Thank you for your generous gift and willingness to support my research, it's very much appreciated 👊🏿❤️
@caurnelmorgan493410 ай бұрын
As a retired scientist, I’m pleased to say your presentations rank up there with the most scholarly lectures. Kemitic mythology and history has been my hobby and passion for over three decades. I’ve never seen this topic covered so thoroughly. We’ll done!
@kingmono10 ай бұрын
Thank you sir. I will strive to keep improving 🙏🏾
@4chukwuebuka8 ай бұрын
@@kingmonoI love you my brother
@jamesregiste96012 күн бұрын
Well done Mono my brother!😮
@allinthecomments968111 ай бұрын
So the ancestors were wearing proto-bonnets and proto-durags. The continuity of these cultural practices is crazyyy. Well done!
@zazlar422811 ай бұрын
It really is. It’s shocking to think that we have subconsciously continued some of these traditions to take care of our own hair til this very day.
@keldel436310 ай бұрын
😂 yes....
@keldel436310 ай бұрын
Not subconscious either.....look how much time and money black people spend on hair prep and arrangement. It's Cultural Anthropology
@reilym9795 ай бұрын
@@keldel4363 it's our DNA
@thedailycheckpoint4 ай бұрын
alright this is pushing it now
@musiqologist11 ай бұрын
Another fantastic study on the cultural continuity between ancient Egypt and other African cultures. Once again, no cultures outside of Africa can display such continuity. I've always wondered why Tutankhamun in his youth, was displayed with an elongated head that didn't carry over onto busts and images of him when he's older. This makes perfect sense of it. Great job King!
@BalogunTafatafa11 ай бұрын
@musiqologist79 - "Once again, no cultures outside of Africa can display such continuity" I couldn't agree with you more.
@algomes71511 ай бұрын
Come on everyone knows that the ancient Egyptians were pale,pale white & spoke with super heavy posh British accents...lol
@Tavi.Liksem10 ай бұрын
@@algomes715😆 😂
@thirdeffect2 ай бұрын
Our mind was colonized taking on foreign ideas about ourselves
@dewaynejeter472811 ай бұрын
King, you knocked this one out of the park! (A home run my brother!)
@GodRaThoth6911 ай бұрын
Grand Slam!!👍🏽
@dewaynejeter472811 ай бұрын
King,in baseball, a grand slam is when the batter not only hits a home run but also brings all the other three men on base along with himself for scores. We know you may not keep up with American sports!🤣
@BlackCosmos-cg6hw10 ай бұрын
Plenty of us already knew all of this and more, we just got tired of proving it to a mentally dead people and racist!
@venusoflatassimus358411 ай бұрын
Here are your flowers now 🎉. You will be remembered in the hearts of Africans and their descendants for as long as we shall live. Thank you for your tireless efforts
@____2080_____11 ай бұрын
Excellent and thorough analysis. This is like a massive asteroid sledgehammer to any ignorant denier of the culture and iconography of Ancient Egypt.
@____2080_____11 ай бұрын
This work DESTROYS all of the nonsense of later invaders who sought to lie about their origins
@BOOMLifestyle11 ай бұрын
& he’s on time.
@____2080_____11 ай бұрын
This was one of the best KZbin exposé I’ve watched in the modern era. Well produced.
@VetsrisAuguste10 ай бұрын
I buy it. I was mostly convinced at the beginning, but was 100% buying it by the end. I’ve been scrutinizing ancient Kemetic art since I was a kid. On this very topic, I always felt there was more going on than what was being addressed in the academic descriptions. When comparing my extensive interest in ancient Egyptian art with my secondary interest in theatrical costume, I know Hollywood has repeatedly failed to understand what they were trying to portray. Not to say I had any better suggestions with my white rural upbringing and euro-centric world view. It always remained a mystery to me what was actually happening in these depictions and why it wasn’t being discussed. Not only has this theory checked all the boxes that have been nagging my visual interpretation of Egyptian art, it has helped me shed the last remnants of a euro-centric misinterpretation of the origins of culture in the Nile Valley.
@TheeGemstone11 ай бұрын
I agree with your analysis about Egyptian crowns actually being decorated hair. It makes sense Africans were always proud of their hair until Europeans denigrated black features
@maureenmcglade60410 ай бұрын
I always thought black people were exceptionally beautiful. I grew up in an all white neighborhood
@wendell646810 ай бұрын
i just found your channel. im a 60-year old black man and i must say the information im receiving frim you is almost overwhelming. ive never seen or heard of 99% of this information. i know our history has been hidden and stolen but this is mind-boggling. i had no idea as to how much i dont know. thank you for this channel. i loom forward to learning and sharing.
@kingmono10 ай бұрын
🙏🏾
@Melanated-w-Nappyhair11 ай бұрын
...I really can't see how modern day Egyptians compete w/this video.Again great work (👑).
