeria, new dating of samples of slag and bloom from ancient industrial furnaces in Lejja, Nsukka in Igbo land sent to UK for dating by the Archaeology Department at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, recently returned with a shocking date of 4,000 B.C.! By 4,000 B.C. Sumerian civilization in the Middle East, which is supposedly older than Egyptian civilization, was in its infancy, while Igbo people were making metal in industrial furnaces and piling up masses of slag and bloom that question to this very day the generally accepted notions of the origin of civilization.
BELOW ARE WHAT WAS HAPPENING ON THE PLANET EARTH IN 4000 BC. WHEN NDIGBO WAS ALREADY PRODUCING AND WORKING WITH METAL
During the 40th century BC, the Near East and southeastern Europe were in the Chalcolithic period (Copper Age), transitional between the Stone and the Bronze Ages. Northwestern Europe was in the Neolithic. China was dominated by the Neolithic Yangshao culture. The Americas were in a phase of transition between the Paleo-Indian (Lithic) to the Meso-Indian (Archaic) stage. This century started in 4000 BC and ended in 3901 BC.
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
The first evidence of a loom comes from this period in Egypt, but some simple method of holding the warp must be as old as weaving
c. 4000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
A passage grave with a superb corbelled dome is constructed on the ?le Longue off the southern coast of Brittany
c. 4000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
Oxen are the first draught animals, in use at this time in the Middle East and in Europe
c. 4000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
In Mesopotamia, and on the grass steppes of southern Russia, oxen are used to pull heavy loads on sledges
c. 4000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
A simple hand-held plough is in use in Egypt and Mesopotamia, at least 1000 years before a heavier version is pulled by oxen
c. 4000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
Beer is brewed in Mesopotamia, where barley is an indigenous crop c. 3800 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
Copper is extracted from ore by smelting at various sites in Iran 3761 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
Later selected by Hebrew scholars as the date when the world began, this becomes the first year (AM 1) in Jewish chronology
c. 3250 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
A neolithic herdsman dies high in the Alps - and is perfectly preserved in ice c. 3100 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
Sumer develops as the first centre of Mesopotamian civilization
c. 3100 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
Upper and Lower Egypt are unified into a single kingdom, inaugurating the first Egyptian dynasty
c. 3100 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
The Egyptians paint murals on the walls of tombs, designed to help the occupants in the next world Fragment of painted wall relief, c.1850 BC British Museum Enlarge on linked site
c. 3100 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
Writing is developed, at Sumer, as cuneiform script on clay tablets c. 3100 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
The Egyptian hieroglyphic script develops at much the same time as the Sumerian cuneiform Box painted with hieroglyphs, c.680 BC British Museum Enlarge on linked site c. 3100 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
The pharaoh Narmer celebrates a victory with a sculpted relief showing his personal dominance over the enemy
c. 3000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
An easily portable writing surface is developed, from the papyrus plant of the Nile Papyrus interpreting dreams, c.1275 BCBritish MuseumEnlarge on linked site
c. 3000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
The lever is in use in both Mesopotamia and Egypt
c. 3000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
The llama and the alpaca, two south American members of the camel family, are domesticated
c. 3000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
The sculptors of the Cyclades produce stylized and formal figures, mainly female, in white marble
c. 3000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
Wheels are in use on carts, particularly where wood is easily available and the ground rough - as in the forests of Europe
c. 3000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
Slavery arrives as part of the package of civlization, along with armies, public works and social hierarchies
c. 3000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
On the steppes of central Asia tribesmen tame, breed and eventually ride horses
c. 3000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
Oxen are given the heavy work of pulling the plough, previously done by men c. 3000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
Potters in Mesopotamia turn their pots on wheels
c. 3000 BC
The people known as Phoenicians are in the region of modern Lebanon from around this date
c. 3000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
Semitic tribes move up from the Arabian peninsula, through Sinai into Palestine and Syria
c. 3000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
The language of a single tribe in eastern Europe, as recently as 3000 BC, is the ancestor of all modern Indo-European languages
c. 3000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
The ass, until now roaming wild from northeast Africa to Mesopotamia, is domesticated in Egypt
c. 3000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
The earliest known currency, consisting of gold bars, is in use in Egypt and Mespotamia
c. 3000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
The world's earliest known board game, senet, is played in Egypt Senet board, c.1400 BC British Museum Enlarge on linked site
c. 2850 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
