Agree with you 100%. I'm a senior citizen and we've ALWAYS had "braidouts". Even today, black women often braid their hair tightly in plats then gently take it out so they can get that braidouts look. It's just another natural fashion for us. You're doing an OUTSTANDING job. Don't you dare stop. You're bringing the truth--a Godly job to your people, to history, and the world.
@sammydasilva6152 Жыл бұрын
I visited plenty of black or Africans communities and I am familiar with African hairstyles and textures. Afro-textured hair does not magically transform into long, flowing Caucasian wavy hair after braids are removed. I know for a fact that after removing their braids, many black females' hair remained afrotextured and were not wavy like Tiye's. Unless their unbraided hair has already been relaxed with perms or other chemicals+ moisturized, and so on, it does not resemble the hair of Tiye's hair. Having said that, some Somali, Eritrean, or Ethiopian females could have hair similar to Tiye's, but they are from West Eurasia. If this Tiye's hair is her own, it means she was at least partially Western Eurasian and thus not entirely black.
@rafaeldossantos4791 Жыл бұрын
@@sammydasilva6152 There are different ethnicities and different African hair, curly hair is a product of climate protection and in my country it is full of black women identical to Tye and they are all descendants of African slaves, Bantu, Yoruba, Ñianza, Meru and Nigerians without any mixture, so That racist logic that if you have "less curly hair" you are from the Middle East is not valid.
@taylorsara1237 Жыл бұрын
@@sammydasilva6152That is absolute bull. I have a huge melanated family ( will not call us blk since under law blk means legally dead/ without rights) but a huge melanated family. And we have ALL diff textures of hair but most of us have very long wavy/ curly hair! And some relatives have hair so straight they are constantly asked if they are mixed! They are NOT. But also anyone studying history knows 90% of so called blk ppl in America are NOT of African descent at all. They are the orig Indians of this land. Don't believe me. Look up the racial reclassification act of 1924! In which the Orig Negro Indians were reclassed as colored/ Negro! Also look up Indian Integ Act/ homestd Act/ Indian Removal act etc. Go look it up n see all those Indians were US.. I dare you to research it....
@sammydasilva6152 Жыл бұрын
@@rafaeldossantos4791 Actually, African hair is homogenously Afro-textured. The Africans that have Caucasian-like curly or wavy hair are either larglery or partially Western Eurasian. And as you said, afro-hair is just an adaptation to the climate, as is dark skin.
@charlesadeoye1404 Жыл бұрын
@@sammydasilva6152 Did you not see and hear if a particular treatment is done, hair looks wavy when braided out.
@Wolfsins Жыл бұрын
Anymore channels like this? I know of Mr.Imhotep and Kuelimika. I can't get enough of this type of content. Love it
@jahifaraji Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for the sharing....of kuelimika and Mr imhotep..let's keep flooding many youtube watchers.. we got to kill our peoples miseducation of these modern days. Brainwashing....self abandonedment is perpetual blindness...
@davepegington9066 Жыл бұрын
There are tons of fantasy garbage channels not backed by science . Search paw patrol. It's as realistic as this
@wildflower7925 Жыл бұрын
Queen T looks like a tutsi woman from Rwanda 🇷🇼 or an Ankole women from south western Uganda 🇺🇬. People in my family have this look, we are from east Africa😊.
@servant_symm Жыл бұрын
Agree she has the bone structure of one of my Ethiopian cousins 🥰🇪🇹🇷🇼🇰🇪🇸🇴
@KuroiHato69 Жыл бұрын
You are correct about the henna btw... I used the two stage step for dark black hair for years... After several washings my hair turned reddish. Now that I have grey I stopped the two step... Half of the time my hair just has red streaks due to my laziness... 😄 I truly believe you are spot on with your analysis...
@thaliahall4599 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for doing the research regarding the hairstyles and textures of the original ancient Egyptians. Egyptologists, Eurocentrists and modern day Arabs often try to use hair texture beside some features to claim that the Ancient Egyptians were Levantine, or some admixture and not black African. The photographs and historical documents once again support the fact that the people in the Ancient Egyptian Dynasties were black. Many of the hairstyles, traditions for styling and maintaining the hairstyles still remain today. It's amazing how some people dont realize that preserved skeletal remains will not look like the living person even if mummified. The fat, cartilage and fluids are removed or dry out. The remaining skin collapses onto the bony structures. This includes noses and lips.
@fivecinco5923 Жыл бұрын
The populations of the Levant did not exist in antiquity as we know them today. In antiquity it was Kushite populations that the populations of Central Asia and the Caucasus invaded but for a long time the invasion was controlled by Egypt. But once Egypt fell, they were under Persian, then Greek, and Roman control, always with a continual arrival of populations from Central Asia and the Caucasus until the birth of Christian and Arab culture. But the action of these two religions which will lead to wars and manhunts will be fatal to the black man who will continually lose his presence. So it is these generational mixes that we call Levantine populations. An ideology applied to all of North Africa.
@fivecinco5923 Жыл бұрын
@@smokinjoe420ooh9 Your comment does not provide any added value. You don't say anything interesting.
@johnjohnson5977 Жыл бұрын
She might have had a red apple so what is the point of mentioning her hair color.
@akinpriestley3901 Жыл бұрын
You are simply amazing in your reasoning, argument and emphasis on ‘cultural continuity’. That’s one point Egyptologist conveniently ignore. You are the best. This shows that most Egyptologist with ALL their vast resources are a fraud. If an a mature like yourself with meager resources can produce ‘excellent and scholarly’ work like this, then the powers that be have outlived their usefulness and should hand over to people like you. You are consistent, honest, factual and resourceful using available evidence. Thank you. 🥰😇👏🏾🙏🏾😘
@kingmono Жыл бұрын
Thank you 🙏🏾 Appreciate the feedback...
@ta-setiwarrior1848 Жыл бұрын
I I truly enjoy your program as usual keep up the excellent work.