@cinnamonstar8088 ай бұрын
He is skipping the Cold truth. 4C hair was the 👑 crown. ---->. If you look 👀 at all the people who left the Nile valley another commonality was hair texture. Those in india has type 2 or type 3 hair. Those black Europeans had type 3 hair in general. Only a few lines had type 4 hair ******those with dark skin or either type 4 hair don’t want to acknowledged that was the “only thing that made the cut” of correct Bloodlines. back then But let them explain why the planet looks the way it looks. And why those powdered wigs had that texture ( judges and kings all had 3c hair in Europe). Power was in the hair textured because it resonated your family line. If you were native European or late arrival European
@zazlar42288 ай бұрын
@@cinnamonstar808 that is actually interesting about the Judges wigs in Europe ... they do look non European
@MonkeyMagic1911 ай бұрын
Thank you for your excellent presentation. Your work deserves more recognition. The Egyptologist gate keepers can't hide the truth for ever. God bless you.
@CarlCaf10 ай бұрын
Keep dreaming. Some day you might have some dignity and find yourself. Egypt is for Egyptians not for Americans who never left the hood
@zazlar422811 ай бұрын
Literally Jaw dropped at your work. The cultural continuity of Africa to Kemet in such an insightful, highly educational and comprehensive way is astounding. Keep up the amazing work !!
@kingmono11 ай бұрын
Thanks to your support, I can and will. I appreciate it. 🙏🏾
@trevormunroe868411 ай бұрын
Well done. Quite logical. As Diop said, the history of Africans will remain suspended in air until Africans begin to write their own history. Your work is clearly validating Diop’s assertion.
@dennisahlarson158410 ай бұрын
@@MacacoCorDeMerda-r2tTROLL.😂
@supahotjoe64939 ай бұрын
@@MacacoCorDeMerda-r2t we wuz uncivilized until Moors nd shieeet we wuz living like savages until Greeks and shieet
@supahotjoe64939 ай бұрын
@@MacacoCorDeMerda-r2t They damm sure wasn’t Vi-Kangz who was living like savages and brought nothing to humanity. Like your ancestors
@JustMe-no8el11 ай бұрын
i just went to a museum today and saw a bunch of egyptian art.....bro in person it looks so undeniable. the sculptures just make it so you can't see anything but black Africans. some of the stone carvings had braids in the details.
@The_Truth-10 ай бұрын
@@MacacoCorDeMerda-r2tNo such this as sub-Saharan. These were dark skin African people from the interior of Africa.
@zazlar422810 ай бұрын
@@MacacoCorDeMerda-r2tit’s not that you don’t believe us, it’s that you can’t come to terms with your Eurocentric lies that have been fed into your millimeter brain
@vanhuvanhuvese27389 ай бұрын
@@MacacoCorDeMerda-r2t go away you you wont change anyone mind not here no African person here while at it we dont call ourselves sub Saharans we call ourself Africans
@JustMe-no8el8 ай бұрын
@@MacacoCorDeMerda-r2t are all the artworks in this video figments of my imagination as well? kzbin.info/www/bejne/oYO4e4qIjtClb5Isi=F9yBGxN_HQkdmh4G Am I confused and my eyes not working properly????
@sonic-bb6 ай бұрын
@@MacacoCorDeMerda-r2t ur coping so hard it's crazy. I hope one day you will no longer be in denial
@obinnaomego197111 ай бұрын
You need to write a journal article about this subject and publish it. I recommend that you consider this.
@0070055611 ай бұрын
This makes way more sense than anything I’ve studied on egypt, and i’ve studied a lot.
@bogosikupe909010 ай бұрын
"Wear your crown with pride" an adage in reference to our hair holds true since time immemorial to this day. Gratitude for this informative presentation.
@JustMe-no8el11 ай бұрын
My friend who is a proud black Dominican visited today from dr. We went to a museum with a decent sized Egyptian section. Prior to going in I asked him what race he thought Egyptians would be. He said middle eastern bc the movies he’s seen. When we went in and he saw the crowns the hair and the noses he was shocked and said they had to be black. He even brought up the bodies and said those bodies had to black bodies. The exhibits were mostly done so very little paint was there anything with color was from the Greek and Roman periods.
@deamorebeaute241211 ай бұрын
There's no such thing as a Middle Eastern racial category. Technically , "black" is not a racial category, either. It's an English terminology that's used to describe human populations with skin of a darker hue. Namely, those of Sub-saharan African and Australian Aboriginal ancestry, but not solely pertaining to.
