The original “knights” of
England were Black! --including the knights of King Arthur’s Round Table! That’s why they were called “knights” after
the night or darkness of their skin.
An African king named
Gormund ruled Ireland during the Anglo-Saxon period in England reports the
medieval historian Geoffrey of Monmouth.
Halfdan the Black was
the first Africoid king to unite Norway.
When the British Isles
were invaded by the Vikings some of these Norse raiders were Africoid. In fact, different varieties of ‘Viking’
Africans lived in Scandinavia during the middle ages and are frequently
mentioned in Viking sagas.
There were Black
Huns! The dictionary describes the Huns
as “a fierce barbaric race of Asiatic nomads who led by Attila, ravaged Europe
I the 4th and 5th centuries A.D.” The
Gothic writer Jordannes described their infamous leader, Attila the Hun as
having “a flat nose and swarthy complexion.”
He describes the types of Huns he had seen as “of dark complexion,
almost black... broad shoulder, flat noses and small eyres.”
The African Moors
dominated southwest Europe during the Middle Ages for 700 years: 711-1492 A.D.
African Moors ruling southwest Europe centuries, darkened whites in this area,
especially Portal, which was “the first example of a Negrito (African) republic
in Europe?"
Moors ruling Scotland
in the 10th century mixed with whites until the black skin color disappeared.
Europe (Ancient Rome)
Conquered by Africans
That Accounts for Red
Haired People
& The Dark-Skinned
People with Nappy Hair
It started with the
Moors in Rome--Septimus Severus
Black rulership of the
Roman Empire begins in 193 A.D. with African born, Roman Emperor Septimus
Severus. There were four other Black
emperors after the Severus dynasty.
Hannibal, the father of
military strategy, performed the astounding feat of crossing the Alps on
elephants in 218 B.C. With only 26,000
of his original force of 82,000 troops remaining, Hannibal defeated Rome, the mightiest
military power of the age, who had a million men, in every battle for the next
fifteen years. His tactics are still
taught in leading military academies of the U.S., Europe & other lands.
Black Celts (Silures)
& Black Vikings vexed with the Scandinavia people. A prominent Viking of the eleventh century
was Thorhall, who was aboard the ship that carried the early Vikings to the
shores of North America. Thorhall was "the huntsman in summer and in
winter the steward of Eric the Red. He
was a large man and strong, black, and like a giant, silent, and foul-mouthed
in his speech, and always egged on Eric to the worst; he was a bad
Christian."
Another Viking, more
notable than Thorhall, was Earl Thorfinn, "the most distinguished of all
the earls in the Islands." Thorfinn
ruled over nine earldoms in Scotland and Ireland, and died at the age of
seventy-five. His widow married the king
of Scotland. Thorfinn was described as "one of the largest men in point of
stature, and ugly, sharp featured, and somewhat tawny, and the most martial
looking man. It has been related that he was the foremost of all his men."
The black blood type is
common even in Nordic Europe where intermixing has been happening since
antiquity.
Black slavery lasted in
England for about 400 years (1440-1834), during which time much intermixing
occurred.
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