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False Benin History for Negroes_FE(3)
This is the Full Edition(FE) of our video,about the False history of Benin. The Present Day Benin Kingdom in the so called South Southern part of the Slave Coast or Nigeria which is today being presented as a very large kingdom to aid the slave masters conquest of Southern Nigeria.
This video tries to show that the term Benin was used by the slave master to refer to an entire area from where they captured slaves. It is however important to note that the purveyors of the false Benin history cannot explain how their King of Benin could have ruled communities that spoke an entirely different language. The Bight of Benin and Bight of Biafra were notorious for the slave trade. While the slave master created a golden Calf Benin Kingdom after the destruction in 1897, he did not build a fake Biafra freedom after the destruction of the Biafra Kingdom circa 1840.
In addition to this, the modern Day Benin history revisionists also forget that the Gregorian Calendar did not exist in Negroland as at the time they were quoting and they are unable to explain how they arrived at the dates they provide.
Please watch the video and look for the materials referenced and study them yourself.
You are welcome to support us at https://www.paypal.me/OurRenaissance https://bit.ly/2OxCtF8
or at https://www.patreon.com/OurRenaissance
REFERENCES
Boisgragon, A. M. (1898). The Benin Massacre. Methuen & Company.
Jacobs, D(1987) The brutality of Nations
Buxton, T. F. (1840). The African slave trade, and its remedy.
Roth, H. L. (1903). Great Benin: Its Customs, Art and Horrors. Routledge & K. Paul.
Pinnock, J. (1897). Benin: The surrounding country, inhabitants, customs, and trade. Journal of Commerce.
Snelgrave, W. (1734). A new account of Guinea. And the Slave Trade (London, 1754),
Johnston, H. (1902). British Nigeria
Woodson, C. G. (1830) Free Negro owners of slaves in the United States in 1830: together with Absentee ownership of slaves in the United States in 1830.
The Alleged Killing of Twins and Mary Slessor Hoax_FE(2)
The Alleged Killing of Twins and Mary Slessor Hoax(2) is the Full version of our video series to examine the lie of the slave masters that Negroes killed twin children and one Mary Slessor, a Scottish woman in her twenties came and stopped them from doing so. This section started with a little look of how the slave master and his slave hunting partners are still working together today and how they employ people to help them propagate lies.
We tried to examine the case of a Refugee they recruited from Turkey to assist them in disparaging and discrediting the Indigenous People of Biafra(IPOB) freedom Movement.
Please remember that a closer look at the activities of the Nigerian Army, Cameroonian Army and the Armies in the sub-region today and their relationship with the Europeans who were their slave hunting partners during the slave trade will help any objectivee research understand how the slave trade was carried on by the Europeans, Arabs and other non Negroes against the Negroes. .
The Full Versions of the Video will be available on the following platforms
www.lbry.tv
www.arisetube.com
www.crystalviews.net
www.rumble.com
For those that have supported us, we say thank you
You are welcome to support us at https://www.paypal.me/OurRenaissance https://bit.ly/2OxCtF8 or at https://www.patreon.com/OurRenaissance
For those that have supported us, we say thank you
REFERENCES
Blackie, W. G. (1868). A Supplement to The Imperial Gazetteer, a General Dictionary of Geography, Physical, Political, Statistical and Descriptive. Blackie and Son.
Shaw, F. L. (1905). Tropical dependency: An outline of the ancient history of the Western Soudan with an account of the modern settlement of Northern Nigeria.
A Barrister of the Middle Temple(1851) Extracts from the Evidence Taken Before Committees of the Two Houses of Parliament Relative to the Slave Trade, with Illustrations from Collateral Sources of Information
Livingstone, W. P. (1915). Mary Slessor of Calabar: Pioneer Missionary. Hodder and Stoughton.
Goldie, H. (1901). Calabar and its Mission. Oliphant, Anderson & Ferrier.
M'Queen, J. (1840). A Geographical Survey of Africa, Its Rivers Lakes, Mountains, Productions, States, Population & C., with a Map on an Entirely New Construction: To which. B. Fellowes.
Mill, H. R. (Ed.). (1899). The International Geography: By Seventy Authors
Watkinson, W.E(1899) The London Quarterly Review, Published July and October 1899, Vol XCII-New Series, Vol II
Payne, E. J. Ed (1893). Voyages of the Elizabethan Seamen to America. Select Narratives from the ‘Principal Navigation’ of HAKLUYT
N.A(1876) Anti-Slavery Reporter under the Sanction of The British and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society
Blackie, W. G. (1868). A Supplement to The Imperial Gazetteer, a General Dictionary of Geography, Physical, Political, Statistical and Descriptive. Blackie and Son.