@theopulentone165011 ай бұрын
@@deamorebeaute2412 I keep telling people that originally race was about skull shape before it became about skin color. To this day horn Africans are sometimes still labeled as "black" or dark skinned causcasians. Caucasoid, mongoloid, and negroid with varying subcategories depending on who you'd asked. They later simplified things to black , white, yellow, red and sometimes brown as a throwaway label. It's all political in nature, because an Egyptian man resembling what people would call a "black" man was labeled "white" under US law. Mostafa Hefny is his name. East Asians went from being described as "white" to later yellow and now they just get called Asian despite Asia being the most phenotypically(not genotypically) diverse continent on the planet. Did I mention that "black" is etymologically linked to terms like blanc, blanco, blank and bleach? It's just bs.
@maryamkim128111 ай бұрын
@deamorebeaute2412 thank you for bringing your sandwich to the banquet.
@ISaidItIDidIt11 ай бұрын
@@deamorebeaute2412Nice profile pic
@zazlar422811 ай бұрын
@@deamorebeaute2412”sub saharan” African is just as lesser as the word, if not worst than the word “black” … they were Africans, Africans in melanin, dark skinned people of the continent of ilkebula
@medhin0511 ай бұрын
Thank you. One can also observe the Rastafarian lhair style also known as dread locks and the various ways the hair is housed. They even refer to their hair as crowns. Striking similarity to these ancient styles.
@marciablack933911 ай бұрын
The Kings Monologue, thank you once again for the magnificent work you, with the support of your team, produces, time and time again. This episode reminds me of something my late mother always said. She always referred to our afro hair as our 'crowning glory'.
@elsmith23es11 ай бұрын
I believe God also refers to a woman’s head of hair as her crown. It never dawned on me that afro-textured hair is the only type of hair that can stand up and out like a crown on its own…wow, how much has really been stolen??!!?
@JudahCub198111 ай бұрын
The consistency of the traditions throughout the continent is absolutely amazing and compelling. Talk about truth being hidden in plain sight. I would love for you, Mr. Imhotep and Kuelimika* to team up and do one in depth teaching together one of these days. I think that would be so rewarding for those of us that follow each of you or all three.
@jjmoultrie948214 күн бұрын
The TRUTH in plain site, tell me about it! Totally.😂
@Vatti.11 ай бұрын
I need a series of books from you. Especially as an African Designer, for my researches it would be magical, it's trully inspirational. Thank you for your amazing work!!
@johndoe87-r5d11 ай бұрын
In New Jersey a state in The U.S.A we've always been taught that in middle school that Egypt was a Black African Country.
@ladybluelotus11 ай бұрын
Wow, that's refreshing. Props to New Jersey.
@reneecaballero96248 ай бұрын
Exactly, I didn't hear about it being anything except for having a black African history until a few years ago. I just thought it was common sense.. maybe it's an easy coast thing. Idk.
@Nasamusa8 ай бұрын
Absolutely fam, In Boston Mass, as well.
@charlesspeaksthetruth433411 ай бұрын
You're doing Great work bro. The ancestors are pleased.
@ProductDesigning11 ай бұрын
This brother's gifts are a powerful testament as to what unfettered Black genius looks like. It looks like him.
@kwadwo968110 ай бұрын
This is such a good video. I don’t think I’ve come across such a detailed analysis of the crowns from this angle before. Your analysis makes a lot of sense to me, even though it never occurred to me to see the crowns this way before. Sometimes the obvious is staring us in the face. Great tribute to Queen Rosalie too 👏🏿 I really enjoyed this video. Keep it up man 👊🏿
@sonofamothafuca342011 ай бұрын
Metatron is gonna hate you forever for this one, my genius .
@VeeKayGreenerGrass11 ай бұрын
The crown of England was mimicking African crowning/royal hairstyles... The dark velvet cushioning in it is Afro hair. They used headrests to preserve their hairstyles too.
@Ariapeithes_11 ай бұрын
No. That's incorrect. You people are just so desperate it's ridiculous.
@Walkingintoyourdestiny11 ай бұрын
@@Ariapeithes_ if anyone is desperate it’s you to hold to a Lie you’ve been told, Then persecuting others for sharing and learning the truth quite sad….
@TeeSpells10 ай бұрын
@@WalkingintoyourdestinyThey could be mimicking African hair without even knowing the actual concepts behind all the meanings as they do with much of African culture.
@Walkingintoyourdestiny10 ай бұрын
@@TeeSpells I wasn’t responding to the comment above the comment I responded to has been removed
@TeeSpells10 ай бұрын
@@Walkingintoyourdestiny oh ok 👍
@mrnancy111411 ай бұрын
Great stuff, much appreciated, this can only make sense when one studies African history and culture holistically, you should do a paper and submit it, quite compelling, also I read somewhere that the White Crown was inspired by the African waver bird.
@ljsc126511 ай бұрын
I agree, a book would be appreciated.
