Ancient Kemet (Egypt) was an indigenous African civilization known as the "Black Land," rooted in Nile Valley cultures, which gradually transformed through conquests (Persian, Greek, Roman) and later, the Arab Islamic conquests starting in the 7th century CE, leading to Arabization, Islamization, and the distinct Arabic Republic of modern Egypt, shifting its primary cultural identity from indigenous African to Arab-Islamic, though strong African connections persist.
Black Pharaohs Built It. Foreign Invaders Took It. Here's How Egypt Changed Hands Forever. The oldest monarchy in the world was built by indigenous Africans.
With the discovery of the ancient city of Ta-Seti, this truth is now undeniable. The progenitors of Kemet's monarchies were black people who established the foundation of what would become the world's greatest civilization.
The first 12 dynasties (3150-1783 B.C.E.) were entirely African. During this remarkable 1,367-year period, they unified Kemet as one nation, built all the pyramids, wrote the great literary texts that comprise the Book of the Dead, and laid the foundations of human civilization.

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