@TransmutedLiving Жыл бұрын
As a henna user for 10 years. Im now a natural red head like ramses lolol
@keilei8169 Жыл бұрын
I love your work and research. Thank you for your time , I can’t imagine the how long it takes to validate things that many try to hide from the world. Blessings to you.
@clairvoyant5027 Жыл бұрын
A couple of things, if I may: Hair styles like the one in question or Queen Tye's, could have once held valuable beads. Perhaps Queen Tye's hair was unbraided to removed them. Like Chebe, ruddy color Henna is still popular today. Black women also apply coconut oil and other emollients to make hair more manageable. Remember the pharaonic temples of Sudan predate Egypts. The sista is speaking in her beautiful formal "fuse-ha" Sudanese Arabic dialect. Karkar Oil contains both chebe and coconut oil, among other ingredients. Least we forget Ethiopia's shared history with Kemet. ie: Coptic lithurgy is like a phoronic language. Their curl pattern also ranges from coily to straight hair, naturally.
@kingmono Жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing!
@davepegington9066 Жыл бұрын
Deluded fool
@taurusscorpion6704 Жыл бұрын
On point. When I am out in the Sun for some time, my hair turns a reddish brown and my younger brother does this as well. When I boil Hena and put in on my hair, it loosens my coils quit a bit. Happy you are touching on eumelanin and pheomelanin.
@KuroiHato69 Жыл бұрын
My mother was African American... I will say she was DNA tested at 46% European but she was still a brown woman who had wavy/straight hair... People literally used to look at her complexion, then her hair, with confused looks... She had negroid features BUT the hair was not the typical 4C that many expected. My family has almost every texture imaginable because of so many racial mixtures throughout the years. Black, White, Yellow, Red, Brown... We are the rainbow... 😄I am sure Kemet was very much the same. Africans have every type of hair and skintone on the planet regardless of melanin content. Always surprised when people who are not ethnic have no clue about the diversity of people of colour. Even in Asia there are many sthnic groups but people tend to only see Han Chinese as Asian... So happy to see you take this topic on... Edit : Chebe powder and essential oils are both used in my family btw... I use the oil....
@kingmono Жыл бұрын
Great info... thanks for sharing
@gardeniainbloom812 Жыл бұрын
Then there are some of us who have several different textures of hair growing out of our scalp lol.
@listenup2882 Жыл бұрын
Kemet was Black. Egypt was that way when invaders and other foreigners mixed in with the indigenous Black African population.
@sammydasilva6152 Жыл бұрын
From personal experience, what black Americans refer to as straight or wavy hair is usually soft but tightly or loosely curly hair rather than true wavy or straight hair. If this were Queen Tiye's natural hair, it would indicate that she is at least half Western Eurasian, so mixed and not entirely black.
@deamorebeaute2412 Жыл бұрын
African Americans do not have 46% European DNA.
@fredrikr6280 Жыл бұрын
Don't worry my friend.... I am a mixed man.....even my darker skin brothers call me reddish....but all other non black ethnicities treats me as "black" which is fine but I also experienced cursing and slurs growing up...sooo i am not ancient Egyptian. ..i don't have their culture cause I do not bow down for osiris.....but i do own a pick comb... they found pick combs in the graves...soo ancient Egypt was black!
@christiansimon3307 Жыл бұрын
Right On Man. Osiris Has Caused "Black" People Enough Problems. Good For You.
@tmaclee2737 Жыл бұрын
@@christiansimon3307proof?
@christiansimon3307 Жыл бұрын
@@tmaclee2737 Where Has Osiris Gotten Them Today? Ask The Ancient So-Called "Egyptians".
@hihello-yv2tt Жыл бұрын
@@tmaclee2737Allah is our creator, not Osiris
@Yh-vi2sv Жыл бұрын
@@hihello-yv2tt”your”
@napoleonruss1528 Жыл бұрын
I’m from the south… Alabama. And during the summers after playing out in the sun all day during the summer, our hair would turn red and our skin would turn copper brown. Which is exactly what we see in tiye
@gardeniainbloom812 Жыл бұрын
My hair is annoyingly red with copper streaks right now. Bizzare with my sparkly greys.
@rafaeldossantos4791 Жыл бұрын
I remember that in my youth I left my dreadlocks and went to spend the summer on the Atlantic beaches for the first time. After a couple of months, the color of my dreadlocks changed totally orange and people thought I had dyed my hair.
@mamamoonie Жыл бұрын
I'm from FL and same! Sun can change the color.
@davepegington9066 Жыл бұрын
Ancient Egyptian hair wasn't just red in appearance. It was red by DNA. It's been tested. Tutankhamen has been DNA tested. Google it.. I've never seen so many ret@rds in one place. Is a full school of mentally deranged ret@rds in the comment section here
@jmcalhoun3732 Жыл бұрын
You dropped a lot of gems here. THANK YOU! I'm so happy I came across this video. Stay blessed.
@kuelimika Жыл бұрын
I missed the Live! Great job my man! 👏🏿
@kingmono Жыл бұрын
I appreciate it brother 👊🏿
@Alfasherif-mh2wg Жыл бұрын
I was eating while watching and seeing all these mummies. I guess nothing really bothers me in life. Keep up the good work king.
@kingofhearts1072 Жыл бұрын
Great content, I LOVE that opening theme/track!!!!
@Kemet3.0 Жыл бұрын
The one smoking gun here @ 41:30 is they have no shirt on...no way can a white/olive skin person work in this environment and survived. That sun was 90 to 122 degrees/ 50c in that era with no rain. From my school college years of sharing a house with an Italian guy who cut grass to get tan for tonight's clubbing, I know and have seen this up close and personal. After cutting the grass for almost 45 minutes, he finally ran in the house and realized he had burned himself and needed some cream that we inserted on his back and shoulder. The night clubbing was canceled and he was hurting, considering going to the hospital because he couldn't lay on his back. After several days, his skin began peeling off and new skin began to appear. As a result, I still have this disgusting image in my head. Our ancient ancestors (Kemet) built approximately 118 pyramids... how did white/olive skin people build that many pyramids over 1500 years? Without any shirts and shendyt around their waist. White/olive skin people would have fried like bacon on their backs and legs.
