The discovery of the oldest text in the Amazigh language dates back to the second millennium BC
The discovery of the oldest text in the Amazigh language dates back to the second millennium BC 11690
A picture of part of the papyrus that was found
In a new archaeological discovery, the first of its kind, dust is removed from the oldest text written in the Amazigh language in history, dating back to the second millennium BC, that is, a thousand years before the last Amazigh text that was discovered by the traveler Thomas Dacros in the year 1631, which is represented in the archaeological inscription of Douqa, which I dusted off the oldest Amazigh text in history, dating back to the tenth year of the reign of the Amazigh King Moxen, corresponding to the year 139 BC.
The discovery of the oldest text in the Amazigh language dates back to the second millennium BC 1-301
The text of the scientific study that talked about the oldest Amazigh text in history
As for the new discovery that we are about to talk about, it is related to an ancient Egyptian papyrus proving that the Al-Qahaq tribe, one of the Libu tribes that entered Egypt, spoke the Amazigh language. This is what the researcher Jason Silvestri from the University of California revealed after studying this papyrus that was found in the Deir el-Medina area by the Egyptologist Drovetti at the beginning of the nineteenth century, as it was translated by the researcher to be the discovery of the oldest Amazigh text dating back to the second millennium BC.
The discovery of the oldest text in the Amazigh language dates back to the second millennium BC 1-302
The second part of the text of the announced study
This important discovery was presented in a joint lecture between the University of California and the University of Turin under the title: “The oldest Amazigh text”.
The discovery of the oldest text in the Amazigh language dates back to the second millennium BC 1--120
The scientific journal that announced the study
The text of the papyrus was a hymn written in hieroglyphics and indicates that “ZRM” in the language of Al-Qahq (one of the ancient Berber tribes) means snake. It is the same word that the Amazighs still use until today as a general word used to refer to snakes and snakes, and this is material evidence from that era confirming what is certain that the Libo tribes were speaking Amazigh even after entering Egypt.
The discovery of the oldest text in the Amazigh language dates back to the second millennium BC 1--121
A picture from a modern Tamazight dictionary of the synonym of the word Azram, which means snake in Tamazight.

On the authority of Dr. Ehab Annan, by discharge


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