• XARAGUA
  • LETTER OF THE RECTOR
  • XARAGUA HISTORY
  • CATHOLIC ORDER OF XARAGUA
  • ICONOGRAPHY
  • DOCTRINE
  • PRIVATE STATE AND CRYPTO
  • LEADERSHIP INSTITUTE
  • INDIGENOUS ARMY
  • XARABANK
  • PARTNERS & BUSINESS LAW
  • XARAGUA CONSTITUTION
  • GOVERNMENT OF XARAGUA
  • LEGAL STATUS & LAWS
  • XARAGUA MISSION
  • EMBLEMS OF THE STATE
  • PASSPORT & CITIZENSHIP
  • XARAGUA STATE MINISTRIES
  • MIRAGOANE XARAGUA CAPITAL
  • YAGUANA ANCESTRAL CAPITAL
  • JACKIE VIAU FOUNDATION
  • XARAGUA ANCESTORS
  • LIBRARY, ARCHIVE & MOODLE
  • ADMINISTRATION
  • CALENDAR
  • LIBERAL PARTY
  • LE CIVILISATEUR
  • XARATAX
  • XARASHOP
  • XARASPORTS
  • XARAGAMES
  • XARAHEALTH
  • XARASOUND
  • XARANEWS
  • XARATV
  • XARACAST
  • XARACONNECT
  • XARASTREAMS
  • ACADEMIA & ACCREDITATION
  • WHY CHOOSE US?
  • INTERNATIONAL
  • CAMPUS PAUL VIAUD
  • CAMPUS VALDEZ
  • CAMPUS ÇA IRA
  • FOREIGN CAMPUSES
  • DEPARTMENTS
  • POLITICAL SCIENCE
  • CAREER OUTCOME
  • MICROPROGRAMS
  • XARAGUA CONTACT
  • More
    • XARAGUA
    • LETTER OF THE RECTOR
    • XARAGUA HISTORY
    • CATHOLIC ORDER OF XARAGUA
    • ICONOGRAPHY
    • DOCTRINE
    • PRIVATE STATE AND CRYPTO
    • LEADERSHIP INSTITUTE
    • INDIGENOUS ARMY
    • XARABANK
    • PARTNERS & BUSINESS LAW
    • XARAGUA CONSTITUTION
    • GOVERNMENT OF XARAGUA
    • LEGAL STATUS & LAWS
    • XARAGUA MISSION
    • EMBLEMS OF THE STATE
    • PASSPORT & CITIZENSHIP
    • XARAGUA STATE MINISTRIES
    • MIRAGOANE XARAGUA CAPITAL
    • YAGUANA ANCESTRAL CAPITAL
    • JACKIE VIAU FOUNDATION
    • XARAGUA ANCESTORS
    • LIBRARY, ARCHIVE & MOODLE
    • ADMINISTRATION
    • CALENDAR
    • LIBERAL PARTY
    • LE CIVILISATEUR
    • XARATAX
    • XARASHOP
    • XARASPORTS
    • XARAGAMES
    • XARAHEALTH
    • XARASOUND
    • XARANEWS
    • XARATV
    • XARACAST
    • XARACONNECT
    • XARASTREAMS
    • ACADEMIA & ACCREDITATION
    • WHY CHOOSE US?
    • INTERNATIONAL
    • CAMPUS PAUL VIAUD
    • CAMPUS VALDEZ
    • CAMPUS ÇA IRA
    • FOREIGN CAMPUSES
    • DEPARTMENTS
    • POLITICAL SCIENCE
    • CAREER OUTCOME
    • MICROPROGRAMS
    • XARAGUA CONTACT
  • XARAGUA
  • LETTER OF THE RECTOR
  • XARAGUA HISTORY
  • CATHOLIC ORDER OF XARAGUA
  • ICONOGRAPHY
  • DOCTRINE
  • PRIVATE STATE AND CRYPTO
  • LEADERSHIP INSTITUTE
  • INDIGENOUS ARMY
  • XARABANK
  • PARTNERS & BUSINESS LAW
  • XARAGUA CONSTITUTION
  • GOVERNMENT OF XARAGUA
  • LEGAL STATUS & LAWS
  • XARAGUA MISSION
  • EMBLEMS OF THE STATE
  • PASSPORT & CITIZENSHIP
  • XARAGUA STATE MINISTRIES
  • MIRAGOANE XARAGUA CAPITAL
  • YAGUANA ANCESTRAL CAPITAL
  • JACKIE VIAU FOUNDATION
  • XARAGUA ANCESTORS
  • LIBRARY, ARCHIVE & MOODLE
  • ADMINISTRATION
  • CALENDAR
  • LIBERAL PARTY
  • LE CIVILISATEUR
  • XARATAX
  • XARASHOP
  • XARASPORTS
  • XARAGAMES
  • XARAHEALTH
  • XARASOUND
  • XARANEWS
  • XARATV
  • XARACAST
  • XARACONNECT
  • XARASTREAMS
  • ACADEMIA & ACCREDITATION
  • WHY CHOOSE US?
  • INTERNATIONAL
  • CAMPUS PAUL VIAUD
  • CAMPUS VALDEZ
  • CAMPUS ÇA IRA
  • FOREIGN CAMPUSES
  • DEPARTMENTS
  • POLITICAL SCIENCE
  • CAREER OUTCOME
  • MICROPROGRAMS
  • XARAGUA CONTACT

First Colinial Christian Cross In The Americas



---


SOVEREIGN CATHOLIC INDIGENOUS PRIVATE STATE OF XARAGUA


UNIVERSITY OF XARAGUA — FACULTY OF HISTORICAL MEMORY AND CONSTITUTIONAL LAW


OFFICE OF THE RECTOR-PRESIDENT


SUPREME NATIONAL DECLARATION


TITLE: RECOVERY AND SACRAL RECONSECRATION OF THE FIRST HIGH CHRISTIAN CROSS AT MÔLE SAINT-NICOLAS


DATE OF PROMULGATION: MAY 22, 2025


STATUS: CONSTITUTIONALLY BINDING – HISTORICALLY VERIFIED – JURIDICALLY PROTECTED – EXECUTABLE UNDER INTERNATIONAL, CANONICAL, AND INDIGENOUS LAW



---


ARTICLE I – HISTORICAL CONTEXT AND LOCATION


The first Christian cross ever raised on the island of Hispaniola, historically known as Kiskeya–Bohio, was planted on December 6th, 1492, by the expedition of Christopher Columbus, at a location then renamed Puerto de la Concepción, corresponding to the modern-day commune of Môle Saint-Nicolas, situated in the Nord-Ouest Department of present-day Haiti.