@mmengistu Жыл бұрын
Brother, I'm sorry I missed your live cast. It was a great video you made. I learned some things. We are amazing! If only most of us knew it. We need to stop entertaining these jealous petty fools by arguing about whether the Kemetiu were black as apparently you have. The argument, in a sense, makes us appear dense since it really is so obvious. We should be using the time and energy doing more research. For example, what you do, kneading all the pieces together. I found the section about the chebe powder very interesting. The black boy mummy comes from that general area. And one theory is that the process of mummification was brought from that region to Kemet at the start of the civilization. If that is the case, then that practice would have surely been known to the Kemetiu. It is these connections we need to establish for OURSELVES. They don't matter really - only to the extent that we must watch our backs and defend ourselves physically against them. Great work. Thank you. 🙏🏾 It's a Mind Game. LET'S BUILD STRONG MINDS.
@kemitamenophis3221 Жыл бұрын
The bust of queen Tiye with the nose knocked off, that you were not certain of the African hairstyle? You can see this hairstyle among the Nubian People of Kau as documented in photographs by Leni Riefenstahl. The women applied heavy butters to their hair and separated them into micro twists with the front and sides kept very short and the back allowed to hang to the shoulders.
@kingmono Жыл бұрын
Super! Thank you!
@mainakibuchi Жыл бұрын
@@kingmonokzbin.info/www/bejne/bYibXqSsaNKSrMUsi=1HjYEhEkAv_od9RD Please pay special attention to the segment starting at 5:27 of the video, especially beginning at 5:50, which addresses specifically the dyeing of hair with henna, and whether or not this is a plausible explanation for blonde and ginger haired Egyptian mummies.
@KuroiHato69 Жыл бұрын
@@kingmono - Also look into the Beja and Afar tribes... They use heavy tallow on the hair and the men's hairstyles look just like the statues and reliefs of Kemet... The women's hairstyles aren't exactly like Queen Tiye but it doesn't mean she didn't borrow some of their methods... 🤷♀
@monekaswan4010 Жыл бұрын
With Queen T, the hairstyle that you could not identify, looks like what we would call an updo, where the braids are brought to the crown of the top of her head, maybe in a ponytail and the braids would cascade longer in the back. You can add a crown on the top and you would not not see the hair gathered at the top. BTW my hair turns red more so in the summer with out manipulation, coloring or bleaching, it happens naturally from the sun...in answer to your question.
@jerseyboyantbrooks2824 Жыл бұрын
I think should you do a study or a review on the Arabs who destroyed the statues and pyramids how the people there played a key role into the destruction of most of stuff there.
@Odin00 Жыл бұрын
Imagine them there for almost 2000 years, even what I'm seeing from ancient Kemet I tell you something more has been hidden and destroyed
@awaters8784 Жыл бұрын
They are just as evil and hateful as their white counterparts.
@JunoDiovonaDemihof Жыл бұрын
Ancient Egyptians DIDN'T HAVE EUROPEAN HAIR! All ancient Egyptian Hair is 100% African. I am over 60, white "Caucasian race"... I am retired nowadays.I was a fine art restorer, I am very very very "DETAIL oriented" - I am told. Borderline, autistic... not making fun of "on the spectrum" individuals, as I am one. My point being: ALL ancient Egyptian hair featured on mummies (Ramses included) IS AFRICAN HAIR!! Absolutely no if's no but's about that fact!!!!!!!!!!!! I have been harassed and bullied off Instagram. I will not go quietly! I will TRUMPED the truth about ancient Egypt BEING AN AFRICAN - dark skinned CIVILIZATION!!!!
@weskerwillie9044 Жыл бұрын
No matter how straight African hair gets, at the roots it will always remain different from European hair. African hair has very curved, hook like roots. This is why our hair uniquely tolerates the intensive hair styles we make. European hair roots go straight down, making it easier to pluck out. This is also why they culturally and biologically could not sustain our hair styles. Even their own hair styles are VERY loose. For me, this biological evidence is why Asians and Europeans could not culturally continue the hair styles of the earlier black people who were the root of their civilizations. They dig up statues of braided people and try to argue that braiding culture was not special to Africa. Yet Africans are the only people culturally sustaining hairstyles unique to both Africa and the ancient statues they are finding outside Africa. So i tell them that those statues are proof that the modern population is biologically and culturally different from the ancient Africans who seeded their civilizations and are being represented by the ancient statues. Really, how convenient is it that Africans despite suffering the greatest Cultural disruption in history of mankind still retain hair culture but white and Asians can't?
@JunoDiovonaDemihof Жыл бұрын
@@weskerwillie9044 exactly! 100%. thank you for strengthening my opinion. best regards ✌ and... ancient Europe (up to the 1700 AD) was a much more African place. Greeks were more African looking - darker skin and very curly/wooly hair. - and, so were the Minoans, and the Phoenicians (Carthaginians) , so are/were the semitic peoples, the Jews, and even the Arabs. have African roots (ethnicity)
@weskerwillie9044 Жыл бұрын
@@JunoDiovonaDemihof I share the same views
@JunoDiovonaDemihof Жыл бұрын
@@weskerwillie9044 thank you!!!! I have been fighting this issue for close to 10 years now... I am so glad so many great new research has been done and published recently to prove us right. Not that I need to be proven right. Just, it hurts when people lie to your face and you know that they bloody know that they are lying and you are right!. lol.
@kingmono6 ай бұрын
@@JunoDiovonaDemihof hi Juno, Are you still about? We haven't been in dialogue for a while, just checking in...