@EvaExplains11 ай бұрын
Wow!! You never disappoint, every study is spectacular! It is no wonder the eurocentric Egyptologists have yet to acknowledge what is obviously the only accurate depictions of the Ancient Egyptian Kings and Queens. If their arrogance and insistence on everything great in the past being linked to a Eurocentric origin we might actually get some great collaborations that yielded even more results. The fact that you have been able to do so much funded be will power and community donations is so phenomenal, but only shows what we as a people are capable of when given access to proper tools, which is why they gate keep so much. Your images are so beautiful that words seem inadequate to describe them. I leave every video wondering what else don't we know of our story? What else are we missing? Why did they work so hard to try and convince us we are nothing and our land is nothing? I mean you would not race your neighbors to the alley and work hard to convince stray dogs to give you the spot by a dumpster right? yet that is what they try to convince we are and our land is, it makes no sense. I am so proud of you Kings and Queens and all of your hard work putting all this together, I am so glad I am alive to see this happening. I wish my father were here to see it as well he would be in love with Queen Tee (sp?) Keep up the great work Team
@Arumeas11 ай бұрын
I think we are still missing a lot because they have probably only shown us a fraction of what they’ve uncovered. It is obvious at this point that truth is not in the slightest important to the gatekeepers of history. It is narrative and the manipulation of the masses that is expedient. The truth is the enemy and they intend to topple it and grind all its fragments it into dust.
@benvinar287610 ай бұрын
None of that arf has anything to do with material dimensions. Its all spiritual
@BlackCosmos-cg6hw10 ай бұрын
Actually you are wrong! Their were plenty of Europeans who have already told the world in their thesis who the Egyptians were! Look up Gerald Massey, Even some of the late Greek historians, they also express to the world that the ancient Egyptians were black Africans!
@nsxboy60410 ай бұрын
Africans Americans are not even related to the Egyptians not even close … African Americans is related to west Africans because of the slave trade… facts ! So why so obsessed with the Egyptian culture 🤷🏾♂️ if u go to any Africans country and ask about there ancient culture? None will say anything about Egypt nor they follow the same gods 🤦🏾 they just Imhotep hustling trying to make a buck 😉
@nsxboy60410 ай бұрын
The reason why these Africans have the same style a Egyptians? cuz African use to worship and copy the Egyptians 🤷🏾♂️ instead of talking about there hair ? What’s there dna 🧬
@sammyblar11 ай бұрын
Great research again brother 👏🏽👌🏽. I was also wondering whether it was the cranial deformation. Aliens theory as always seems another way of discounting African abilities. But you have definitely show that its all about our African hair styles that is being depicted. We have lost soo much during this past centuries of colonial interruptions. Thanks to you, we are discovering the wealth of our past and also present!!
@tyiingram987811 ай бұрын
This was an absolutely brilliant presentation. The costumer and costume designer/historian/anthropologist in me is full of joy. Love this ❤💯🔥✊🏿
@tracycrum378811 ай бұрын
EXCELLENT WORK! I've been arguing these kinds of points with folks for over 30 years.
@quelnariemrah562411 ай бұрын
I've watched this 3 times and must have sent it to 30 ppl. This is some of the best research in great while. Thank you for this.
@jojoyah_123611 ай бұрын
Your work is amazing. I found your channel about a month ago and started to watch everything on it. I became addicted to the information you have discovered. Then there was a lull in any new video and I wanted to learn more.
@kingmono10 ай бұрын
They do take a little longer at the moment. But I'll keep them coming 🙏🏾
@calledbyhisname9711 ай бұрын
This. Video. Is. FIRE. Our hair was LITERALLY our CROWNS 👑. Absolutely FANTASTIC. May Yahawah continue to use you and our other brothers to bring forth the Truth. ❤
@Shamanicjourney711 ай бұрын
So much information. Thank you 🙏
@mpoulawefang11 ай бұрын
Mvoghe keang zamb'Eyo!!! Peace of the creator to you !! I was wondering why people were thinking they were crowns instead of hairstyles ,but nobody wants to listen to native Africans whose ancestors migrated from upper egypt or nubia
@renaissancewoman10011 ай бұрын
Other native Africans are too busy siding with Egyptians accusing is of trying to steal their culture. All we're saying is this was an African civilization started by black Africans.
@mpoulawefang11 ай бұрын
@@floppletopple good very good !
@rafaeldossantos479111 ай бұрын
TA-SETI A Group Culture are the absolute creators of Km t and Kush, also referred to as "ProtoNubians". They are approved by Archeology and Anthropology A Group, which means that they are native creators of native African civilization (Black Race). The Ta-Seti are the worst nightmare for Eurocentrists and all the racist cultural usurpers of Asia Minor. That's why there are already racist counterattack campaigns such as Afrocentrist Critiqued and Egyptologist7 and historians very poorly misinforming periods and dates in the history of Nubia, sowing confusion to new generations by ridiculously applying Whitewashing to the Ta-Seti and the Kushites (it is impossible for them to succeed). Also keep in mind the Punt of Somalia and Kenya who are the origin of the entire "Shemsu Hor" and "Ta' Ntchr" mythology.