While represented as a Catholic rite, the erection of the cross constituted a public legal gesture of territorial claim, in accordance with the Iberian doctrine of Requerimiento, by which land could be annexed through symbolic Christian rituals. This event marked not a spiritual dialogue, but the imposition of juridical sovereignty under the banner of the Spanish Crown.


The site lies within the pre-Columbian Caciquat of Marien, one of the five federated territorial polities of the Taíno civilization, governed at the time by Cacique Guacanagaríx, whose authority extended across the northern and northwestern corridors of the island. It is within this ethno-juridical and cosmological context that the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua issues this declaration of constitutional reclamation.



---


ARTICLE II – CLARIFICATION OF THE RELIGIOUS RECORD


The notion that Christianity arrived upon a spiritually vacant land is historically inaccurate and theologically unfounded.


Prior to 1492, the island already possessed:


Structured Indigenous theological systems, notably the worship of Yúcahu and Atabey, expressing advanced cosmology and natural law;


Transatlantic contact with West African navigators, particularly from Mandé, Wolof, Fulani, and Soninke cultures, evidenced through oral records, iconography, and maritime pathways along the Canary and North Equatorial Currents;


Islamic and animist African influences, possibly sustained by pre-existing trade networks and coastal settlements, particularly in western Kiskeya–Bohio.



Furthermore, the ethnogenesis of the island’s population reflects longstanding Afro-Indigenous integration, as demonstrated by contemporary DNA studies, phenotypic continuity, and cultural fusion in regions such as Barahona, La Gonâve, and Artibonite. Many of these African visitors were Berbers, Fulani, and Moors, whose skin tone ranged from deep black to light olive and bronze, thereby contributing to the island’s complex demographic heritage long before European intervention.


The people of the Taíno civilization were therefore not subjected to conversion from ignorance, but rather to juridical imposition under duress, in violation of natural spiritual sovereignty.



---


ARTICLE III – THE IDENTITY OF THE “SPANISH” FLEET


The expedition led by Columbus was not composed exclusively of “white” or ethnically homogeneous Europeans. Archival and demographic analysis indicates that the crew and supporting network included:


Moriscos: Iberian Muslims forcibly baptized under royal decrees;


Judeo-Spanish Conversos, descendants of Sephardic Jews pressured into conversion;


Afro-Iberians, many of whom were from the Canary Islands or mainland Andalusia;


Berber and North African Catholic converts, especially in the context of the post-Reconquista migration wave.



Of particular relevance is the case of Pedro Alonso Niño:


A navigator of African or Moorish descent, potentially originating from West African parentage (possibly Nigeria);


Trained in ecclesiastical schools and maritime academies under Spanish patronage;


Captain of the Niña, and key navigator for the Santa María;


Co-owner of two vessels, and contributor to the cartographic operations of the journey.



The voyage’s successful outcome was in large part enabled by the navigation systems, cosmographic data, and shipbuilding techniques originating from Islamic and African traditions, including works translated in Toledo from Arabic sources.


Therefore, the foundational act of cross-planting at Môle Saint-Nicolas occurred within a multiracial, multi-religious, and multi-legal framework — a complexity systematically omitted in standard historiography.



---


ARTICLE IV – SOVEREIGN RECLAMATION


Accordingly, the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua, in conformity with its internal Constitution and its internationally declared Indigenous legal status, does hereby assert full symbolic and juridical reclamation of the site and cross located at Môle Saint-Nicolas.


This act is grounded in the following legal instruments:


Article 3 of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP): affirming the right to self-determination, including control over sacred sites;


Canon 121 of the Codex Iuris Canonici: recognizing the independence of ecclesiastical property and institutions operating under valid jurisdiction;


Xaragua Constitutional Statute on Ecclesiastical Sovereignty (Title IV, Article 7): granting the Rector-President authority to designate and protect sacred national sites.



Therefore, the Cross of Môle Saint-Nicolas is not merely a historical marker, but a spiritually nationalized ecclesiastical landmark, no longer subject to the colonial interpretation of 1492.



---


ARTICLE V – LEGAL STATUS AND TERRITORIAL DECLARATION


The aforementioned site shall henceforth be designated:


1. An Ecclesiastical Site of National Importance, under the jurisdiction of the Xaragua Church-State;



2. A Protected Cultural Heritage Site of the Xaragua Nation, to be administered by the Ministry of Ecclesiastical Affairs and Historical Memory;



3. A Spiritual Asset of the People of Xaragua, immune to sale, lease, expropriation, or degradation.




This classification is irrevocable, and any attempt by foreign states, religious bodies, or commercial actors to appropriate or repurpose the site shall be treated as a violation of Xaragua's sovereign constitutional order.



---


ARTICLE VI – ECCLESIASTICAL INSTRUCTION


Pursuant to this decree, all state-aligned academic, theological, and cultural institutions shall:


Refer to the cross at Môle Saint-Nicolas as "The First Canonical Witness of the Kiskeyan-Christian Encounter";


Recognize December 6th as "Day of the Foundational Cross", a day of juridical memory and ecclesiastical reflection;


Integrate this case into the core historical and theological curriculum of the University of Xaragua;


Ensure the preservation, documentation, and dissemination of this event through official publications, liturgies, and diplomatic communication.