The Chinese discover that the cocoon of a certain worm can be unwound, spun as thread and then woven - thus creating silk
c. 2800 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
Objects are cast in bronze, at Ur in Mesopotamia - introducing what is later called the Bronze Age
c. 2800 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
The harp and the lyre are in use as musical instruments in Mesopotamia c. 2800 BC
Byblos (modern Jbeil) evolves to become the most important seaport and city of Phoenicia
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
The first evidence of a loom comes from this period in Egypt, but some simple method of holding the warp must be as old as weaving
c. 4000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
A passage grave with a superb corbelled dome is constructed on the ?le Longue off the southern coast of Brittany
c. 4000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
Oxen are the first draught animals, in use at this time in the Middle East and in Europe
c. 4000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
In Mesopotamia, and on the grass steppes of southern Russia, oxen are used to pull heavy loads on sledges
c. 4000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
A simple hand-held plough is in use in Egypt and Mesopotamia, at least 1000 years before a heavier version is pulled by oxen
c. 4000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
Beer is brewed in Mesopotamia, where barley is an indigenous crop c. 3800 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
Copper is extracted from ore by smelting at various sites in Iran 3761 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
Later selected by Hebrew scholars as the date when the world began, this becomes the first year (AM 1) in Jewish chronology
c. 3250 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
A neolithic herdsman dies high in the Alps - and is perfectly preserved in ice c. 3100 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
Sumer develops as the first centre of Mesopotamian civilization
c. 3100 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
Upper and Lower Egypt are unified into a single kingdom, inaugurating the first Egyptian dynasty
c. 3100 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
The Egyptians paint murals on the walls of tombs, designed to help the occupants in the next world Fragment of painted wall relief, c.1850 BC British Museum Enlarge on linked site
c. 3100 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
Writing is developed, at Sumer, as cuneiform script on clay tablets c. 3100 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
The Egyptian hieroglyphic script develops at much the same time as the Sumerian cuneiform Box painted with hieroglyphs, c.680 BC British Museum Enlarge on linked site c. 3100 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
The pharaoh Narmer celebrates a victory with a sculpted relief showing his personal dominance over the enemy
c. 3000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
An easily portable writing surface is developed, from the papyrus plant of the Nile Papyrus interpreting dreams, c.1275 BCBritish MuseumEnlarge on linked site
c. 3000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
The lever is in use in both Mesopotamia and Egypt
c. 3000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
The llama and the alpaca, two south American members of the camel family, are domesticated
c. 3000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
The sculptors of the Cyclades produce stylized and formal figures, mainly female, in white marble
c. 3000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
Wheels are in use on carts, particularly where wood is easily available and the ground rough - as in the forests of Europe
c. 3000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
Slavery arrives as part of the package of civlization, along with armies, public works and social hierarchies
c. 3000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
On the steppes of central Asia tribesmen tame, breed and eventually ride horses
c. 3000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
Oxen are given the heavy work of pulling the plough, previously done by men c. 3000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
Potters in Mesopotamia turn their pots on wheels
c. 3000 BC
The people known as Phoenicians are in the region of modern Lebanon from around this date
c. 3000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
Semitic tribes move up from the Arabian peninsula, through Sinai into Palestine and Syria
c. 3000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
The language of a single tribe in eastern Europe, as recently as 3000 BC, is the ancestor of all modern Indo-European languages
c. 3000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
The ass, until now roaming wild from northeast Africa to Mesopotamia, is domesticated in Egypt
c. 3000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
The earliest known currency, consisting of gold bars, is in use in Egypt and Mespotamia
c. 3000 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
The world's earliest known board game, senet, is played in Egypt Senet board, c.1400 BC British Museum Enlarge on linked site
c. 2850 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
The Chinese discover that the cocoon of a certain worm can be unwound, spun as thread and then woven - thus creating silk
c. 2800 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
Objects are cast in bronze, at Ur in Mesopotamia - introducing what is later called the Bronze Age
c. 2800 BC
Narrative history in HistoryWorld
The harp and the lyre are in use as musical instruments in Mesopotamia c. 2800 BC
Byblos (modern Jbeil) evolves to become the most important seaport and city of Phoenicia
If ordinary charcoal found in Lejja should be older than the Egpt Saqqara pyramid....
