The Sumerians and
Akkadians were Blacks
Controversy surrounding
the Kushite/African/Black origins of the Elamites, Sumerians, Akkadians and
“Assyrians” is simple and yet complicated. It involves both the racism
exhibited toward the African slaves in the Western Hemisphere and Africans
generally which led to the idea that Africans had no history; and the need of
Julius Oppert to make Semites white, to accommodate the “white” ancestry of
European Jews.
To understand this
dichotomy we have to look at the history of scholarship surrounding the rise of
Sumero-Akkadian studies. The study of the Sumerians, Akkadians, Assyrians and
Elamites began with the decipherment of the cuneiform script by Henry Rawlinson
(1851). Henry Rawlinson (1810-1895) had spent most of his career in the Orient.
This appears to have given him an open mind in regards to history. He
recognized the Ancient Model of History, the idea that civilization was founded
by the Kushite or Hamitic people of the Bible.
As result, Rawlinson
was surprised during his research to discover that the founders of the
Mesopotamian civilization were of Kushite (Cushite) origin. He made it clear
that the Semitic speakers of Akkad and the non-Semitic speakers of Sumer were
both Black or Negro people who called themselves sag-gig-ga “Black Heads”. In
Rawlinson’s day the (agglutinative Turanian speaking) Sumerian people were
recognized as Akkadian or Chaldean, while the Semitic speaking blacks were
called Assyrians.
Rawlinson identified
these Akkadians as Turanian or Scythic people. But he made it clear that these
ancient Scythic or Turanian speaking people were Kushites or Blacks.
A major supporter of
Rawlinson was Edward Hincks (1792-1866). Hincks continued Rawlinson’s work and
identified the ancient group as Chaldeans, and also called them Turanian
speakers. Hincks, though, never discussed their ethnic origin.
A late comer to the
study of the Sumerians and the Akkadians was Julius Oppert (1825-1905). Oppert
was a German born of Jewish parents. He made it clear that the Chaldean and
Akkadian people spoke different languages. He noted that the original founders
of Mesopotamia civilization called themselves Ki-en-gi “land of the true lords”
(Kang, Tr. "predecessors, pra-fathers", later also Kangars). It was
the Semitic speakers who called themselves Akkadians.
Assyrians called the
Ki-en-gi people Sumiritu “the sacred language”. Oppert popularized the Assyrian
name Sumer, for the original founders of the civilization. Thus we have today
the Akkadians and Sumerians of ancient Mesopotamia.
Oppert began to
popularize the idea that the Sumerians were related to the contemporary Altaic
and Turanian speaking people, e.g., Turks and Magyar (Hungarian) speaking
people. He made it clear that the Akkadians were Semites like himself (however,
these Semitic people were using an agglutinative language, instead of a flexive
Semitic language). To support this idea Oppert pointed out that typological
features between Sumerian and Altaic languages existed. This feature was
agglutination.
The problem with
identifying the Sumerians as descendants (i.e. ancestors) from contemporary
Turanian speakers resulted from the fact that Sumerian and the Turkish
languages are not genetically related (however, the quantity of genetically
related words constitutes a significant portion of Sumerian vocabulary). As a
result Oppert began to criticize the work of Hincks (who was dead at the time)
in relation to the identification of the Sumerian people as Turanian following
the research of Rawlinson.
Oppert knew Rawlinson
had used African languages to decipher cuneiform writing. But he did not
compare the Sumerian to African languages, probably, due to the fact that he
knew they were related given Rawlinson’s earlier research.
It is strange to some
observers that Oppert never criticized Rawlinson who had proposed the Turanian
origin of the Ki-en-gi (Sumerians, Kangars). But this was not strange at all.
Oppert did not attack Rawlinson who was still alive at the time because he knew
that Rawlinson said the Sumerians were the original Scythic and Turanian people
he called Kushites. Moreover, Rawlinson made it clear that both the Akkadians
and Sumerians were Blacks. For Oppert to have debated this issue with
Rawlinson, who deciphered the cuneiform script, would have meant that he would
have had to accept the fact that Semites were Black. There was no way Oppert
would have wanted to acknowledge his African heritage, given the Anti-Semitism
experienced by Jews living in Europe.
Although Oppert
successfully hid the recognition that the Akkadians and the Sumerians both
referred to themselves as sag-gig-ga “black heads”, some researchers were
unable to follow the status quo and ignore this reality. For example, Francois
Lenormant (1837-1883) made it clear, following the research of Rawlinson, that
the Elamite and Sumerians spoke genetically related languages. This idea was
hard to reconcile with the depiction of people on the Persian monuments,
especially the Behistun monument, which depicted Negroes (with curly hair and
beards) representing the Assyrians, Jews and Elamites who ruled the area. As a
result, Oppert began the myth that the Sumerian languages was isolated from
other languages spoken in the world even though it shared typological features
with the Altaic languages. Oppert taught Akkadian-Sumerian in many of the
leading Universities in France and Germany. Many of his students soon began to
dominate the Academe, or held chairs in Sumerian and Akkadian studies, these
researchers continued to perpetuate the (generally, contained only inside the
Euro-centric academic school) myth that the Elamite and Sumerian languages were
not related.
There was no way to
keep from researchers who read the original Sumerian, Akkadian and Assyrian
text that these people recognized that they were ethnically Blacks. This fact
was made clear by Albert Terrien de LaCouperie (1845-1894). Born in France, de
LaCouperie was a well known linguist and China expert. Although native of
France, most of his writings are in English. In the journal he published called
the Babylonian and Oriental Record, he outlined many aspects of ancient
history. In these pages he made it clear that the Sumerians, Akkadians and even
the Assyrians who called themselves salmat kakkadi "black headed people”,
were all Blacks of Kushite origin. Even though de LaCouperie taught at the
University of London, the prestige of Oppert, and the fact that the main
centers for Sumero-Akkadian studies in France and Germany were founded by
Oppert and or his students, led to researchers ignoring the evidence that the
Sumerians, Akkadians, and Assyrians were Black.
In summary, the
cuneiform evidence makes it clear that the Sumerians, Akkadians, and Assyrians
recognized themselves as Negroes: “black heads”. This fact was supported by the
statues of Gudea, the Akkadians and Assyrians. Plus the Behistun monument made
it clear that the Elamites were also Blacks.
The textual evidence
also makes it clear that Oppert began the discussion of a typological
relationship between Sumerian and Turkic languages (after Rawlinson identified
the Sumerians-Akkadians as Turanian or Scythic people). He also manufactured
the idea that the Semites of Mesopotamia and Iran, the Assyrians and Akkadians
were “whites”, like himself (you can find a long and winding blurb on the
Caucasoidness/Europeoidness of the N.Africans in most of the English-language
popular materials. But anybody who saw an Egyptian mummy, and a mummy of a
tanned white-skinned corps, can tell that the Hamitic Egyptiand were not
lily-white at all, and had a curly hair). Due to this brain washing, and
whitening out of Blacks in history, many people today can look at depictions of
Assyrians, Achamenians, and Akkadians and fail to see the Negro origin of these
people.
To make the Sumerians
“white”, the textbooks print pictures of artifacts dating to the Gutian rule of
Lagash, to pass them off as the true originators of Sumerian civilization. No
Gutian rulers of Lagash are recognized in the Sumerian King List.
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