EGYPTIAN WORDS OF IGBO ORIGIN - Onyeji Nnaji
There is no part of
Egypt today that sustains the ancient culture of the eminent Egyptian
civilization of old. The first ever civilization after the flood that involved
almost the entire continents of the world was lost to the Arabian world whom
Egyptians had allowed to take over their land. What this aptitude paid the
Egyptians with was the loss of their history and origin. It is very pathetic to
hear that all the ancient books excavated in Egypt were sold out by the Arabs
who did not and were not prepared to know what historical relevance those
tabulates hold to Egyptian history. That is why the position of pharaoh, which
was one of the most sophisticated monarchies in the history of Africa, was
claimed to have ever been taken by a foreigner different from the pharaoh
bloodline.
I believe that such
faulty historians spreading lies in the bid to assigning certain credence to
the foreigner who did not have a history actually did not know the meaning of
the word Pharaoh. For if they knew,
they would understand that it was a family affair which was never done by
selection. In a condition where a people had lost their heritage to foreign
culture and its civilization, the only surviving historical proof is language.
These include terms and their meanings, names of the inhabitants; especially
those involved in different legendary acts. Language also includes writings. As
we progress we shall understand that Egypt became much more disillusioned to
the point that the name of the architect who designed the stepped pyramid in
Saqqara was replaced with Imhotep. Imhotep was still associated with the cosmic
architecture (see Bauval and Brophy, Imhotep:
The African Architect of the Cosmos). But the Egyptian Book of the Dead (P. 120) proves these later records
wrong. We shall get the real architect of the cosmos in the succeeding pages.
Language made us to know him, not history.
The most contribution
this research work has to African readers is its unmentionable attempts to
reconstruct African history by tracing the genesis of the world as well as
Africa from various perspectives. As the passage way to the western part of
this world, the survivor of the flood had the Sahara planes as their
uninterrupted route out of Igbo land, many stopped in Egypt to form a
population there. Igbo popularized the language of ancient Egyptian because it
was, by the explanation above, the foundational language of the founding
fathers. A later crusade was occasioned by the civilizer who also went to Egypt
with the prevailing culture in the east. To this end, Egyptian words with Igbo
sounds and meanings are numerous. Citable among them are in the table below:
Egypt words
|
Meaning
|
Igbo
|
Meaning
|
Tuf
|
To
throw away.
|
Tufuo
|
To
throw away.
|
Akhu
|
Fire
or light
|
Oku
|
Fire
or light
|
Aru
|
Body
or form
|
Aru
|
Body
|
Ba
|
Heart
|
Obi
|
Heart
|
Egypt
|
Black
soil
|
Ojikputu
(Orlu dialect)
|
Pitch
black
|
(h)ike
|
Power
or strength
|
Ike
|
Power
or strength
|
Xut
(pronounced kut)
|
Sunrise
|
Kutee
(Igbo Nkanu)
|
To
wake or rise
|
Sa
|
To
shine
|
Sa/saa
|
To
shine
|
Satu
|
Shine
down
|
Satuo
(Orlu dialect)
|
Shine
down
|
Tua
|
Praise
or glorify
|
Tuo/too
|
Praise
or glorify
|
Xerkert
(pronounced kirkir)
|
Pieces
|
Kirikiri
|
Pieces
|
Huru
|
The
day dawns
|
Horo
(Orlu dialect)
|
The
day dawns
|
Musi/mose/msi,
|
To
give birth
|
Mmusi
|
To
give birth to many children
|
Miri
|
Water
|
Miri
|
Water
|
It was amazing to read
Diop Anta’s best seller book, African
Origin of Civilization (P.184), pointing
out that Egyptian word for water is Miri.
As mentioned on the table above, fire was called Ahku in Egypt. Akhu is
also the sacred vernacular name for the Giza Pyramid. Its native Igbo related
name tries to suggest that an Igbo-speaking team of ancient engineers possibly
constructed it. Of course, the mystery in the Giza pyramid lies on its
reference to Ra “sun-god”. This paper
suggests that the architect who may have masterminded the issues of the
pyramids in Egypt must have been metaphysics of the sun mystery.
If this is true about
the pyramids in Egypt, we may associate these mystic views to the highest contributor
of the Egyptian metaphysical books collectively entitled the Egyptian Book of the Dead, Ani. Ani wrote
virtually all the mystic information about the sun, both as a body and as a
venerable concept. The Egyptian Book of
the Dead even associates Ra to
Ani; he was called Osiri Ani. It is
indicative from this point that Ani is duly Igbo. Ani was described in the
Egyptian records thus:
The
papyrus of Ani is undated, and no facts are given in it concerning the life of
Ani, whereby it would be possible to fix its exact place in the series of the
illustrated papyri of the Theban period to which it belongs. His full titles
are:--
suten in maa an hesb
hetep neter en neteru nebu (Royal scribe veritable, scribe and
accountant of the divine offerings of all the gods.)
mer tenti en nebu Abtu
an hetep neter en (The governor of the granary of the
lords of Abydos, scribe of the divine offerings
of) nebu Uast. (the
lords of Thebes);
…
He is said to be "beloved of the lord of the North and South" and to
“love him”. The name of the king thus referred to cannot be stated. That Ani's
rank of “royal scribe” [2] was not titular only is shown by the addition of the
word “veritable,” and his office of scribe and accountant of all the gods was
probably one of the highest which a scribe could hold.[3] His other offices of
“governor of the granary of the lords of Abydos,” and “scribe of the sacred
property of the lords of Thebes,” further prove his rank and importance, for
Abydos and Thebes were the most ancient and sacred cities of Egypt.
