Posts

Black Kingdoms That Pre-Date Rome

Image
The classical historiographical canon long centered Mediterranean polities such as Athens, Carthage, and Rome. Yet, across Africa, a vibrant constellation of powerful states and kingdoms flourished long before Rome’s meteoric rise in the first millennium BCE. These African polities developed complex governance systems, extensive trade networks, durable cultural traditions, and profound intellectual achievements that challenge reductive notions of ancient “civilization” as exclusively Greco-Roman phenomena. As the historian Toyin Falola has noted, “African societies were not passive backdrops to external influences; they were dynamic agents of historical change long before the Mediterranean world assumed its classical prominence.” This analysis focuses on several key Black kingdoms that pre-date or are contemporaneous with early Rome, analyzing their political structures, economic foundations, cultural legacies, and historical significance.   The Kingdom of Kush (c. 1070 BC...

The Black Origins of Philosophy

Image
  Philosophy is often presented in surveys as beginning with ancient Greek thinkers such as Thales, Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle. Yet this framing obscures a deeper and broader lineage of critical thought that emerged before and alongside the Greek tradition. Many of the earliest philosophical ideas in recorded history were articulated in Black African civilizations — especially in Ancient Egypt (Kemet) and the Nubian world, as well as through enduring traditions in West and Central Africa such as Ifá , Akan thought, and Mande epistemologies. These traditions formulated systematic questions about existence, ethics, knowledge, fate, and the nature of reality long before their European counterparts. The goal of this essay is not to diminish Greek philosophy, but to center the Black origins of philosophy and clarify that philosophical reasoning did not begin in a vacuum. Rather, it developed in multiple regions and societies — with Egypt playing a foundational role — and inf...

The Richmond Jail as a Holding Pen for Interstate Slave Traders

Image
In the historiography of American slavery, the focus has often rested on plantations as the central sites of exploitation. Yet the machinery of slavery—particularly during the nineteenth-century domestic slave trade—relied just as critically on urban infrastructures of confinement. Among the most notorious of these was the Richmond Jail , a city jail that functioned not merely as a penal institution but as a crucial holding pen for interstate slave traders . Located in the commercial heart of Virginia, Richmond became one of the principal hubs linking the Upper South to the booming slave markets of the Deep South. The Richmond Jail stood at the center of this human trafficking network, embodying the fusion of state power, private profit, and racial domination. In this presentation we examine the Richmond Jail’s role in the interstate slave trade, situating it within the broader political economy of slavery, the rise of professional slave traders, and the transformation of incarcerati...