@zazlar422810 ай бұрын
@@floppletopple Exactly. Really have to ignore the Eurocentric nonsense. This is why Egypt is a huge mystery to them, but when you study Africa , it is not a mystery.
@DocShan11 ай бұрын
Exceptional work here! Thank you so much for this examination. It is simply brilliant.
@JourneyGurrl11 ай бұрын
I love how the ancient Kemets used a special device to prop up their heads so they don't mess up their hair. In African American culture, we black women call that "sleeping cute" 😂 There's no way you're gonna spend all that time and effort getting your hair done just right, only to mess it up sleeping in the bed. Now I know where we get it from 😅
@thaliahall459911 ай бұрын
Right! 😂😂
@yangasidziya324510 ай бұрын
Sleeping Cute🤣
@weskerwillie904410 ай бұрын
The whole of African culture is at your disposal. You Can reignite the use of the head rests coated with soft pillow like interior for extra comfort
@maureenmcglade60410 ай бұрын
Exactly! They’re complaining about white colonials while using electricity and computers
@mikejam99111 ай бұрын
Once again, astonishing research. Thank you. Your work is so much more important than you probably know...More strength and power to you.
@RobertCalvilloChicago10 ай бұрын
Wooow! As a life -long Egyptology lover, I thank you for all this information wich opens up my eyes and makes me fall even more in love with this beautiful dream called Egypt.
@MoncœrCoyoteSmith11 ай бұрын
Thank you as usual. I am very proud and gracious of the work you put in.
@mossleoka927910 ай бұрын
This is priceless information & an emphatic confirmation of the Africanness of Kemet. It further shows how important it is for African scholars to take the lead in this so-called "Egyptology" field that has for years been the monopoly of people who are not Africans. They have caused a lot of harm with their biased assumptions & distortions of Kemetic history. One of the best videos of The Kings Monologues yet. May the Gods spare you to continue this important work.
@richardtomlinson24211 ай бұрын
Absolutely fantastic!! So much effort went into making this and just when you think that you've learnt all there is to know. The system definitely cannot keep the lies up anymore.
@levipriest85846 ай бұрын
BRAVO 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾 Sir: I don't see your name here anywhere... You've done an most excellent job revealing and documenting what we Africans ALREADY are aware of but have not had time or experience to document. Antiquarian Dr. Runoko Rashidi was a good friend of mine and THESE particular conversations came up often ... As this topic, and an African presence, relates to ancient Asiatic (China, Japan & Korea in particular) kingdoms and cultures as well! PLEASE continue in your works ... MAY THE ANCESTORS BE WITH YOU....A TRUTH TELLER ! 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👊🏾👊🏾👊🏾💪🏾💪🏾💪🏾🫶🏾
@kovarcoley841811 ай бұрын
I really enjoy your videos, tbh I dont even care about ancient Egypt but I watch because you seem so passionate and well researched. I really look forward to your videos. I like to sew in my spare time I'm thinking attempting to sew one of these hats and make a KZbin video on it 😅
@kingmono11 ай бұрын
Thank you! I appreciate your engagement and I would like to buy a hat if you get that far 😆
@weskerwillie904410 ай бұрын
@saoham659they don't even look remotely similar
@weskerwillie904410 ай бұрын
@saoham659 Hollywood depiction of the nemes is way closer to the mark than the Arab hair cover and those Hollywood depictions are still terrible.
@pharaoh_hakatre10 ай бұрын
Absolutely PHENOMENAL presentation, brother! It is certainly packed with very hard to refute historical and traditionally African ethnic content. The naysayers 🧐 will have a very hard time disputing all that evidence. Thank you again for your painstaking research, work and valuable contributions to the greater understanding of our beloved, classical African civilizations. 🤎🖤👊🏾
@teeldd11 ай бұрын
I am also working on a theory that explains the obsession of Black Hair by whites (particularly in the USA), and I am more and more of the belief that hair is a major factor in the jealousy of others toward us, making it imperative that we hate our own hair so as not to be natural reflections of what those with stringy hair cannot achieve. The mental colonization we Africans have and our obsession with stringy hair does as much damage to the African mind as a white Jesus. Our hair one of the few that grows toward the sun, yet we believe beauty is hair that, as it "grows", falls down to the dirt. How strange... Black hair is a very serious point of contention because it is a means of self-expression. Furthermore, it is a means of self-expression unattainable by our former colonizers. There is an idea by Nietzsche called ressentiment (pronounced in a French accent) where he explains that, out of jealousy of what the other has, and knowing that the jealous figure can never obtain it, He (the jealous one) wishes ill-will upon those who have it. For instance, if you own a Mercedes and I become jealous, not only do I want to also get a Mercedes, but I want you to lose your Mercedes even more than I want to get one. He also has this idea of a "slave morality" which means that the masses of jealous (or oppressed) people, in their inability to obtain what another has, restructure values so that the 'having', that is, the possession of what the jealous group wants is suddenly deemed to be a negative and "evil", and that which the jealous group does possess, regardless of how valuable it actually is, becomes positive and "good". So you can see why I am trying really hard to impress on people the importance of a new revaluation of values. Nietzsche calls this the "slave morality" because the group of have-nots revalues not from a position of power, but from a position of inferiority. Very similar to Franz Fanon and his ideas in his book "Black Skin, White Masks". In it he states that the only way for African's to get out of their reverence to anything white and disgust for anything Black is to revalue values. Said differently, all things about the Black experience that they say is negative (nappy hair, brown skin, big lips, braids etc.) is to be viewed as positive, uplifting, culturally appropriate, etc.