@marjorievernelle9261 Жыл бұрын
Another wonderful video, this one on African hair. I know the effects of compression as a way to smooth curly kinky hair. I brush my washed hair back and tie it tight with a scunchy. It air dries straight. I also have a first cousin with tan skin like mine but with a red undertone. She has dark brown eyes and glorious dark red hair.
@eilliwrenrut2658 Жыл бұрын
I enjoy the broadcast. I do prefer the ancient art of the Ancient Egyptians displaying themselves as Black Africans. The biggest benefit of your efforts is to give your viewers a choice: do they prefer an ancient or a modern version of Ancient Egyptian blackness? Again, so that the viewer has a choice: do they prefer a modern rendering of Ancient Egyptian blackness or an ancient one? Those are the only true choices. Then, we need to focus on why it is so important, culturally and politically, for the West to - in your face - lie about this., claiming, with no evidence, that they are not Black people? Keep those images coming!
@tralosum9854 Жыл бұрын
Hi TKM, Glad you’re back! I agree with you on our hair, I get the same results when I remove my braids. I was born in red hair, it was the color of my skin. It also gets lighter in the summer. Rameses II at his age his hair should have been gray, I thought it turned red from the resin. I like your answer Henna and Indigotin. being a process. Thank you again for your awesome breakdown. Queen Tiye reconstruction is beautiful!
@sammydasilva6152 Жыл бұрын
Ehem. With no offense intended, Afro-textured hair does not magically transform into long, flowing Caucasian wavy hair after braids are removed. I know for a fact that after removing their braids, many black females' hair remained afrotextured and not wavy like Tiye's. Please don't misunderstand me; I think Afro-textured hair is cool, but Tiye's hair is obviously not Afro-textured. And if Tiye's hair is authentic, it indicates she was most likely part Western Eurasian, if not majority Eurasian and thus not entirely black.
@nirbija Жыл бұрын
@@sammydasilva6152 " flowing Caucasian wavy hair"? lol So of all of the MANY 'straight hair' peoples on the planet, it would have to be so-called "wavy hair" of 'Caucasian' found in faraway Kemet? Anyway, at the ROOT, there is not straightness in the hair. All of this is assuming that deceptive european peoples haven't sneaked in a fake mummy, to confuse/shed doubt on the reality that Kmet IS of Africans/Black people.
@rafaeldossantos4791 Жыл бұрын
@@sammydasilva6152 The same thing happens with those who have the last name "Da Silva" Da= De la (feminine article) are typical Latin-Mediterranean Portuguese and Galician surnames and who have a totally different physical appearance from the Anglo-Saxon, Germanic and Nordic ones due to extreme differences in features, hair, height and complexion. In countries legally "Whites" England, Sweden, Germany, Denmark do not consider the Portuguese and Spanish of the same race due to several differences, so leave calm and black as Queen Tiye was and stop inventing Gaslighting. The Eurasian term is fantasy.
@tralosum9854 Жыл бұрын
@@sammydasilva6152 I take no offense to your comment! Apparently you must not know many of us to see when our hair braided for a long period of time it takes the shape of the braids during a braid out! It is wavy because it's taking the shape of the woven braids! It doesn't go immediately go back to curly coils texture until you shampoo or wet the hair! Please take no offense, please do your research on our hair before coming up with comments you know nothing about. I think TKM did a great job explaining the process, start here by watching the whole video and keep it moving.
@sammydasilva6152 Жыл бұрын
@@tralosum9854 Hahaha. Research? In real life, I see and encounter a lot of black folks. Besides, there are sizeable African diaspora communities in Europe. And I've seen how naturally straightened or unrelaxed Afro-hair looks when unbraided; it's nothing like Caucasian wavy hair. So, I know exactly what I'm talking about. Whatever Queen Tiye was probably a mixed woman.
@weskerwillie9044 Жыл бұрын
This was a very very illuminating stream bro. I'm wishing you all the best in every way to keep making these kinds of contents. Literally one step above the other with you bro ✊🏾🔥🔥🔥❤
@deidrabenson361 Жыл бұрын
Thank you sooo very much for sharing all of this amazing information! Absolutely loved this video, again, as usual great work young man! I can say young man because I’m 74 years young and I just love you!!❤️❤️❤️
@bakaribradford Жыл бұрын
It’s crazy how you did a live about this and just yesterday I was thinking about the study on the Egyptian mummies hair clustering close to Tropical Africans and was wondering where it was and look at here… 🙃
@kingmono Жыл бұрын
🙌🏾I want to know more about that study!!! 👀👀
@christiansimon3307 Жыл бұрын
@bakanbradford Can You Please Share What Study That Is? Thank You.
@mmigash4real742 Жыл бұрын
You are super in your analysis, everything is on points... but i feel pity for our African brother and sister in Egypt but surely one day the naked truth will prevail.....
@NaigaT Жыл бұрын
Sometimes im concerned for their safety because of the hate arabgyptians have towards the black race.
@gsr4079 Жыл бұрын
I know you have a bunch of books on deck. I made a comment a few videos ago about the many books of Dr. Malachi Z York. In one of his recent books - "Actual Facts #3 Ham's Seed" there is a lengthy discussion about hair and mummies hair I think you would find useful. the upshot is that it would only take putting a piece of the hair under a microscope to see it is "Negroid hair". Black hair is unique on planet earth and no other race has the same coil to it.