The Nsude pyramids were constructed before the Igbo ancestors had a settled life; many centuries before industrialization in the ancient Igbo societies. In the twenty first century, an Iron Smelting Site was discovered in Lejja,
Lejja Iron Smelting Site. Over 4000 BC Enugu State of Nigeria. Lejja is located within the same area where the stepped pyramids where constructed by the ancient Igbo fathers. Out of the hips of the charcoal found in the site, a sample was collected and estimated in the Oxford University Accelerator Spectronometry Laboratory to have lasted more than 4,000 BC. If ordinary charcoal should be older than the Saqqara pyramid, it should be apparent that the owner of that industrial site (whoever he might be) did not live in isolated as he had outnumbered population whom he worked for. Of course, his ancestors also may have worked in the site. The document in the Canadian museum gives us another important information about the pyramids in Saqqara.
Lejja Iron Smelting Site. Over 4000 BC Enugu State of Nigeria. Lejja is located within the same area where the stepped pyramids where constructed by the ancient Igbo fathers. Out of the hips of the charcoal found in the site, a sample was collected and estimated in the Oxford University Accelerator Spectronometry Laboratory to have lasted more than 4,000 BC. If ordinary charcoal should be older than the Saqqara pyramid, it should be apparent that the owner of that industrial site (whoever he might be) did not live in isolated as he had outnumbered population whom he worked for. Of course, his ancestors also may have worked in the site. The document in the Canadian museum gives us another important information about the pyramids in Saqqara.
HOW SARGON THE GREAT, WAS ESCAVATED IN IGBO UKWU NIGERIA AND TAKEN TO UK
For over three years, we have been studying the pottery and bronze inscriptions on the hundreds of artifacts and potsherds excavated by Thurstan Shaw at Igbo Ukwu and have demonstrated that they are mostly letters found in orthographies of almost every ancient Middle Eastern civilization. The direction of borrowing is more than obvious. The result of this study is carefully catalogued in our latest publication in the series – The Lost Testament of the Ancestors of Adam – Unearthing Heliopolis – The Celestial City of the Gods of Egypt and India (2010). Armed with these findings, the Catherine Acholonu Research Center, Abuja, Nigeria, hereby calls on the British Museum authorities to release for autopsy and proper dating, the remains of the monarch whose partially decayed bones were excavated in Igbo Ukwu in 1950 by Thurstan Shaw.
The monarch’s bones were partially preserved through contact with rows of copper wires adorning his arms and legs. He wore a copper crown engraved with the official emblem of Sargon the Great, a forehead Sun-disc, a breastplate of copper and a regalia strung with one hundred and eleven thousand coloured carnelian beads! Other emblems of Sargon the Great and his royal line taken from Igbo Ukwu were: a Roped Bronze Vase. The roped design consists of quadrangles – the official emblem of Sargon the Great; an Alter Stand with the image of a man and a woman standing back to back. The man bears two other Sargon emblems on his forehead and on his belly-button, one of which is a double concentric circle.
The cache of goods excavated in Igbo Ukwu would fill two museums. A few of the artifacts are located in Nigerian museums, but the bulk of them are hidden away in the British Museum and Nigerians are not allowed to access them. The civilization in question, like all other Sumerian civilizations in Nigeria, is outside living memory of the natives of Igbo land, and only exists in long forgotten folklore. The excavated city of Akkad was found four to five meters deep beneath the foundations of buildings of the present town of Igbo Ukwu. Natives still dig up grooved pottery and bronze-wares while digging cisterns in every part of the town, as well as in the neighboring town of Oraeri up to this very day. This indicates a thriving civilization in its time. The Igbo Ukwu bronze casting method differs from other Nigerian Bronzes in the use of Tin – technique employed by the Sumerian Chaldeans; and in the use of the lost wax method. Igbo Ukwu bronze is also in a class of its own in the delicacy and exquisitely ornate nature of its designs. We have identified the locations of other lost cities of Pre-Historic and Pre-Deluge Sumer in various parts of Nigeria, as well as various landmarks that feature in Sumerian literature and mythology. Sumerians sought to duplicate landmarks from their original homeland in their new places of abode. Accordingly, the Niger-Benue confluence rivers of their Olden Texts gave way to the Tigris and Euphrates confluence rivers in their new cities in Babylon and Mesopotamia.