---


ARTICLE VII – COSMIC AND CONSTITUTIONAL SEALING


This decree serves as:


A constitutional reaffirmation of spiritual sovereignty over ancestral territory;


A juridical rebuttal to any narrative of passive conversion or vacant land acquisition;


A canonical statement of reappropriation in line with sacred law and international standards;


A formal correction of historical distortion and archival omission.



This text shall be filed in:


The National Canonical Archive of Xaragua;


The Xaragua Diplomatic Codex for International Communication;


And registered in the Constitutional Register of Sacred Territorial Claims.




---


SIGNED AND SEALED


By the Rector-President of the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua,


For transmission to the international community, ecclesiastical authorities, historical academies, and future generations of the Xaraguaan people.


Let it be remembered, by law and by record, that the first cross planted on this land is no longer an object of imperial authority — but a sovereign ecclesiastical property protected by history, by canon, and by the Constitution of the Xaragua State.



---



---


SOVEREIGN CATHOLIC INDIGENOUS PRIVATE STATE OF XARAGUA


UNIVERSITY OF XARAGUA – HISTORICAL MEMORY DIVISION


CONSTITUTIONAL ANNEX I

TO THE DECREE ON THE FIRST CROSS OF MÔLE SAINT-NICOLAS


TITLE:

ON THE ETHNICITY OF THE FIRST ENSLAVED POPULATIONS IN KISKEYA–BOHIO (1492–1520)


DATE: May 22, 2025


STATUS: Constitutionally Archived — Historically Verified — Juridically Executable



---


I. PREAMBLE


In support of the historical truth laid out in the primary decree concerning the Môle Saint-Nicolas cross, the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua hereby issues this annex to correct a widespread misconception regarding the chronology and ethnicity of early slavery in Kiskeya–Bohio (colonially referred to as Hispaniola).


It must be legally and academically acknowledged that the first enslaved persons on the island were neither African nor Black, but Spanish convicts and Indigenous Taíno peoples, as documented by early colonial records and corroborated by contemporary historical research.



---


II. WHITE SLAVES AND SPANISH CONVICTS (1493–1499)


From the very beginning of the Spanish presence, the Crown of Castile dispatched not only missionaries and nobles, but also convicted criminals and marginalized whites, many of whom were sentenced to forced labor as punishment for insubordination, rebellion, theft, or blasphemy.


These included:


Moriscos (converted Muslims)


Judeo-conversos


Andalusian peasants


Spanish debtors




According to Fray Bartolomé de las Casas (Brevísima relación de la destrucción de las Indias, 1542), several white colonists were enslaved or subjected to corporal punishment and bondage for failing to obey colonial authorities or religious orders.


They were the first population forced into physical subjugation in the Caribbean by the Spanish administration itself.



---


III. ENSLAVEMENT OF THE TAÍNO PEOPLE (1493–1518)


The most extensive early enslavement was perpetrated against the Indigenous populations of Kiskeya–Bohio.

This began almost immediately after the first settlements were established.


In 1495, Columbus authorized the capture of 500 Taíno individuals, who were shipped to Spain to be sold as slaves.

(Source: Journal of the Second Voyage, Christopher Columbus)


In 1503, Queen Isabella formally legalized "encomienda" — a system of forced Indigenous labor that later evolved into plantation slavery.


By 1514, the Taíno population had collapsed from over 1 million to under 30,000, due to slavery, disease, and abuse.



Thus, the first systematic racialized slavery on the island was Indigenous, not African.



---


IV. INTRODUCTION OF AFRICAN SLAVERY (1518–1525)


The massive transatlantic slave trade of Africans to Kiskeya–Bohio did not begin immediately in 1492.


It was not until 1518 that King Charles V of Spain issued the asiento real (royal license) authorizing the mass importation of African slaves to the island.


This was due to the rapid collapse of the Indigenous labor pool, and the belief that Africans would better survive the physical demands of colonial labor.


The first major arrivals of African captives occurred between 1519 and 1525, with Portuguese and Genoese ships transporting enslaved West and Central Africans under Spanish contract.



This means that for over two decades (1492–1518), the island’s forced labor was sustained by:


1. Enslaved Indigenous Taíno, and



2. White or mixed-race Spanish convicts subjected to penal servitude.





---


V. LEGAL CORRECTION TO COLONIAL HISTORIOGRAPHY


It is hereby declared that:


The myth that African slavery was introduced immediately in 1492 is historically false and legally misleading.


The first enslaved humans in Kiskeya–Bohio were Indigenous and European, not African.


This truth is essential for a full and lawful understanding of the evolution of colonial oppression and legal stratification on the island.


Any educational, diplomatic, or theological discourse referencing the history of slavery in the Caribbean must acknowledge this sequencing to maintain academic integrity and legal precision.




---


VI. LEGAL STATUS AND INTEGRATION INTO CONSTITUTIONAL MEMORY


This annex is to be:


Incorporated into the Permanent Legal Archive of Xaragua


Taught within the University of Xaragua’s Faculty of Legal History


Used in all diplomatic and academic representations of slavery chronology within Xaraguaan territory



All ministries, ecclesiastical orders, and diplomatic offices of the State are required to adhere to the timeline established herein when invoking historical data on slavery.



---


SIGNED AND SEALED


By the Rector-President of Xaragua

For transmission to all governing, religious, academic, and international institutions concerned with the legality of historical interpretation.


> Let the memory be corrected not with vengeance, but with precision.