@varietystudio200011 ай бұрын
Spot on
@KenlonJones11 ай бұрын
Excellent presentation! 🔥🔥🔥🔥
@so948711 ай бұрын
This is quite an impressive presentation. Thank you so much.
@derricklangford472511 ай бұрын
This was such an informative video, I'm blown away. Africa really has some amazing traditional hairstyles, I hope these art forms are being passed down. I recently saw a video on Chisha Zad channel where a group of African women were saying that they would never wear their natural hair to any events they deamed important because they've adopted the use of weaves and wigs it was sad for me to see as a African American full blooded African women saying essentially that they're natural hair was ugly. Just realized after posting my comment that I wasn't subscribed to the channel and I immediately fixed that 🫶🏿
@varietystudio200011 ай бұрын
I feel the same. It's so sad
@derricklangford472511 ай бұрын
@@varietystudio2000 👍🏿
@vanhuvanhuvese27389 ай бұрын
a lot are waking up though and in Africa a lot of people are using their natural hair more often that not
@penelopepitstop774811 ай бұрын
I was at a party this weekend working and I was almost brought to tears at our beauty. If it wasn’t our collectively embraced appreciation of our own hair which is glorious then it was the beautiful curvy women or rock hard stunning black men. I wish my parents had instilled in me how beautiful and powerful and amazing we are instead of me having to go through so much of my life thinking that I was less than. They truly did a number in us 😢
@SalvadorButtersworth10 ай бұрын
Yeah your parents are sick for teaching you that. Did they not allow you to have mirrors? Usually when someone is beautiful, it's just something you automatically see when you look at them.
@mcdaddy201110 ай бұрын
Any pics? 🤔
@penelopepitstop774810 ай бұрын
@@mcdaddy2011 😂🥲
@rochellek532711 ай бұрын
Thank you. That was interesting and informative.
@theeyesareopen-_-30408 ай бұрын
After watching your videos, nobody can unsee it!!
@pausereflect59117 ай бұрын
One of your *BEST* episodes.❤
@SKforPeace11 ай бұрын
The Kings Monologue... one of the on Kemetu. Great work always... keep it up 🎉
@morpheus20723 ай бұрын
Your intense bro. I never have a problem paradigm shifting when presented with facts. This really shocked me. Just never seen this.
@maryamkim128111 ай бұрын
Excellent commentary, and the photos illustrating the points are brilliant. Superb work❤
@mochacola7211 ай бұрын
Thank you for your research and hard work.
@thaliahall459911 ай бұрын
Great presentation! This explains why little or no elaborate metal and jeweled crowns were found by the Egyptologists and colonial explorers. They probably desperately wanted to find jeweled metal crowns that could be stolen out of Africa and sold for large sums of money. Pure greed! Many were probably disappointed to find the crowns portrayed on the statues and artwork were mainly due to the actual hairstyles and textured hair covered with beads and fabrics. Thanks for explaining the various examples of the natural hair and headdresses.❤
@kingmono10 ай бұрын
My pleasure 😊
@cineretdavila253511 ай бұрын
Your edition is just magnificent! 😮
@deidrabenson36110 ай бұрын
Absolutely loved this video! Thanks sooo very much for sharing this amazing information! Well done!❤️❤️❤️
@janelfields228410 ай бұрын
This focus on hairstyles is so important. Many Egyptologists & conspiracy theorists would rather credit anyone other than Black Africans with the intelligence discovered in the many archeological sites. Egyptologist accredit the Arabs, while conspiracy theorists and New Age “scientists” attribute the discoveries to Extraterrestrial(ET) beings & lost Atlantis societies. They look right over the intricate hairstyles to state that artifacts found depict inhuman head shapes & point to ET higher intelligence. Black Excellence is the truth.