(Book of the Dead, 120).
The Egyptian word for ‘gods’
is NTR or Neter. It means “Guardian or Watch person”. This word was
originally derived from the semantic corroboration of the acts of the gods. The
role of the gods is primarily the service of a guardian. The Igbo have the
equivalent of this word in the connotation of the same actions, role or
duty/function. Its Igbo equivalent is Onetara/neta.
The meaning is the same; “He who guards and watches” or “to watch” over a thing
on behalf of someone else. The Igbo idea is more explicit, for it shows that
these lesser gods are answerable to a Higher Being, the Almighty God. The
highest and oldest of the known gods of Egypt was Ptah. He was the father of all the other gods. His name, Ptah, means in Egyptian, “He who
fashions things by carving and opening up”. The Igbo form of this
word is Okpu-atu; meaning “He who
molds/fashions things by carving and opening up”. Igbo word tuo/atu means both the same thing, “to
carve and to open a hole”.
Researches reveal that Ptah’s rule over Egypt began as early as
21,000 BC. If his name and the collective name for the gods of Egypt, Neter, were Igbo in origin, it implies
that an ancient civilization of Igbo extraction existed in West Africa, where
the gods ruled, (not particularly men) by a time far beyond 22,000 BC. Then, it
is apparent that Egypt was an originally Igbo-speaking civilization and that
early Egyptians were Igbo. These linguistic pieces of evidence suggest that the
earliest Egyptian civilization (at the time when the gods ruled Egypt) before
the advent of Pharaohnic rule; in 3,100 BC. You could imagine that Ptah’s son
was called Ra, meaning
‘Sun/Daylight’. Its Igbo equivalent in Afa
(the cult language of Igbo native priests) is still Ra which means ‘Sun/Daylight’.
Here are list of other Igbo words that survived in Ancient Egyptian words :
The grandson of Ra was called Osiris by the Greeks and Asar by the Egyptians. Osiris was associated with the number “seven”. This same view is given recognition by the Igbo among whom Asaa means “seven”. Osiris is associated with horrific cosmic energy (seven). In the Igbo geometry, the number “seven” is associated with the highest cosmic energy. From Nnaji’s detailed explanation of this meaning of the mystic number (seven) in the Igbo cosmology, we shall cite a little to broaden our understanding of the term.
The
Igbo have various esoteric ideas associated with the figure seven. Seven is
usually the climax of some mystic activities that are connected to energy and
forces. Some folktales recognized this mystery of seven.
Seven
means the climax of power. It marks the completion of a revolutionary cycle in
different mystic schools. It identifies the realm (position) where the highest
power lies and a height almost unattainable. One of the ancient Igbo proverbs
says thus, aria ugwu asa, erie nri asa, when one climbs seven hills (seven
mystic heights), he eats seven food (attains higher state of consciousness).
From ancient time, the Igbo associated the terminal height or mystic realms
with the number seven. To become a member of Ndi Ichie in Agulu, the
undertakers are made to chew seven seeds of Ose Nshi (Alligator pepper) to be
launched into the spirit of the ancestors. Except
the seeds are up to seven, he would not see aught. (Aspects, 149, 152)
Egypt’s most ancient
god is called Amun/Amen/Ammun. He is a god residing under the earth; an abode
known to ancient Egypt as Aemnta. The
name of this god implies “Hidden inside the bowels of Earth”. According to
Martin Bernal the word Amen
is derived from imn which is
pronounced Amana. These two words
have Igbo origins. Igbo equivalent of imn
is ime ana, and means “inside the
earth”, while amana is equally an
Igbo word referring to the Earth religion, further supporting an originally
Igbo-based Egyptian religion and civilization. It means original, main,
integral or son of the soil.
Egyptian borrowings from Igbo are in
two groups: words borrowed from Orlu/Okigwe dialectal family are far older in
chronological time than those borrowed from the Anambra dialectal family or
Nsukka. The reason for their
chronological order might be because Orlu/Okigwe are held by Igbo historians
to belong to the autochthonous (non-migrant descendants of Homo erectus)
group. This implies that the earliest roots of Egyptian civilization, when the
gods and not men ruled Egypt, began among the autochthons of Igbo land, but did
not end there. Latter-day migrant Igbo priest-kings continued to exert
influences in Pharaohnic Egyptian civilization as shall be clarified in other
papers.
Thank you for your inspiring information
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