Well, I looked into all of the links provided and I am still at a loss...
Bro. Clyde, can you offer any etymology on this word ALKEBULAN?
How do you define etymology and what would be acceptable to you?
...
Well, I looked into all of the links provided and I am still at a loss...
Bro. Clyde, can you offer any etymology on this word ALKEBULAN?
How do you define etymology and what would be acceptable to you?
...and so far it has not been dated that far back in time even in any translations. But when I look at root words that compose the word 'ALKEBULAN' I can accept that Dr. Ben perhaps has formed his findings on root words like
Kebulan Gebu Jebus El-Gebel ...
I see these root words in early script and therefore, I believe Dr. Ben and you, on this basis.
The name ‘Africa’ stems from the time when the Roman Empire took occupation of the majority of the continent. As is the practice in these type war times, the “Romans sought to completely disconnect the indigenous Africans with their culture, deities, and knowledge. This could only be successfully done by renaming the all archetypical icons, thereby disconnecting the significance, meaning, and sacredness from any specific archetype.”
(http://redsea1.websitetoolbox.com/post?id=2562581)
Alkebulan is the oldest and the only word of indigenous origin