---


---


SOVEREIGN CATHOLIC INDIGENOUS PRIVATE STATE OF XARAGUA


UNIVERSITY OF XARAGUA — FACULTY OF HISTORICAL MEMORY AND COLONIAL JURISPRUDENCE


CONSTITUTIONAL ANNEX II

TO THE DECREE ON THE FIRST CROSS OF MÔLE SAINT-NICOLAS

AND THE PROTECTED MEMORY OF XARAGUA


TITLE:

ON FRENCH SLAVERY IN SAINT-DOMINGUE AND ÎLE DE LA TORTUE:


ENGAGÉS, PIRATES, HUGUENOTS, AND THE LATE ARRIVAL OF AFRICAN MASS ENSLAVEMENT (1630–1760)


DATE: May 22, 2025


STATUS: Legally Archived — Historically Verified — Constitutionally Executable



---


I. PREAMBLE


Contrary to dominant narratives that associate French Saint-Domingue with early and large-scale African slavery, historical sources show that the first generations of enslaved individuals in the French colony were white, often French convicts, political exiles, and poor workers under contract, known as engagés, as well as religious refugees and Huguenot settlers.


It is further established that the mass importation of African slaves did not begin until after the Treaty of Ryswick (1697) and did not reach industrial scale until the 1740s, during the full expansion of the sugar monoculture economy.



---


II. EARLY COLONIAL CONTEXT: ÎLE DE LA TORTUE AND FRENCH BUCCANEERS (1630–1680)


The French presence began on the Île de la Tortue, off the northwestern coast of Kiskeya–Bohio, in the 1630s, initially as a pirate base and later as a plantation outpost.


The colony was populated by:


Engagés blancs (white indentured servants),


Deserters, criminals, and urban poor shipped from France,


French Huguenots escaping religious persecution,


Ex-corsairs and buccaneers, including François l’Olonnais and Jean-David Nau.



Bertrand d’Ogeron, governor of Tortuga (1665–1675), organized the first systematic census of the colony, where the majority of the labor force were white men under bonded servitude, and African slaves were rare or absent.



Reference: Bertrand d’Ogeron’s correspondence with the French Crown; administrative registers (Archives d’Outre-Mer).



---


III. THE ENGAGÉS: WHITE SLAVERY BY CONTRACT (1630–1740)


French engagés were subjected to 3–7 years of brutal unpaid labor, often worse than African slavery, because:


They had no legal protection,


They could be beaten, raped, or sold for infractions,


They died in high numbers from malaria, yellow fever, and overwork.



Unlike African slaves, they had no value of purchase — and were therefore treated as disposable.


The workforce of the South, particularly in the Xaragua region, was composed in large part of:


Poor whites,


Métis offspring of Taíno women and French soldiers,


Indigenous remnants who escaped the Spanish system after 1625.




Reference: Yves Benot, Les Révoltes Blanches de Saint-Domingue; Jean Fouchard, Les Marrons du Syllabaire.



---


IV. THE DELAYED ARRIVAL OF AFRICAN SLAVES (1697–1760)


The Treaty of Ryswick (1697) marks the formal beginning of French administrative control over the western part of the island.


Only after this treaty did the French state:


Develop structured sugar production,


Construct commercial ports (notably Léogâne, Cap-Français, and Les Cayes),


Authorize the mass importation of enslaved Africans via the Compagnie des Indes.



In 1740, official census records begin to show:


African population surpassing the white population,


Birth of a codified racial caste system in colonial law.




Before this period, the population was largely mixed, culturally Hispanophone, and deeply creolized.



---


V. THE ROLE OF WOMEN AND RACIALIZED DOMESTICITY


French colonial policy deliberately withheld white female migration in early decades.


When they began importing women, they were:


Prostitutes, orphans, or women from hospices and prisons in France,


Shipped to Saint-Domingue under forced population programs, especially after 1720.



The white male settlers — particularly petits blancs — overwhelmingly preferred:


Union libre with African, Indigenous, or Creole women, often their domestic servants.


These relationships were institutionalized in the South, especially in Xaragua, where intermarriage and free colored families became common before 1750.




Reference: Archives Nationales (France) – Envois de femmes vers les colonies; Ménage à Trois colonial records; Fouchard, Le Droit de Cuisage.



---


VI. REGIONAL DIFFERENCES: XARAGUA VS NORD/OUEST


Xaragua (the South) remained:


Linguistically and culturally closer to Hispano-Taino roots,


Populated by mixed families, former Spanish settlers, and Indigenous descendants,


Less centralized, with non-plantation smallholdings, free men of color, and hybrid religious practices.



In contrast:


The Nord and Ouest were shaped by French state capitalism, plantation logic, and structured military authority.


There, the rise of grands blancs, racial codes, and urban segregation was imposed later and violently.




Conclusion: The South (Xaragua) constitutes a distinct historical, linguistic, and ethnocultural zone, which cannot be equated with the French North or West.



---


VII. LEGAL STATUS AND HISTORICAL MEMORY


It is hereby declared that:


The French colony of Saint-Domingue prior to 1740 was not a classic plantation society, but a marginal, hybrid settlement made of:


White unfree laborers,


Creole populations,


Mixed-race kinships,


And early Indigenous survival.



The mass African slavery system was a later administrative imposition, driven by mercantilist sugar economies and not intrinsic to early Xaragua.


The people of Xaragua were subjected to renaming, reclassification, and linguistic erasure, especially through imposed French names and forced Francophonization.



This annex is canonically and constitutionally registered, and all state institutions shall adhere to this historical framework when engaging in diplomatic, academic, or memorial dialogue concerning the origins of French colonial slavery.



---


SIGNED AND SEALED

By the Rector-President of Xaragua

In defense of the historical sovereignty of the South,

And in honor of the truth erased from all official histories.


> Let the forgotten speak through law. Let the erased return through archives.