@bnellaniyah Жыл бұрын
Just discovered your channel covering two of my favorite subjects -history and archaeology. I think you're doing an excellent work👏🏾 Agree with your conclusion on how the hair would change. I had locs for sixteen years. After I cut them I stored them in a bag. Several years later I opened the bag to look at them. I was shocked to find that they looked completely different. The color was lighter and the texture looked softer almost like cotton. On a different note, a young lady on YT made the observation that the people that live in Egy)pt today know very well that the Ancient Egy)tians were BP , which is why they have allowed the tombs/pyramids to be decimated by archaeologists. As she said, who would give someone permission to do those things to their families grave? That statement made so much sense to me. Anyway sorry for the long comment. Peace and blessings 🙏🏾
@davepegington9066 Жыл бұрын
I think it falls under fantasy. Not history. And most certainly not DNA
@MultiCfoster Жыл бұрын
Thanks for such a detailed and well presented, video, I really enjoyed and look forward to the next one.
@DS-me1ui Жыл бұрын
BRILLIANT RESPONSE! Absolutely brilliant. The ancient Egyptians were Black.
@deelask3024 Жыл бұрын
I love that we can finally find out the real facts thank you. No more cultural and racial bias I just want facts my mind craves it
@rafaeldossantos4791 Жыл бұрын
Excellent master class!!!! And excellent harmony Dm/Em+Bsus?/Am
@ayinke4551 Жыл бұрын
Another great talk 👏🏽 . Please continue to state, what you think is, the obvious in respect of the impact of mummification - as it is not obvious to many 💡
@gardeniainbloom812 Жыл бұрын
My hair is straight as a bone after a braid out. No heat, oils or chemicals required.
@sammydasilva6152 Жыл бұрын
Sure. Your claim is just a claim.
@daveramses8236 Жыл бұрын
Just found this channel...I'm hooked
@kingmono Жыл бұрын
🙏🏾
@christiansimon3307 Жыл бұрын
Wow. You've Hit On Something. This Is Huge. Groundbreaking. What A "Breakthrough". Excellent. Black People Have Always Got To Go Over And Beyond...Way Over And Beyond, Such As Is The Case Here, To Prove Anything Either To Themselves, Or To Others, With A Slightly Better Chance Of Proving Anything To Others. Great Job Bringing It All Together. Great Job.
@taurusscorpion6704 Жыл бұрын
Hena is boiled, then add coconut oil. I repeat the application upto 5 times, though not the same day. I love it. My few gray hairs turn a burgandy color. Blonde headed folk, like queen Elizabeth, used hena to get her red hair...she was not a ginger.
@dominiquewyatt6704 Жыл бұрын
What is the name of the henna that you use
@taurusscorpion6704 Жыл бұрын
@@dominiquewyatt6704 Reshma Henna. I purchased it from an India store.
@ArtificialIntelligently Жыл бұрын
Cloves: Often used for their antiseptic properties and pleasant aroma. They can help in treating scalp issues and promoting hair growth. Sesame Oil: Known for its moisturizing and conditioning properties. It's also rich in nutrients that can promote hair health. Mahtep: This ingredient is not commonly recognized in the realm of hair care or cosmetic chemistry. Peanut Oil: Generally used for its moisturizing benefits. It can also add shine to hair. Cow/Lamp Fat: Likely used as a thickening agent or for moisturization. However, it's less common in modern formulations. Bees Wax: Commonly used to provide hold in styling products like pomades and waxes. Orange Peel: Often used for its fragrance and potential to improve scalp health. - Chat GPT-4
@ArtificialIntelligently Жыл бұрын
I'll add (from Perplexity AI: ME: I'm interested in knowing whether the list of ingredients I was provided was commonly used in Ancient Egypt for hair care or other purposes and if you can confirm the information I gathered on each ingredient thus far. AI: Analysis: Cloves: While not native to Egypt, cloves were a known commodity and could have been imported for various uses, including medicinal and aromatic purposes. Sesame Oil: Sesame was cultivated in Ancient Egypt and the oil was likely used for various purposes including cosmetics and medicine. Mahtep: As previously mentioned, this ingredient is not recognized in modern or ancient contexts, including Ancient Egypt. Peanut Oil: Peanuts are not known to have been present in Ancient Egypt, so it's unlikely that peanut oil was used. Cow/Lamp Fat: Animal fats were commonly used in Ancient Egypt for various purposes, including as a base for ointments and cosmetics. Bees Wax: Beeswax was used in Ancient Egypt for various purposes, including cosmetics and embalming. Orange Peel: Citrus fruits are not native to Egypt and were likely not present in Ancient times.
@jerseyboyantbrooks2824 Жыл бұрын
Great show my girl loves you’re channel here in the USA 🇺🇸
@kingmono Жыл бұрын
🙌🏾 love to you and yours brother
@shawnahall7246 Жыл бұрын
The hair color is their main argument, saying that cuz they have reddish or sandy hair they must of been white ect. I have always thought the hair basically dies and lightens up as the mummy ages or looses it’s color etc, it’s common dang sense, I’m so happy that you have brought this to light.
@kemitamenophis3221 Жыл бұрын
The Chadian women do not apply the chebbi powder to the front of their hairline because it is their artistic beauty standard expression not to allow the front of the hair to grow as long as the rest.
@StopTheLiess8 ай бұрын
Did they say this? If not I don’t believe that I’m sure it’s to save the hairline. Cornrow styles will recede your hairline over times
@menak8870 Жыл бұрын
Dang I missed the live but another great one! Completely agree with your insights! @ 26:40 maybe im off but the hair slightly reminds me of the traditional hairstyles the Hamer tribe rock in Ethiopa, no?
@straightwithnochaser Жыл бұрын
She had edge control too!😂 Great informative video. Thank you for sharing!
@jahifaraji Жыл бұрын
A must read is the 1800s researcher..His book Gerald Massey lectures...states that africa is the birth place and through egypt we spoke to the world..other European religious writters hated him
@JunoDiovonaDemihof Жыл бұрын
51:00 You must clear your "cookies". Also, you have an upgrade waiting, which slows down everything... also, you have too too many browser and you keep too too many open at the same time.... if you have "bluetooth on" that is also a slowing down issue while you're "live"...
@mysticjourniesofzunnymatem7007 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your explanation about the changes after death.