The monarch’s bones were partially preserved through contact with rows of copper wires adorning his arms and legs. He wore a copper crown engraved with the official emblem of Sargon the Great, a forehead Sun-disc, a breastplate of copper and a regalia strung with one hundred and eleven thousand coloured carnelian beads! Other emblems of Sargon the Great and his royal line taken from Igbo Ukwu were: a Roped Bronze Vase. The roped design consists of quadrangles – the official emblem of Sargon the Great; an Alter Stand with the image of a man and a woman standing back to back. The man bears two other Sargon emblems on his forehead and on his belly-button, one of which is a double concentric circle.
The cache of goods excavated in Igbo Ukwu would fill two museums. A few of the artifacts are located in Nigerian museums, but the bulk of them are hidden away in the British Museum and Nigerians are not allowed to access them. The civilization in question, like all other Sumerian civilizations in Nigeria, is outside living memory of the natives of Igbo land, and only exists in long forgotten folklore. The excavated city of Akkad was found four to five meters deep beneath the foundations of buildings of the present town of Igbo Ukwu. Natives still dig up grooved pottery and bronze-wares while digging cisterns in every part of the town, as well as in the neighboring town of Oraeri up to this very day. This indicates a thriving civilization in its time. The Igbo Ukwu bronze casting method differs from other Nigerian Bronzes in the use of Tin – technique employed by the Sumerian Chaldeans; and in the use of the lost wax method. Igbo Ukwu bronze is also in a class of its own in the delicacy and exquisitely ornate nature of its designs. We have identified the locations of other lost cities of Pre-Historic and Pre-Deluge Sumer in various parts of Nigeria, as well as various landmarks that feature in Sumerian literature and mythology. Sumerians sought to duplicate landmarks from their original homeland in their new places of abode. Accordingly, the Niger-Benue confluence rivers of their Olden Texts gave way to the Tigris and Euphrates confluence rivers in their new cities in Babylon and Mesopotamia.
How the name or word Chemistry was coined both in ancient and modern age?
Chem” (Black)
“Mistry” or “Mystery” (Magic)
= Black Magic
How the ancient Chemistry name or word "al-kī mīā" was coined from Igbo language
Etymology
The word chemistry comes from alchemy, which referred to an earlier set of practices that encompassed elements of chemistry, metallurgy, philosophy, astrology, astronomy, mysticism and medicine. It is often seen as linked to the quest to turn lead or another common starting material into gold,[5] though in ancient times the study encompassed many of the questions of modern chemistry being defined as the study of the composition of waters, movement, growth, embodying, disembodying, drawing the spirits from bodies and bonding the spirits within bodies by the early 4th century Greek-Egyptian alchemist Zosimos.[6] An alchemist was called a 'chemist' in popular speech, and later the suffix "-ry" was added to this to describe the art of the chemist as "chemistry".
The modern word alchemy in turn is derived from the Arabic word al-kīmīā (الكیمیاء). In origin, the term is borrowed from the Greek χημία or χημεία.[7][8] This may have Egyptian origins since al-kīmīā is derived from the Greek χημία, which is in turn derived from the word Kemet, which is the ancient name of Egypt in the Egyptian language.[7] Alternately, al-kīmīā may derive from χημεία, meaning "cast together".[9]
Chemistry coined from Igbo word
The ancient name of Chemistry is "al-kī mīā", The word "al-kī mīā" is derived from Igbo word
"ala-ke-mīā"
ala.......ke............mīā
god.... create .......reproduce
Chemistry can be said to be science of creation and reproduction
chemistry occupies an intermediate position between physics and biology.[3] It is sometimes called the central science because it provides a foundation for understanding both basic and applied scientific disciplines at a fundamental level
“Mistry” or “Mystery” (Magic)
= Black Magic
How the ancient Chemistry name or word "al-kī mīā" was coined from Igbo language
Etymology
The word chemistry comes from alchemy, which referred to an earlier set of practices that encompassed elements of chemistry, metallurgy, philosophy, astrology, astronomy, mysticism and medicine. It is often seen as linked to the quest to turn lead or another common starting material into gold,[5] though in ancient times the study encompassed many of the questions of modern chemistry being defined as the study of the composition of waters, movement, growth, embodying, disembodying, drawing the spirits from bodies and bonding the spirits within bodies by the early 4th century Greek-Egyptian alchemist Zosimos.[6] An alchemist was called a 'chemist' in popular speech, and later the suffix "-ry" was added to this to describe the art of the chemist as "chemistry".