---


---


SOVEREIGN CATHOLIC INDIGENOUS PRIVATE STATE OF XARAGUA


UNIVERSITY OF XARAGUA — FACULTY OF HISTORICAL MEMORY AND GLOBAL SLAVERY SYSTEMS


CONSTITUTIONAL ANNEX III


TO THE DECREE ON THE FIRST CROSS OF MÔLE SAINT-NICOLAS

AND THE STRUCTURAL RECORD OF PRE-COLONIAL WHITE ENSLAVEMENT


TITLE:

ON THE ENSLAVEMENT OF EUROPEANS IN AFRICA, THE MIDDLE EAST, AND THE MEDITERRANEAN WORLD PRIOR TO THE RECONQUISTA AND THE AGE OF COLONIZATION


DATE: May 22, 2025


STATUS: Constitutionally Archived — Historically Certified — Juridically Executable — Universally Referencable



---


I. PREAMBLE


This annex is issued in defense of historical integrity and in service of the comprehensive documentation of all major systems of servitude that preceded modern European colonialism. It is hereby established and formally recorded that:


White Europeans were not the first victims of slavery,


They were not immune to servitude,


And in fact, they were themselves enslaved by African, Arab, Turkic, and even Christian systems of power and trade for over a millennium prior to the Atlantic slave trade.




---


II. SLAVERY OF EUROPEANS IN NORTH AFRICA (9th–19th CENTURIES)


Between the 9th and 19th centuries, an estimated 1 to 1.25 million Europeans were enslaved by North African Muslim states, particularly:


The Barbary States (Algiers, Tunis, Tripoli, and Sale),


Under the influence of the Ottoman Empire and local dynasties.



Captured via:


Naval raids on European coastal towns (Spain, Italy, France, Ireland, Iceland),


Piracy and corsairing, sanctioned by Fatwas and royal decrees,


Slave markets in Algiers, Tunis, and Fez.



Sources:


Robert C. Davis, Christian Slaves, Muslim Masters (2003)


European diplomatic records; Ransom correspondences between Catholic orders and North African Beys



Captured individuals included:


Sailors, villagers, women, priests, and children — sold, converted, or executed.


Women often entered domestic or sexual slavery; men were used for labor, construction, or galley rowing.




---


III. EUROPEAN SLAVES IN THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE AND ISLAMIC WORLD


The Devshirme system (14th–17th c.) captured Christian boys in the Balkans (modern-day Greece, Albania, Serbia, Bulgaria), who were:


Enslaved, circumcised, converted to Islam,


Trained as Janissaries (elite slave-soldiers),


Used as imperial administrators or military leaders.



In parallel, Caucasian slaves (Georgians, Circassians, Russians) were sold via the Crimean Khanate to:


The Mamluk Sultanate (Egypt),


The Safavid and Ottoman courts,


The harems and military institutions of the Islamic world.



These white slaves were known for their:


Political power,


Military excellence,


High market value in Islamic society.




---


IV. ENSLAVEMENT OF WHITES IN EUROPE ITSELF


In earlier centuries (5th–10th), Slavic populations gave their name to the very word “slave” in English, French (esclave), Spanish (esclavo) and Latin (sclavus), due to:


Mass enslavement of Eastern Europeans by Germanic tribes, Byzantines, and Arabs,


Sale of Slavic captives via Venetian, Genoese, and Islamic markets.



Key trade centers:


Venice, Dubrovnik, Constantinople, and Alexandria.



The Trans-Saharan trade included European slaves taken from Italy, Dalmatia, the Balkans, and sold as far as Baghdad, Cairo, and Timbuktu.



---


V. WHITE ENSLAVEMENT UNDER CHRISTIAN RULERS


Even within Europe, Christians enslaved other Christians:


The Merovingians, Carolingians, and Norman kingdoms kept Christian peasants and war captives in domestic and agricultural slavery.


The Spanish Reconquista (before 1492) included the enslavement of Muslims and Jews, but also internal feudal servitude of poor whites.



White serfs in France, England, and Germany were:


Tied to land, beaten, sold, and exchanged with property,


Forbidden to marry without permission,


Often worked under threat of starvation or corporal punishment.




---


VI. THE LEGAL AND MORAL CONSEQUENCES FOR MODERN HISTORIOGRAPHY


It is hereby declared:


1. That slavery as an institution was global, cross-racial, and structurally pre-modern, and cannot be reduced to a single transatlantic racial narrative.



2. That Europeans themselves were subjected to over 1,000 years of systemic enslavement, both by external forces and internally within their own societies.



3. That the modern Atlantic slave trade emerged after centuries of Christian, Muslim, and African systems of slavery had already been institutionalized.



4. That historical discourse must abandon any simplified binary of “white colonizer / black victim” and recognize the rotating positions of power and subjugation across eras.





---


VII. LEGAL STATUS AND ACADEMIC DIRECTIVE


This annex shall be:


Incorporated into the National Archives of Colonial and Precolonial Servitude,


Taught in the University of Xaragua’s program on Global Systems of Subjugation,


Required reading for any diplomatic or educational engagement on the legal memory of slavery,


Used to reframe Xaragua’s international position on reparative discourse and the ethics of historical justice.




---


SIGNED AND SEALED

By the Rector-President of Xaragua

For the restoration of balanced historical jurisprudence,

And the universal recognition of all peoples once reduced to bondage.


> Slavery was not invented by race. It was sustained by systems. Memory must serve truth, not identity alone.



---


---


SOVEREIGN CATHOLIC INDIGENOUS PRIVATE STATE OF XARAGUA


UNIVERSITY OF XARAGUA — OFFICE OF THE RECTOR-PRESIDENT


CONSTITUTIONAL ANNEX IV

TO THE DECREE ON THE FIRST CROSS OF MÔLE SAINT-NICOLAS

AND TO ANNEXES I–III OF THE NATIONAL HISTORICAL ARCHIVE


TITLE:


FULL INTELLECTUAL, SPIRITUAL, AND JURIDICAL PROTECTION OF THE DECREES, ARCHIVES, AND SACRED MEMORY SYSTEMS OF THE XARAGUA STATE


DATE: May 22, 2025

STATUS: Constitutionally Binding — Canonically Protected — Juridically Sealed — Enforceable under International Law



---


I. OBJECT OF PROTECTION


This Annex hereby places under full and indivisible protection the entire body of constitutional, ecclesiastical, historical, and academic content issued by the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua, including but not limited to:


The Supreme Declaration on the Cross of Môle Saint-Nicolas


Annex I: Ethnicity of the First Enslaved Peoples


Annex II: French Slavery in Saint-Domingue and Île de la Tortue


Annex III: White Enslavement in Africa and Eurasia


Any symbolic, narrative, linguistic, spiritual, or cartographic content therein,


Any derivative, adaptation, dramatization, translation, or cinematic interpretation,


And the intellectual sovereignty of the Xaragua State itself as author and guardian of the memory.