@MisyeDiVre Жыл бұрын
If it wasn't for the Islamisation of Sudan and Egypt, the continuity would be obvious. Those Islamic garments quite literally cover up their heritage...no offense to the Muslims out there, but this is just fact.
@mansamusa9465 Жыл бұрын
FACTS
@rafaeldossantos4791 Жыл бұрын
I will always say it, no one belonging to Asia Minor, the Levant or Indo-European has not developed, has no idea and has not known the exclusive African Medu Neter culture.
@lacinabakayoko4634 Жыл бұрын
💯
@rafaeldossantos4791 Жыл бұрын
Observing their art it is evident that they have refused to portray themselves, when seeing them one sees Mongols perched on horses and birds with Chinese heads and they also identify with the representations of our ancestors, they have an extreme visual identity problem.
@qadarinimo258 Жыл бұрын
And also Christanity
@bridgescwr6136 Жыл бұрын
Young man, your content is great. Queen Tiye( her forehead) may not have been shave but traction alopecia. The ladies in Chad are considered more attractive and desirable with that forehead. Look at the video from Miss Saheil regarding Chebe powder. Also the grinder is a very large mortar and pedestal. Today they can be found in most kitchens. Keep up the good work King!
@Drutzie Жыл бұрын
Learned a lot, thank u.
@treeslikeflowers Жыл бұрын
Malcolm X had red hair but I understand what you’ve said about Ramses. Another great video. Thanks!
@rafaeldossantos4791 Жыл бұрын
I have adored the great Ta-Seti for more than 50 years. I have understood since when I was young that Neferet was a Ta-Seti warrior, is that still the case today?
@SatakhNakhte8796 Жыл бұрын
Great video!!
@PeterBagjuice Жыл бұрын
That representation of Queen Tiye is dope, where could I get a jpeg of it please. Great presentation also
@kingmono Жыл бұрын
Thank you. Instagram! @kingsmonologue
@Victory111-3 Жыл бұрын
The female mummy blonde hair appears platted and later taken down to appear braided at one time. Egyptologist were and still are busy trying to make those modern Egyptians fit the ancient Egyptians mummies using the old switcheroo moves and making strategic deceptive moves 😂
@____2080_____ Жыл бұрын
A sidebar that may prove to be significant: in 1971, after years of requesting get materials from artifacts of King Tut-ankh-amen burial, the University of Pennsylvania performed radiocarbon analysis on a few pieces of reed mats and wood buried withn the King and resulted in the date of… 846 BCE As far as we know, the PennU never made this public or formally published this. This info comes from Michael Bradley, "The Black Discovery of America" 1981, p. 46
@____2080_____ Жыл бұрын
This is to say the following: The europeans (which I include those arabs who are merely the invaders who have mixed with indigenous Nile Valley peoples to merely become browner) not only lied about the phenotypes of the Ancient Egyptians. They lied about the dates. They fabricated the events as to insert themselves into history as a heritage. They stole artifacts to create/invent the three major western religions of Christianity, Islam and Judiasm. These three religions are not BC in dating and were all inventions of far later dates, during the times/dates of [433 BCE when the Roman Empire finally established the fusion of Roman Imperial government with the Ancient Egyptian priesthood, 1040 BCE - 1105 BCE when Solomon bar Issac, invented the literary work called the Pentateuch, writing the text of those works for the first time in human history of the character Moses, and much later, after the disintegration of the Ottoman Empire at the eve of World War I and Jesuit and Jewish scholars helped the House of Saud create the religious book called the Qu'ran (Koran) for the first time in history, released to the travelers who embarked on the first human pilgrimage to Mecca in history, a new created city bases off of archaic Sufi legends.] This work of the channel is incomplete WITHOUT ALSO dismantling the falsehoods and falsifications that these other additional details of the Ancient Egyptians that are the lynchpins of lies and deceptions about history.
@kingmono Жыл бұрын
I'm currently reading works by an author called Anatoly Fomenko. I know what you are saying above to be true. I encourage you to purchase his works... im an currently producing a thesis on the subject 👊🏿 Thank you for sharing
@weskerwillie9044 Жыл бұрын
@@kingmonolike I said earlier, scary stuff. Could lies really be that great historically? This makes me feel like I'm in this ocean of murky water and I'm just floating.
@weskerwillie9044 Жыл бұрын
@@kingmonoif a professor could mathematically calculate the divergence of all languages to the African continent, I believe the same can be done with cultural continuity and divergence on the African continent. Given the cultural disruption we have faced we are undoubtedly quite resilient. Still, the remarkable preservation of material culture among many Africans that remain virtually kemetic in nature despite greatest distance traveled could be a time line evidence.
@emiproperty2041 Жыл бұрын
Thx for applying facts in multiple stages. You create foundation to the subjects that you are speaking on. I'm enjoying this very much. In Amerikkka, they teach us that black folk lives started on the slave ship Jesus. Take this Bible and have faith. I appreciate you. Respect 4 life 216 Ibrahim
@gardeniainbloom812 Жыл бұрын
I for one missed you. I know you deserve a holiday but my goodness, a holla would be nice. Don't do it again. Oh and pretty please leave the livechat replay available for those who can't make the live, unless of course the trolls were out of control. Mwah!
@kingmono Жыл бұрын
🤣🤣🤣🤣 i'll bare this in mind... The live chat replay is available, at least I thought it was... it does play up a lot
@inspectatech4 ай бұрын
Tech comment (fyi) : ctrl + or - on the keyboard will zoom in & out. So will ctrl key and scrolling the wheel on the mouse. (hope this helps)
@arronhaggerty8426 Жыл бұрын
If you look at Eritrean people, Sudanese people, and Ethiopians have hair that is really long, even west Africans tureg people have long wavy thick hair. Black North Africans have that kind of hair.
@kingofhearts1072 Жыл бұрын
Tiye is a NUBIAN name along with her mother and father, Yuya & Tuya which are NUBIAN names.