The modern word alchemy in turn is derived from the Arabic word al-kīmīā (الكیمیاء). In origin, the term is borrowed from the Greek χημία or χημεία.[7][8] This may have Egyptian origins since al-kīmīā is derived from the Greek χημία, which is in turn derived from the word Kemet, which is the ancient name of Egypt in the Egyptian language.[7] Alternately, al-kīmīā may derive from χημεία, meaning "cast together".[9]
Chemistry coined from Igbo word
The ancient name of Chemistry is "al-kī mīā", The word "al-kī mīā" is derived from Igbo word
"ala-ke-mīā"
ala.......ke............mīā
god.... create .......reproduce
Chemistry can be said to be science of creation and reproduction
chemistry occupies an intermediate position between physics and biology.[3] It is sometimes called the central science because it provides a foundation for understanding both basic and applied scientific disciplines at a fundamental level
Adam was an offshoot of a Pre-Adam human ancestor dwelling in the Nigeria-Cameroon area of West Africa. Before 300,000 B.C -The Human Genome Project
All Sumerian kings and emperors bore the proud title “King …Emperor of Eden (Edin) Land”. Their oldest creation stories are the same creation stories in Biblical Genesis, except that Sumerians preserved all the practical, astronomical and scientific details that are lacking in Genesis, as well as the names and identities of the Gods of Eden: the coming of the Biblical Nephilim, the genetic manipulation (creation) of Homo Erectus to bring about Homo Sapiens (Adam). In the past two decades, Science has proved the Sumerians right in every detail through Genetics, Linguistics , Paleontology and Archaeology.
The Human Genome Project has proved that Adam was an offshoot of a Pre-Adam human ancestor dwelling in the Nigeria-Cameroon area of West Africa (see Plate 10). Before 300,000 B.C This corroborates our thesis illustrated in They Lived Before Adam (2009) where we demonstrated with paleontological and archaeological evidence that 7 million years old Toumai man of Chad – ancestor of Homo Erectus - known scientifically as Sahelanthropus Tchadensis – a relative of the Ape man - who was discovered in 2002 by French Professor Michel Brunet, was the direct ancestor Ugwuele man who lived in Igbo land before 500,000 B.C. all the way to the Late Stone Age (see plate 9b).
The Toumai man of Chad and the Ugwuele man of Nigeria - both border nations - make a final case for a West, rather an East African origin of Mankind. A Nigerian location of Eden implies a Nigerian location of Sumer, and vice versa.
As if these are not shocking enough, we find that a sizable number of ancient inscribed Stone monoliths discovered in 1970 in the virgin forests, villages and under the ground in the Niger Delta region of Nigeria (in Cross River and Akwa Ibom States) bear the faces of apes (plate 6)! The Egyptian Book of the Dead claims that Ape-men called Khemennu were the Primeval Ancestors of Humanity as well as the Scribes of the Duat in Heliopolis, and that their symbolic number was eight. The eight-pointed star is the symbol of their Khemennu city or Khammasi city (in Sumerian). Nigerian monoliths actually bear the eight-pointed star of the Khammasi/Khemennu gods of Sumer and Egypt.