@atibakojo347811 ай бұрын
This is the best thing I have ever seen on this subject. And when we start to do what u are doing,we can write or own books on KMT. Written by us for us. Fantastic job.
@heidiedgely923810 ай бұрын
This makes TOTAL SENSE! For years i have wondered about the shape of the Armana Royals & their busts & the shape of the head, but being ignorant of the facts that you have so brilliantly presented on hairstyle, i couldn't understand what what was being alluded to in the artwork. However, thanks to yhe amazing examples that you have thoughtfully provided, it is now totally obvious and makes sense to me, as well as what i have now learned i must also thank you for providing what i can only call hairstyles of great beauty & ingenuity. What a pity that we dont get to see these hairstyles more often.The Rwandan genleman in the video is right, people should be proud of their heritage & wear them with pride. I really enjoyed watching this & learning. Its a pity that Egyptologists arent given your videos to learn from, i had always wondered about the headrests, that too now makes perfect sense! Thanku !!
@kaprooki11 ай бұрын
This was inspiring! Well worth the effort it evidently required in its production. Hopefully this will attract many of those with nuanced and unique insights into African hair culture to the field of research. Well done!
@kingmono10 ай бұрын
I really hope so!
@tinagauthreaux67555 ай бұрын
I am blown away! I have been interested in learning the truth about Kenet for a long time now, and wow, talk about an epiphany for me! Thank you. We appreciate you. Keep teaching the truths. It's fascinating!
@Khiarika19 ай бұрын
This was an amazing video. One of my favorites. I think it answers SO many questions and helps make SO MANY THINGS make sense.
@rochellek532711 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@kingmono11 ай бұрын
Thank you. I appreciate it very much 🙏🏾
@bridgescwr613611 ай бұрын
Young King. I can't thank you enough for all that you've given me in this. I have had locks for 27 years of my 67. You've helped me understand very systematically all that I've experienced with my hair in my past and why I was never bothered when some would laugh or attempt to bully me. I would like to do something for you because you've inspired me to live in grace more than yesterday. Now to figure out how to assist you. $$$$$. ?????
@bridgescwr613611 ай бұрын
How & why the unusual amount? What does the platform get? Rather how much? Honestly.
@kingmono11 ай бұрын
@@bridgescwr6136 thank you elder. I appreciate your feedback. My patreon is in the description... you can message or support me via that platform it goes a long way. Thank you 🙏🏾
@beverleybrown467910 ай бұрын
@@kingmono, yet another Great video; learning awhile back, that the crowns were made of felt, I did often wonder how they managed to keep it looking “full”😅, Great work & if you haven’t yet, check out the video I mentioned 👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿
@maodondiaye250210 ай бұрын
What an amazing and informative video!!! Well done 👍🏾
@theopulentone165011 ай бұрын
I used to buy into the skull elongation argument and the crown/wig argument, but this video changed my mind. Thank you for enlightening me! Also, the guy at 17:15 matches Tuts profile exactly. Who do these Euro/arabcentrics think they are fooling? We have eyes, we know how our people(s) look like.
@newhorizonsgloballlc.105510 ай бұрын
I look forward to your every video. So thoroughly researched, edited and narrated. I hope you're working towards a documentary series. Something we can view on one of the mid-major or even major media platforms. As a 30+ year amateur Egyptologist, it brings such feelings of satisfaction to see you put words and indisputable research to what we've known inherently all along. Thank you.
@kingmono10 ай бұрын
🙏🏾 Thank you for the kind words 🙏🏾
@anthonymwenyemali632110 ай бұрын
This man is so precise. I really love it.
@daharris4110 ай бұрын
This is excellent information. You broke the code on this one. They can try all the different examples they want but nothing will explain away the natural crown 👑 of black people. It’s so powerful that every black person can grow it out of their skull and no one else can claim it. Great work
@weskerwillie904410 ай бұрын
No one else can claim it💪🏿
@mellochello7710 ай бұрын
Absolutely amazing! I thought some hairstyles looked vvveeeerrryy familiar! This confirms everything and more. Thanks for the video 🙏🏾
@Michael-jp3qe11 ай бұрын
This is excellent! I am so happy to be a member of your Patreon family. Excellent!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@akinpriestley390111 ай бұрын
Thank you King. What can we say? You are chosen for such a time as this. Enlightening, revealing, super appreciation of our history.
@BlackCosmos-cg6hw10 ай бұрын
There are plenty of brothers and sisters who have been saying and doing this for years, yawl just haven't been paying attention!
@joshharris328210 ай бұрын
Amazing video, you just opened up a whole other world of thought for me 🔥🔥🔥🔥
@glamaticus9 ай бұрын
A dynamically powerful presentation. A skillful coalescence, from the audiovisual, the story telling/narration, welded to solid interdisciplinary research and analysis, a complex topic presented with relative simplicity. Thoroughly impressive. Asante.
