Google helps validate Jews’ ancient history in Israel.

Arabs did not exist as an ethnic community until Islam in the Middle Ages, not in ancient history.

Eminent scholar of Arab history Professor Peter Webb…

“Finding the first Arabs”

“To begin reconstructing the history of people who called themselves 'Arabs', we must cross into the Islamic period.

During the century after Muhammad (d. 632), poetry is recorded in which individuals make novel expressions of being Arab. The first Islamic century is also when Arabic-language inscriptions proliferated across Arabia and the Middle East (Figure 2). And the first two centuries of Islam witnessed both the earliest discernable attempts to write Arab history in Arabic, and the genesis of genealogies and myths of origins that tie pan-Arabian populations together into one ethnic community. The evidence indicates that people became conscious of being Arab and took the first tangible steps to define Arab identity after their conversion to Islam.

The stark proliferation of 'Arabs' following Islam's rise invites the correcting of old stereotypes and paves new avenues to understand Arabness. The first people who called themselves Arabs were the elite of the early Caliphate. They inhabited new towns founded by Muslims across the Middle East (e.g. the places we know as Cairo, Basra, Baghdad), and they rigorously distinguished themselves from Bedouin. As far as my research has taken me, being Arab did not signify an antique sense of Arabian nomadic origin, but was instead a novel means for early Muslims to express what it meant to belong to their exclusive group of converts to Islam and to the elite of a new, mostly urban empire. Arabness emerges as an end-product of the remarkable success of early Islam whereby the new religion, conquest and reorganisation of the Middle East created a whole new way in which Middle Eastern peoples understood their communities.”


View attachment 791032

7E763753-90A8-4668-A43C-1976E25C4909.jpeg
 
Arabs did not exist as an ethnic community until Islam in the Middle Ages, not in ancient history.

Eminent scholar of Arab history Professor Peter Webb…

“Finding the first Arabs”

“To begin reconstructing the history of people who called themselves 'Arabs', we must cross into the Islamic period.

During the century after Muhammad (d. 632), poetry is recorded in which individuals make novel expressions of being Arab. The first Islamic century is also when Arabic-language inscriptions proliferated across Arabia and the Middle East (Figure 2). And the first two centuries of Islam witnessed both the earliest discernable attempts to write Arab history in Arabic, and the genesis of genealogies and myths of origins that tie pan-Arabian populations together into one ethnic community. The evidence indicates that people became conscious of being Arab and took the first tangible steps to define Arab identity after their conversion to Islam.

The stark proliferation of 'Arabs' following Islam's rise invites the correcting of old stereotypes and paves new avenues to understand Arabness. The first people who called themselves Arabs were the elite of the early Caliphate. They inhabited new towns founded by Muslims across the Middle East (e.g. the places we know as Cairo, Basra, Baghdad), and they rigorously distinguished themselves from Bedouin. As far as my research has taken me, being Arab did not signify an antique sense of Arabian nomadic origin, but was instead a novel means for early Muslims to express what it meant to belong to their exclusive group of converts to Islam and to the elite of a new, mostly urban empire. Arabness emerges as an end-product of the remarkable success of early Islam whereby the new religion, conquest and reorganisation of the Middle East created a whole new way in which Middle Eastern peoples understood their communities.”


View attachment 791032

There were Arabs long before Islam. The Akkadians were Arabs from the Arabian peninsula.

See Akkadian Empire. It predates Judaism.
 
Damn, you're insecure. There's more to the Middle East than Jewish history. By the time of Adam and Eve Sumer had agriculture and irrigation, a written language and sailboats.

Adam and Eve were Jews. In the Jewish Bible, Adam (Jewish word) names his wife Chava, a Jewish word. Chava became Eve in other languages. In your Arabic Koran, Eve isn’t even mentioned.

Sumerians were not Arabs.
 
There were Arabs long before Islam. The Akkadians were Arabs from the Arabian peninsula.

See Akkadian Empire. It predates Judaism.

Renowned Middle East historian, pioneering specialist in Arab history, Professor Bernard Lewis:

“In recent years a new doctrine has been developed in Arab countries. Arab historiography has extended the Arab identity to all or nearly all Semitic peoples.“
 
Adam and Eve were Jews. In the Jewish Bible, Adam (Jewish word) names his wife Chava, a Jewish word. Chava became Eve in other languages. In your Arabic Koran, Eve isn’t even mentioned.

Sumerians were not Arabs.

The Akkadians were Arabs. They began migrating north about 10,000 years ago as the peninsula became more arid. They supplied Frankincense and Myrrh to the pharaohs and even King Herod.
 
Renowned Middle East historian, pioneering specialist in Arab history, Professor Bernard Lewis:

“In recent years a new doctrine has been developed in Arab countries. Arab historiography has extended the Arab identity to all or nearly all Semitic peoples.“

Lol 🤣 Bernard Lewis?

 

Forum List

Back
Top