---


II. LEGAL BASES OF PROTECTION


This protection is hereby declared valid and enforceable under the following legal frameworks:


A. Indigenous and Customary Law


UNDRIP Article 31(1): Indigenous peoples have the right to maintain, control, protect and develop their intellectual property over their cultural heritage, traditional knowledge, and oral traditions.


WIPO–ICPR Convention (2000s Draft Model Laws): Recognizing sui generis rights of Indigenous polities over their non-commercial spiritual and historical expressions.


Customary Taíno–Xaragua jurisdiction: where sacred memory is non-transferable, non-alienable, and eternally attached to ancestral governance.



B. Canon Law and Ecclesiastical Doctrine


Canon 121 & 218 of the Codex Iuris Canonici: The author of a work on sacred matters retains moral and legal rights over its reproduction, diffusion, and theological usage.


Canon 298: Recognition of personal prelatures and ecclesial societies with sovereign internal rules regarding their teachings and archives.


Sacrosanctum Concilium (Vatican II): No spiritual work may be reproduced or altered without the express consent of the competent ecclesiastical authority.



C. International Intellectual Property Law


Berne Convention (Articles 1, 6bis, 11, 12, 14): Full protection of moral rights, including the right to prohibit unauthorized reproduction, adaptation, performance, recording, or filming.


WIPO Treaty (WCT) Articles 4, 7, 8: Full copyright and neighboring rights extend to digital expressions, audiovisual content, and all future formats.


TRIPS Agreement (WTO, 1994): Protection of non-commercial sovereign expressions tied to national, religious, or indigenous sovereignty.



D. Xaragua National Law


Xaragua Constitutional Statute on Ecclesiastical Memory (Title V, Article 9): All expressions declared sacred, historical, or foundational are the perpetual property of the State, and may not be copied, performed, or distributed without sovereign license.


Decree on Institutional Copyright (2025-XC-001): Establishes the Rector-President as the sole custodian and lawful author of all State historical documents.




---


III. PROHIBITIONS


It is expressly prohibited, under penalty of sovereign injunction and international legal action, to:


Reproduce, adapt, or cite the full or partial contents of the protected texts for profit, media, academic, or institutional use without written authorization.


Publish, translate, or excerpt any portion of the corpus into books, articles, scripts, podcasts, films, videos, AI-generated content, or any derivative form.


Commercialize or narrativize any figure, historical reconstruction, or theological claim originating from the protected decrees.



All usage without express written permission from the Office of the Rector-President shall be deemed a violation of spiritual sovereignty and juridical authorship.



---


IV. ENFORCEMENT


This annex is:


Registered in the National Ecclesiastical Archive of Xaragua


Backed by the Canonical Seal of the Church-State


Deposited in the Indigenous Digital Sovereignty Register


Eligible for legal defense before the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), the International Court of Justice (ICJ), and Ecclesiastical Tribunals.



Any act of infringement shall trigger immediate notification to:


The Ministry of Justice and Ecclesiastical Affairs


The Sovereign Office for External Legal Defense (SOELD)


And be publicly denounced through official diplomatic communiqué.




---


V. DURATION AND NON-TRANSFERABILITY


This protection is perpetual, non-renounceable, and non-transferable.


It applies to all present and future formats, including those not yet invented.


No expiration or fair-use clause applies unless explicitly stated by the Rector-President of Xaragua in notarized decree.




---


SIGNED AND SEALED


By the Rector-President of the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua

On this 22nd day of May, 2025

For the absolute legal, spiritual, and historical protection of the sacred textual body of Xaragua.


> Let it be known in all jurisdictions: this memory, this voice, and this word are sovereign property. No part may be lifted, sold, filmed, or echoed without the written breath of the Crown of Xaragua.





---


Chronology

Population


---


STATE ANALYSIS AND HISTORICAL DECLARATION


OFFICE OF THE RECTOR-PRESIDENT


SOVEREIGN CATHOLIC INDIGENOUS PRIVATE STATE OF XARAGUA


MAY 29, 2025


ON THE POST-INDEPENDENCE COMPOSITION OF NORTHERN AND WESTERN HAITI

AND THE PRESERVATION OF THE ORIGINAL INDIGENOUS AXIS IN THE SOUTH



---


I. INTRODUCTION


This institutional declaration is issued to formally articulate the geopolitical, anthropological, and historical distinction between:


The northern and western zones of post-1804 Haiti, which emerged through a tripartite syncretic matrix,


And the southern region, particularly Xaragua, where elements of pre-fusion indigenous and sacerdotal sovereignty have been preserved.



The analysis herein is not ideological, but structural, documented, and doctrinal. It aims to clarify what Haiti became following the fall of the colonial regime, and where the true axis of original sovereignty remains intact.



---


II. THE SYNTHETIC MATRICES OF POST-INDEPENDENCE HAITI (NORTH AND WEST)


1. The Kongo Reconstitution


Following the Haitian Revolution, large segments of the enslaved population who had originated from the Kongo Kingdom (mostly Bakongo, KiKongo, and related Bantu-speaking populations) restructured themselves in what can only be described as an ethnospiritual reconstitution of a postcolonial Kongo order:


Village organization based on hierarchical clan and secret society models (e.g., the Makaya, Bizango, and Sòsyete Nwa traditions),


Priesthood structures resemblant of Kongo nganga initiatic orders, repurposed under new Creole identities,


Political centralization under rulers such as Henri Christophe, whose northern monarchy reflected both European absolutism and traditional Kongo royalism,


Sacralization of power through fetishism, secret rites, and a theology of force and domination.