The Khemennu scribes of Ikom – who needless to say - are the same Khemmenu Primeval Ancestors of Sumer and Egypt actually share this symbol with Nze na Ozo god-men and Initiates of Igbo land (see plate 8)! What this suggests is that the Ape men authors of the monoliths were intelligent beings. Perhaps humanity may need to search into the actual family of apes for its real ancestors! This opinion, though seemingly outlandish, is borne out of the fact that several cases of recorded oral traditions of internal migrations of various Nigerian peoples into the Lower Niger Delta, claim that migrants encountered intelligent ape-men aboriginal residents with tails, who traded with, or resisted the advance of the migrants.
As unscientific as this may sound, the tails indicate that Homo Erectus was more ape than man! Yet he was intelligent enough to write on rock, as recorded in the Nigerian monoliths and in the famous Hindu Ramayan epic, where the ape Hanuman is depicted as an intelligent ape-man who could write verses on stone – a Sumerian/Nigerian story never-the-less! Hanuman was probably the Egyptian god Thoth, the leader of the Primeval Ancestors of The Book of the Dead - the Khemennu ape-men of Sumer in Eden.
All Sumerian kings and emperors bore the proud title “King …Emperor of Eden (Edin) Land”. Their oldest creation stories are the same creation stories in Biblical Genesis, except that Sumerians preserved all the practical, astronomical and scientific details that are lacking in Genesis, as well as the names and identities of the Gods of Eden: the coming of the Biblical Nephilim, the genetic manipulation (creation) of Homo Erectus to bring about Homo Sapiens (Adam). In the past two decades, Science has proved the Sumerians right in every detail through Genetics, Linguistics , Paleontology and Archaeology.
The Human Genome Project has proved that Adam was an offshoot of a Pre-Adam human ancestor dwelling in the Nigeria-Cameroon area of West Africa (see Plate 10). Before 300,000 B.C This corroborates our thesis illustrated in They Lived Before Adam (2009) where we demonstrated with paleontological and archaeological evidence that 7 million years old Toumai man of Chad – ancestor of Homo Erectus - known scientifically as Sahelanthropus Tchadensis – a relative of the Ape man - who was discovered in 2002 by French Professor Michel Brunet, was the direct ancestor Ugwuele man who lived in Igbo land before 500,000 B.C. all the way to the Late Stone Age (see plate 9b).
The Toumai man of Chad and the Ugwuele man of Nigeria - both border nations - make a final case for a West, rather an East African origin of Mankind. A Nigerian location of Eden implies a Nigerian location of Sumer, and vice versa.
As if these are not shocking enough, we find that a sizable number of ancient inscribed Stone monoliths discovered in 1970 in the virgin forests, villages and under the ground in the Niger Delta region of Nigeria (in Cross River and Akwa Ibom States) bear the faces of apes (plate 6)! The Egyptian Book of the Dead claims that Ape-men called Khemennu were the Primeval Ancestors of Humanity as well as the Scribes of the Duat in Heliopolis, and that their symbolic number was eight. The eight-pointed star is the symbol of their Khemennu city or Khammasi city (in Sumerian). Nigerian monoliths actually bear the eight-pointed star of the Khammasi/Khemennu gods of Sumer and Egypt.
The Khemennu scribes of Ikom – who needless to say - are the same Khemmenu Primeval Ancestors of Sumer and Egypt actually share this symbol with Nze na Ozo god-men and Initiates of Igbo land (see plate 8)! What this suggests is that the Ape men authors of the monoliths were intelligent beings. Perhaps humanity may need to search into the actual family of apes for its real ancestors! This opinion, though seemingly outlandish, is borne out of the fact that several cases of recorded oral traditions of internal migrations of various Nigerian peoples into the Lower Niger Delta, claim that migrants encountered intelligent ape-men aboriginal residents with tails, who traded with, or resisted the advance of the migrants.
As unscientific as this may sound, the tails indicate that Homo Erectus was more ape than man! Yet he was intelligent enough to write on rock, as recorded in the Nigerian monoliths and in the famous Hindu Ramayan epic, where the ape Hanuman is depicted as an intelligent ape-man who could write verses on stone – a Sumerian/Nigerian story never-the-less! Hanuman was probably the Egyptian god Thoth, the leader of the Primeval Ancestors of The Book of the Dead - the Khemennu ape-men of Sumer in Eden.
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WHO THE IGBOS ARE
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IGBONOMIC
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ODINANI
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