@rayzakyan4008Күн бұрын
The question of hair can be tackled through the angle of hair treatment/regiment: since hair styles were very elaborate there must be text around the sacred nature of hair and what each hair style means and how to achieve the look. Or how to take care of them. Or what type of hair style had to be made during rituals. Or certain rits of passage like going from single to married. And married to motherhood.
@JunoDiovonaDemihof Жыл бұрын
Indigo powder can be eaten... Indigo is edible and can be consumed as a tea. Not only are the leaves and stems used, but also the root, flower and seed depending on the season.
@hsny76h4l9 Жыл бұрын
What does Indigo powder do?
@JunoDiovonaDemihof Жыл бұрын
@@hsny76h4l9 google it
@myrawells5691 Жыл бұрын
Queen Ti is remarkable so beautiful
@RikiSmith1 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for explaining that there are no mummies with thick lips, or breasts, or fat! It is NOT common sense to know that. And unconsciously I have been looking for Those traits in mummies so I can identify which ones are black like me. Please don’t feel like you wasted your time because, I did not know and I’m sure many others of us did not know. Thank you for the work that you do. Fascinating video.
@MaLiArtworks186 Жыл бұрын
I am black but don't have thick lips...
@RikiSmith1 Жыл бұрын
@@MaLiArtworks186 i’m sorry, but, were you replying to me? I’m assuming you’re still alive so your lips don’t matter. I’m purely speaking of mummies lips. My son has thin lips and so does my daughter it’s got nothing to do with what I was responding to.
@americanjulamaghan7359 Жыл бұрын
The briads are extention. Resin is treated on the extentions.
@arlenedundas6373 Жыл бұрын
Greetings ! Beet root can also be used for colouring hair red
@sharongillesp10 ай бұрын
When sculpting I imagine the figure’s hair is being stylized: made thicker, longer and more layered. If I had a sculpture done of me I’d definitely want more hair than I normally have had. These were human beings, with vanity, just like the rest of us.
@charlenegraham1923 Жыл бұрын
Some depictions do look like wigs but that doesn't mean they had straight hair underneath. Black people in America wear natural wigs, wigs with braids, etc. because braided styles take forever and long naturals take far more care and pre-planning than anyone (but a black woman) would believe. Plus, many of these depictions may represent queens right after marriage, right after they had their heads shaved and were wearing wigs as "crowns" until their hair grew back (since regular wig wearing in a hot place is infeasible).
@uniquemahogany1 Жыл бұрын
I'm so called African American and my siblings and me have brown and red hair.. what we call sandy red naturally. My mom her hair is sandy red she dye it black because she don't like the red tent. My baby her hair is sandy red. Also Malcom x had red hair.. also for the stringy straight Hai black elderly people when they get older most of them the hair relaxes more and becomes straight and stringy. My grandparents hair has always done this. Also the braid out is correct. I have the exact same hair texture wavy and people think I'm mixed with something hut I'm not. This text runs in my family. When pomade or any creme is added the hair stretches out resembling exactly queen tye's texture. This is normal, and will stay until the hair is washed thoroughly. I bet they won't let water hit it. Lol
@jojoyah_1236 Жыл бұрын
I would like to point out to you that the JAMAICANS reinvigorated and brought back the dreadlocks hairstyle. I have seen many Egyptian paintings with men and women wearing dreadlocks, as well as mummies with dreadlocks. In some parts of Africa, such Ghana for example, some people look down on "dreadlocks".
@deelask3024 Жыл бұрын
I'm very disappointed that people didn't figure this out a long time ago it makes me sad that I can't find out the one hundred percent truth of history and partially it's because of people's biased opinions on race thank you very much for your diligent work it is so cool toosi truth. Totally disappointed in History channel 2
@kingofhearts1072 Жыл бұрын
Natron is was applied to ALL of the mummies so exposure to natron not only colors the hair but it straightens it as well. Besides the fact that all kinds of products like "goat" fat was applied to the hair on living people as well. The Afar and Beja are very well known for using fat products on the hair.
@DreDre3318 Жыл бұрын
Our hair color and African hair colors, in general, are actually Shades of Black for the majority. If you Google "Color Spectrum Shades of Black", our hair color would be within that spectrum with people falling into the Brownish Black look. If you Google "Color Spectrum Shades of Brown", that is clearly more along the lines of Europeans as well as "Color Spectrum Shades of Blond or Ginger" (which indicates a lack of melanin). Some scientists see it as characteristic of Albinism given there are different forms of it. It is said that "In fact, around 75 to 85 percent of the people in the world have some shade of black hair. While black hair is common in nearly every part of the world, it's practically the only hair color naturally occurring in certain parts of the world, like Africa and Asia."
@adambyars8763 Жыл бұрын
Peace and blessings 💪🏾🤞🏾
@ebonyfair9487 Жыл бұрын
That’s my hair with a braid out
@orlandoevansministriestv5740 Жыл бұрын
Black people are VERY diverse. Dark, lighter, straight, soft curly and kinky hair are very common. It’s hard to put us in a box.
@jasminenwhitaker9717 Жыл бұрын
Good evening everyone blessings 🙌 🙏 ✨️ ❤ Great topic 👍
@npursuit Жыл бұрын
26:27 hairstyle reminds me if the hair that is encased in clay... let me look up something...
@Lenichehouse Жыл бұрын
Some of the Nubians are still are there in Egypt in the south in Answan but are few in numbers and shrinking and also we have such people with weavey hair among all African populations from Cape to Cairo.
@kingmono Жыл бұрын
I have nubian friends. Beautiful people.
@NaigaT Жыл бұрын
Keep up the great work..