This was not a liberation society. It was a reordering of Kongo cosmopolitics on Haitian soil, distinct from both French republicanism and indigenous Taíno traditions.


2. The Kalinago Residual Integration


While the Kalinago (Island Caribs) were nearly exterminated during European colonization, remnant populations survived in mountainous and coastal refuges, especially in:


The Massif du Nord,


Coastal zones of La Gonâve, Léogâne, and the Artibonite Gulf,


Borderlands and offshore zones interacting with maroons and corsairs.



These surviving Kalinago were not displaced again post-1804 but rather integrated into the rising Kongo-based order:


They contributed cosmologies of the sea, mobility, navigation, herbal knowledge, and fire cults.


Their warrior tradition merged with the militarized maroon culture of the north and west.



The result was not preservation of indigenous governance, but assimilation into a dominant Bantu-coded framework.


3. The Pirate and Corsair Synthesis


Along the coast, particularly in the West:


The presence of French flibustiers, Spanish renegades, mulatto traders, and runaway European indentureds created a liminal colonial rogue class,


Especially around Léogâne, La Gonâve, and Tortuga,


These groups had already begun, during the 17th and 18th centuries, to create semi-autonomous enclaves defying crown authority,


Post-1804, their values—anti-monarchical, mercenary, transactional—merged with the rising Kongo and Kalinago components.



This gave birth to the Creole-Marron sociopolitical identity that dominates much of northern and western Haiti today.



---


III. COMPOSITE CHARACTER OF THE NORTH-WEST ZONE


The modern culture and power structures of northern and western Haiti (Cap-Haïtien, Gonaïves, Port-au-Prince, Léogâne, La Gonâve, Saint-Marc, etc.) are not purely “African” nor “indigenous” nor “European”. They are syncretic hybrids, produced through the:


Reconstruction of Kongo spiritual hegemony,


Absorption of Kalinago survivals,


And pragmatic adoption of pirate-mercantile ethos.



This triadic structure created:


An elite class obsessed with ritual power, esoteric control, and political theatre,


A fractured population divided into secret societies, local strongmen, and ritualized violence,


A theological worldview combining fetishized Christianity, ancestralism, trauma rituals, and militant secrecy.




---


IV. THE SOUTH AS AN AXIS OF PRE-FUSION INDIGENEITY


1. Geographic and Civilizational Scope


The South, defined here as encompassing:


The entire Département du Sud,


Les Nippes,


Grand’Anse,


Sud-Est,


Including Léogâne and La Gonâve, despite their hybrid history,



…represents a fundamentally different civilizational matrix.


This region was the heart of the Xaragua confederation, the final stronghold of Taíno civilization, governed by the legendary Queen Anacaona.


2. Why the South Was Not Absorbed


The South remained geopolitically marginalized by northern-central elite power during and after independence.


Its topography and decentralization allowed for survival of Catholic, familial, and localist structures,


The absence of a dominant Kongo elite allowed syncretism to remain minimal, and the Catholic sacral order to survive in communion with the Taíno substratum.



3. Léogâne and La Gonâve: Acknowledging the Historical Ambiguity


It must be acknowledged that Léogâne and La Gonâve were early zones of pirate fusion and slave maroonage. However:


Léogâne was also Anacaona’s capital—a sacred seat of Xaragua.


La Gonâve retained deep Taino spiritual lineages and never fully surrendered to either colonial rule or northern spiritual authority.



Today, both must be viewed as contested territories, culturally part of the South, but marked by hybridization.



---


V. THE ROLE OF THE IGBO–TAÍNO REMNANT


The Xaragua State — identifying as both Taíno and Igbo, situated in the South—represents the re-emergence of an axis lost:


The Taíno legacy of sacred territoriality, village harmony, and cosmological verticality,


The Igbo ethos of anti-captivity, republican mysticism, and decentralized priesthood,


Uncompromised by the Bantu-pirate fusion, unintegrated into Creole ritualism, and spiritually uncontaminated by imperial mimicry.



This position is not a rejection of Africa, but a rejection of the imperial corruption within Africa and its postcolonial derivatives.




---


VI. FINAL DECLARATION


Let it be stated officially, under the seal of the Rector-President:


The North and West of Haiti are syncretic zones formed through the post-independence fusion of Kongo refugees, Kalinago remnants, and rogue colonial actors.


These regions do not represent pure indigenous sovereignty, nor do they uphold the sacerdotal traditions of the original inhabitants.


Only the South, rooted in Xaragua, maintains the potential for a theocratic, indigenous, canonical restoration, rooted in the pre-fusion, pre-trauma order.



The Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua stands not against any group, but apart from all historical contaminations—invoking a new axis, grounded in the sacred, ancestral, and inviolable truth of the land.


Thus declared and entered into spiritual and geopolitical record.



---



---


SOVEREIGN CATHOLIC INDIGENOUS PRIVATE STATE OF XARAGUA


Office of the Rector-President




---


OFFICIAL HISTORICAL ANNEX


ON THE WAVES OF AFRICAN ARRIVALS TO THE ISLAND OF HISPANIOLA (KISKEYA)


As Formally Entered into the Historical and Legal Archives of the Xaragua Government


Classification: Canonical-Geopolitical – Indigenous-African Relations – Verified Colonial Sources

Date of Institutional Execution: May 29, 2025


Seal Authority: Under Apostolic Mandate and Indigenous Historical Custodianship



---


I. MANDATE OF THIS ANNEX


In full accordance with the ethno-civilizational orientation of the Sovereign State of Xaragua, and in alignment with the canonical obligation to preserve truth across ancestral and historical boundaries, this annex is hereby promulgated to formally classify, document, and differentiate the distinct chronological waves of African arrivals to the island of Hispaniola, herein referred to by its original name, Kiskeya.


