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More from African History Extra

The Nsibidi script ca. 600-1909 CE: a history of an African writing system

Nsibidi is one of Africa's oldest independently invented writing systems.

a week ago 8 votes
The forts and castles of Africa: a brief architectural history.

For much of African history, the construction of fortresses and fortified structures was a mostly urban phenomenon associated with large states.

a week ago 32 votes
A complete history of the Sudano-Sahelian architecture of west Africa: from antiquity to the 20th century

The westernmost region of Africa which forms the watershed of the great rivers of the Senegal, the Volta and the Niger, is home to one of the world's oldest surviving building traditions, called the ‘Sudano-Sahelian’ architecture.

2 weeks ago 26 votes
The pre-Islamic civilizations of west Africa

While West Africa has been part of the Muslim world since the late Middle Ages, as famously demonstrated by the golden pilgrimage of Mali's Mansa Musa in 1324, Islam had only arrived in the region at the close of the 1st millennium.

3 weeks ago 40 votes
The Meroitic script and the documents of ancient Kush (ca. 300BC-450CE)

The Meroitic writing system of the kingdom of Kush is one of the best-known, yet most enigmatic scripts of the ancient world.

a month ago 34 votes

More in history

The Seven Deadly Sins Under Death’s Dominion by James Ensor, 1904

“…the eternal black night, death under the colourless earth” – James Ensor on his dread of death     Belgian painter and printmaker James Ensor (13 April 1860 – 19 November 1949) etched his Seven Deadly Sins in 1904. To hammer home the message of human foolishness, malice and the farce we construct around ourselves, … Continue reading "The Seven Deadly Sins Under Death’s Dominion by James Ensor, 1904" The post The Seven Deadly Sins Under Death’s Dominion by James Ensor, 1904 appeared first on Flashbak.

13 hours ago 2 votes
My Weekly Reader and Gemini (1965,1966)

As I got through boxes I found a couple of My Weekly Readers that I had not shared before. My Weekly Reader posts seem to be popular for their nostalgia effect and because as ephemera no one saved them from their youth. These particular ones are about the Gemini missions. At the time in elementary school many children saw these as their "space news" since the adult papers were not written at a basic level. So even if these are short articles they bring back a time when America was headed for the moon. Don't you wish you had lived in this neighborhood? Pretty fun to see someone's answers to the quiz. How did you do?

yesterday 4 votes