@catherinesterling1685 Жыл бұрын
So if they had european hair like whytes say why didn't they make straight hair wgs
@djeio Жыл бұрын
Everyday i argrue with these uninformed points and i have to shiw them taht thir very hero Hawass write in his medical journals that henna dye was uesd by the mummies and that the mummification process relaxes hair
@yashursuntheamericanindian Жыл бұрын
It is not that hard. When you die, your hair dies. Dead hair straightens, alive hair grows up and out like nature, trees, bushes, grass
@daisyn3gr0n10 ай бұрын
I thought hair and nails are already dead
@HughEMC Жыл бұрын
I've seen many mummies with Afro textured hair but those are usually hidden. Afro was also very popular so Tiye could also have been featured with an Afro wig in her famous head bust
@davepegington9066 Жыл бұрын
Those are hidden... So when things don't confirm to your fantasy it's a lie. When it doesn't exist it's "hidden" convenient
@HughEMC Жыл бұрын
@davepegington9066 huh?you idiot. As I've written, I've *seen* these mummies. You have to actively research & dig to locate them ie: hidden. It's why you haven't seen them because they're not commonly displayed which makes it easier for people like you to maintain such a biased mindset you glaze over a sentence & read something into it that wasn't said. Operating words: "I've seen many mummies with Afro-textured hair" How do you hear "they don't exist" in this sentence? How do you hear me pointing to something no ones seen & claiming the reason you haven't seen it is because it's hidden? Again I said I've *SEEN* these mummies. #readingcomperhensionfail Google mummies with Afro hair & just click on images
@HughEMC Жыл бұрын
@@davepegington9066 Universities & museums obviously have these remains but they're not on display ie: *hidden* like #UanMuhuggiag bka *The Black mummy of the Green Sahara* the oldest man made mummy in the eastern hemisphere. Only Peruvian artificial mummies date older in the world.
@realthelonious2592 Жыл бұрын
@@HughEMC Notice how cave oops sorry dave* fails to reply after your statement, truly hilarious 😂
@HughEMC Жыл бұрын
@realthelonious2592 yeah. If he does respond he'd either have to admit his error (which is highly unlikely) or he'd have to spout even more ridiculous mental gymnastics- he literally put words in my mouth as if the written text wasn't sitting there in his face. Bias is powerful. I meant to add that the "Black Mummy of the Green Sahara" was locked away in a Itialian Universities artifact drawer from 1958 until the 2000's. In other worlds it was "hidden" until a less racist less biased grad student came accross these incredible remains.
@mansamusa9465 Жыл бұрын
Why aren't artifacts shown on this channel and Kuelimika not shown in the African Kemet deniars like Kemet (Fake) Queen, Metatron. The deniers show the same few artifacts, Rahotep, The questionable Nefertiti busts, etc. Also, why are their positions "to prove their non-Black" instead of proving they are whatever the claim they are...Things that make you go hmmm. Also why don't they debate people?
@rafaeldossantos4791 Жыл бұрын
I think I wrote something to him, but the majority of Metatron's followers are Eurocentric video gamers believing the ridiculousness that the first civilization of humanity was European in the Middle Ages and with the aesthetics of Tolkien's Elves of Middle Earth, I think it would be A big waste of time debating with those types of people.
@mansamusa9465 Жыл бұрын
@@rafaeldossantos4791 A debate wouldn't be to convince them, but used as an example for us
@rafaeldossantos4791 Жыл бұрын
@@mansamusa9465 The most ironic thing of all is that modern Egyptian impostors learned about Km.t thanks to Anta Diop
@mansamusa9465 Жыл бұрын
@@rafaeldossantos4791 Exactly. They never called it Kemet until 2023, to try and counter the truth
@rafaeldossantos4791 Жыл бұрын
What Eurocentrists hate is that the best privileged white specialists of African prehistory like Cristopher Ehret affirm and teach evidence with complete tranquility that all Nile civilizations are 100% black and 100% African, highlighting that Km.t is an exclusively African civilization. and he is neither Afro-Asiatic nor Afro-Mediterranean, I doubt that many would want to debate him.
@jubeidu0111 ай бұрын
Hi King, very deep information, I appreciate it a lot. When you started to talk about how black people are naturally Red Headed, that got me thinking about the Red headed giants they found in the pyramids in China. Do you has any thoughts on that?
@blackafrikansoulja9093 Жыл бұрын
You did a very good job she looks just like her.
@soulsgaming1851 Жыл бұрын
Looks like miniture length locks
@kingmono Жыл бұрын
It basically is...
@sanlee9632 Жыл бұрын
What is the title and artist of the music in the beginning and and of the video?
@health_is_wealth333 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this great video! Have you all seen the Documentary ' 400 Years Without a Comb '? If not, check it out! ❤
@thareamisskaren10 ай бұрын
I believe that her hair was Braided and grave robbers stole the stones or precious jewels that were braided within her hair,And that is why her hair is in the state or what it is now.
@gloriasamuel5685 Жыл бұрын
Black is beautiful. Say it loud, I'm black and I'm proud. James Brown. Love you phenotype.
@kingmono Жыл бұрын
🤣🤣🤣🤣👊🏿🙌🏾
@gloriasamuel5685 Жыл бұрын
@@kingmono Hi Phenotype, check this out. Bible, in the beginning God created the heavens and the Earth and darkness (black people) was on the face of the deep. You're doing a great job. Even the bible they gave says. Black people were everywhere on the earth. (Darkness, black, people was all over on the face of the earth).
@saxupyourlife8607 Жыл бұрын
Thank you very much❤❤❤
@uniquemahogany1 Жыл бұрын
We wear most these hairstyles today from all over the world. The one queen you didn't know the hairstyle it looks like a Mohawk or what is also called a mullet... look at some videos of black Americans and them doing quick weaves to achieve the look... it looks exactly the same. Also in the 80s and 90s women in America achieved the same look with their natural hair with molding products like gel and spritz. My husband uses henna dye and when it gets old the gray hair turns red... he has black and red hairs right know from bejin/henna derivative wearing off on his Grey hairs