@Yemaya2213911 ай бұрын
This is brilliant. I have tears in my eyes. Thank you Thank you ❤
@Yemaya2213910 ай бұрын
Absolutely brilliant 👍🏽
@MsTiLaJ3 ай бұрын
Excellent research and information. I thoroughly enjoyed watching the session. I hope my people learn where some of their hairstyles originated💇🏽♀️
@noxolotshabangu805510 ай бұрын
The point you make here is so true… Many a times I have looked at art work from Kemet and immediately understand. Our distinguishing features being our hair and hues have always told us, and them, who the real Egyptians are.
@kimsaarunga98910 ай бұрын
Its a undeniable fact that the Tutsi migrated into their present habitation from Egypt. They even speak of it in their oral histories ie that they came from Misri ". The king Tutankhamuns name is written as TUT-ANKHI-IMN in the heiroglyphs. Notice the IMN at the end of the name? That IMN stands for the god IMANA that's worshiped to date among the Ba-Tutsi not AMUN as transliterated by the Greeks. So TUT-ANKHI-IMN is actually TUTANKIMANA or TUTANGIMANA as many Tutsi names end with "Imana" eg Habyarimana, Hategekimana, etc. And even today the name Tutangimana has a meaning it Ba-Tutsi and it means "We give to Imana (god). The 18th dynasty that's referred to as "Armana dynasty" is actually IMANA dynasty.Its because many of the names of the pharaohs names ended with "Imana '. The IMN is not "AMUN" but "IMANA"
@kingmono10 ай бұрын
🔥🔥🔥 Thank you for sharing. My information regarding the Tutsi lineage came from another insightful member of my viewing community so I really appreciate this input.
@kimsaarunga98910 ай бұрын
That's awesome.I am also a researcher into the Kemetic knowledge.I am a big follower of your content.You are doing a good factual job
@incognito9611 ай бұрын
Thats why you never see the egyptian arabs with no affliation to these styles to this day. Not one hair style, headband, neck stretch absolutely nothing.
@bromin65 ай бұрын
Stupendous One of greatest channels of all time
@kingmono5 ай бұрын
Thank u 🙏🏾❤️
@chosen17507 ай бұрын
Amazingly put together, well done.
@jjmoultrie948214 күн бұрын
Once you see this, you can't unsee or unfeel the deepness of our connection to the ancestors... despite it ALL and all. I mean come on y'all they talking to us thru our HAIR!!!!!Love this! ❤
@esthertjones11 ай бұрын
Great work! I came to this realisation myself about the crowns when pulling a buff over my head and noticing the shape it created. Have shared. 👍🏼
@TheCovertsEnabler11 ай бұрын
Tut's crown/hair changing is interesting; I wonder if he had to shave his head ritually. He rejected his Father's worship of Aten and went back to RA, maybe he had to cut his locs off to show his spiritual shift, hence being bald when he was buried, even though he is depicted with the full head of locs elsewhere... I'm down the rabbit hole, thank you! I have believed Egyptian hair was being depicted for years, and you made the points so succinctly! Great video!
@TheCovertsEnabler11 ай бұрын
Wait! He also died of a head injury! Maybe his head was shaved to treat the wound? Rabbit hole, I told you! Lol Such a great video!
@misskk712311 ай бұрын
You are amazing! I’ve never thought about this but the information here strikes a chord with me. I love your concepts of cultural continuity it makes so much sense. Keep them coming King 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾🥰
@jimmyd409211 ай бұрын
That was fantastic. That makes absolute sense.
@mmajwalanetladi820010 ай бұрын
Very well put. 👏🏿 thank you for sharing the knowledge
@nyssandey11 ай бұрын
I have some affiliation with the royal family of Rwanda since one of my ancestors was a chief under the king so I am excited to see this video. Thank you for your work and may Queen Rosalie Gicanda rest in peace. 😢🕊️
@kingmono11 ай бұрын
🙏🏾 my humble contribution ...
@ntriintr911 ай бұрын
thank you for your amazing work!
@Trendsetic10 ай бұрын
Best video, yet! I am on the edge of my seat. Well done.
@OyaRevolutionary10 ай бұрын
Will keep sharing. Thank you really did good here and kept it simple and factual. Truth!!🎉🎉
@calledbyhisname9710 ай бұрын
Your investigating is AMAZING, Ach! When you read about the Levitical High Priest's headdress, it sounds similar. The High Priest of YasharAl would wear a material head covering to protect his hair (the mitre) and they would place the diadem around it on their foreheads. Cultural continuity.
@musakam11 ай бұрын
THIS IS BY FAR YOUR MOST INTERESTING VIDEO, BRIILLIANT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!