Did Africans invent and first use Chinese architecture?
- From: Marc Washington <paulmarcw@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sun, 25 May 2008 07:29:36 -0700 (PDT)
Link below
Near 1800 BC, from Korea came the Puyi (Buyei, Puyo) tribe down the
Yantze River from Korea to China (See: Jon and Alan Covell, Korean
impact on Japanese culture - Japan's hidden history). In China at that
time were the Dian peoples (1 - 10). With full facial features (e.g.
1, 3, 7, 8) and wiry hair and heads longer than wide: i.e. they are
African (meaning by phenotype). The Dian peoples from 250 BC at least
constructed their buildings with the heavy timbered, end-
overlapping,CONCAVED roofs (A) that are found even today in peasant
homes (B) and in China’s Forbidden City at Tianamen Square (C) where
lived the last emperor (12) at the outset of the 20th century. Note,
though, that his nose is rounded and lips full, his face not
characteristic of the typical Asian.
Emperor Puyo (12) was part of the Buyei tribe that entered China from
Korea 3800 years ago when Korea had an African population as seen in
the South Korean city, Jeju, with its 4000 BC Dol Zang Sung, or
“Grandfather” with African features (11). At that time, it is nearly
certain that the Buyei tribe of Japan’s last emperor had features as
clearly African as indigenous Koreans (11) and Dian Chinese (1-10) and
lost them through 4000 years of miscegenation with the ancestors of
today’s population in China.
It is clear that Africans created Chinese architecture and from there
the architecture travelled to Japan. It is used as temples (C), served
as the Summer Palace of Emperors (12), and houses the East.
IMAGES ONLINE:
http://www.beforebc.de/Made.by.Humankind/Pottery.Boats.Ruins/59-10-7-10.html
Marc Washington
.
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