The Black Rulers, Military Leaders, Clergy, and Moors Who Saved Medieval Europe
The purpose of this title is to debunk the white supremacist narrative of Europe’s Middle Ages. It begins by revealing that the first Europeans were migrants from Africa in antiquity followed by soldiers recruited by the Roman Empire, Christian evangelists from both the north and northeastern Africa (today’s Middle East) then populated by blacks. They and their progeny were the center of European history through the Middle Ages.
That progeny became Europe’s nobles, royals, bourgeoisie, and leading clerics of the Catholic Church. They were known as “blue-bloods” because they were fair or very light-skinned blacks whose veins appeared to be blue as seen through the skin. They have chapters or krewes that claim to be connected to Europe’s monarchial rulers. According to the Economist (2016), there are the blue-blood organizations—“krewes,” in New Orleans’s Mardi Gras parlance—that have been parading since the late 1800s, when the festival was introduced to the city by French Catholic settlers who were attesting to lineage to the European aristocracy that ruled through the Middle Ages.
This group in both the Old and New Worlds were recognized as Moors because their ancient lineage can be traced to Mauritania, in West Africa, and Kemet along the Nile Valley in East Africa.The Moors are Black Africans. They once constituted Rome’s finest soldiers, numerous emperors. Their prodigy served as renowned knights during the Middle Ages that saved Europe from pagan violence, pillage, and chaos. In addition, they and prodigy were the founders and evangelist of Christianity. As learned men, they conveyed ancient Kemet philosophy and science transcribed by Greco-Latin and Islamic scholars.
That knowledge would give birth to the Renaissance and Modern Era’s ingenuity and invention. Black and brown complexioned, they were leaders among Europe’s nobles and bourgeoisie that arose in number after the 12th century when trade and commerce was triggered by trading settlements and routes established in the holy lands by virtue of the Crusades. Intermarriage thrived to enhance hegemony and lineage. The African lineage as displayed on the “coat of arms” depicts one or more Black Africans as father(s) or seeder(s) of the family as bestowed by kings and/or emperors. The idolized images of Virgin Mary and Jesus the Savior of Our Souls and God in human form were depicted as black. Statutes to blacks who fought for Christianity are found throughout Europe and Russia. Black Africans had god-like status until their capture and enslavement in the continent beginning in the 16th and 17th centuries to extract agricultural and mining wealth from the New World.
This book shatters the “white supremacist paradigm” accorded to the Middle Ages as a triumph of white chivalry in a quest to save Eurocentric Christianity, civilization, and white womanhood from all these Islamic, swarthy, savage, Othello-like, infidels standing in the way of human progress. Mainstream history was rewritten to falsely proclaim that blacks had no meaningful presence in human history prior to their enslavement and conversion to humble Christian servants.
To ensure this myth is believed, the black and brown portraits and sculptures of the ruling class had to be either whitened or remodelled to appear idealistically Caucasian or Nordic. The book unravels the mainstream narrative from the so-called white Roman occupation to the Renaissance. It looks at key figures, knightly order, royals and emperors that were either black, brown, or blue blood prodigies who fought off intruders from Asia, particularly from Central Russia, Turkey’s Ottoman Empire, and Islamic Africa. The case and evidence that they served as saviours of Europe’s civilization and human progress that would be free to pursue a rebirth and reconnection to Africa’s philosophy and science from its ancient past.