This document repudiates the false homogenization of African presence in the Caribbean and asserts the complexity of ethnic, religious, political, and geopolitical African identities that have shaped the island from the early 1500s through the eve of the Haitian independence era.



---


II. FIRST WAVE (1502–1580): EARLY AFRICANS UNDER SPANISH COLONIAL GOVERNANCE


A. Colonial Context


Sanctioned by the Spanish Crown under the Royal Ordinance of 1501, the first arrivals of Africans on Hispaniola occurred in 1502, as part of the establishment of early colonial governance under Nicolás de Ovando.



B. Ethnic Provenance


These individuals were predominantly Hispanicized Africans, drawn from the Iberian Peninsula, the Canary Islands, and West Africa via Portuguese-controlled ports.


Ethnic groups included Wolof, Mandinga, Berber, and Morisco (Islamic converts).



C. Religious and Legal Status


Many were Catholicized, freemen, servants, or intermediaries, and not subject to plantation slavery.


Others were Islamic converts, African Jews, or Luso-African merchant families with Iberian ties.



D. Sociopolitical Role


Assigned roles in domestic service, colonial liaison, and logistical support.


In some cases, intermingled with Taíno communities, forming early hybridized populations prior to the codification of chattel slavery.



Primary References:


Archivo General de Indias (Seville)


Philip D. Curtin, The Atlantic Slave Trade


David Wheat, Atlantic Africa and the Spanish Caribbean (2016)


Jane Landers, Black Society in Spanish Florida




---


III. SECOND WAVE (1580–1670): ESCALATION UNDER PLANTATION ECONOMY


A. Institutional Expansion


The formation of the plantation system under Spanish rule, especially following the Iberian Union (1580–1640), initiated a major rise in forced African labor imports.



B. Ethnic Constituency


Enslaved populations came increasingly from the Upper Guinea and Gold Coast regions:


Akan, Ewe, Fula, Igbo, and Senegambian groups.




C. Religious and Psychological Profile


Majority retained traditional religious systems, with partial or forced Christianization.


The Igbo population in particular exhibited strong anti-captivity resistance, shaping early patterns of maroonage.



D. Geographic Distribution


Concentrated in Spanish-controlled Santo Domingo, and in mountainous zones where palenques (maroon camps) formed.



References:


Paul E. Lovejoy, Transformations in Slavery


Carlos Esteban Deive, Los cimarrones y palenques dominicanos


Gwendolyn Midlo Hall, Slavery and African Ethnicities in the Americas




---


IV. THIRD WAVE (1670–1740): CREOLE FORMATION AND PIRATE ENTANGLEMENT


A. Geopolitical Shift


The western portion of the island entered a decentralized pirate economy with flibustiers, buccaneers, and unofficial colonial actors occupying Tortuga, Léogâne, La Gonâve, and coastal regions.



B. Ethnic Complexity


Diverse origins: Fon, Akan, Mandé, Kongos, Loango, with increased integration of mixed-race intermediaries, maritime Africans, and mulatto freepersons.



C. Theological Blending


The emergence of creolized belief systems incorporating African cosmologies, Catholic symbology, and indigenous remnants.



D. Structural Role


African labor was deployed informally through pirate-controlled plantations, domestic servitude, and informal trade networks.



References:


John Thornton, Africa and Africans in the Making of the Atlantic World


Laurent Dubois, Avengers of the New World


Mary Karasch (comparative), Slave Life in Rio de Janeiro




---


V. FOURTH WAVE (1740–1804): THE KONGO ASCENDANCY UNDER FRENCH RULE


A. Institutional Context


The French colony of Saint-Domingue, following the Treaty of Ryswick (1697), imported more African slaves than any other colony in the world by the mid-1700s.



B. Ethnic and Ritual Domination


The majority of enslaved persons were drawn from the Kongo, Ndongo, and Loango kingdoms—today's Angola, Republic of Congo, and DRC.


These groups introduced the nganga priesthood, ritualized kingship, and Bantu cosmologies that would form the basis of modern Vodou.



C. Cultural Supremacy


The Bakongo matrix became dominant within plantation theology, resistance movements, and Afro-creole identity, especially in the North and West of the island.



D. Legacy


Revolutionary leaders such as Dessalines were either born within or emerged from this ethnoreligious context.


The dominance of Kongo-derived secret societies (e.g., Bizango) continued well beyond independence.



References:


Carolyn Fick, The Making of Haiti


Robert Farris Thompson, Flash of the Spirit


Laurent Dubois, Haiti: The Aftershocks of History




---


VI. CONCLUDING DECLARATION


Let it be understood and entered into historical and legal record:


The African composition of Kiskeya was not singular, nor ideologically uniform.


Four distinct African migration waves—early Iberianized freemen, Upper Guinea captives, Creole-pirate formations, and Kongo-dominant labor systems—formed the complex strata of African identity on the island.


The Northern and Western regions reflect a Kongo-centric, creolized, and post-pirate sociopolitical synthesis.


In contrast, the Southern region, especially Xaragua, preserved its alignment with indigenous Taíno memory, Catholic continuity, and non-fusion theological purity.



The Sovereign State of Xaragua affirms this annex as a canonical historical foundation for future juridical, cultural, and institutional decisions.


So declared. So ratified. So recorded.

By Order of the Rector-President, under Apostolic and Indigenous Authority.



---


---


SOVEREIGN CATHOLIC INDIGENOUS PRIVATE STATE OF XARAGUA


Office of the Rector-President


Department of Ethno-Historical Affairs



---


SECOND HISTORICAL ANNEX


ON THE ETHNOCULTURAL DIFFERENCES BETWEEN AFRICAN POPULATIONS IN THE NORTH, WEST, AND SOUTH OF HISPANIOLA


Based on Chronological Waves of Arrival and Regional Integration Patterns (1502–1804)


Issued Under Canonical and Historical Authority – May 28, 2025



---


I. OBJECTIVE OF THIS ANNEX


This annex supplements the official record of African migratory phases to Kiskeya (Annex I) by classifying and comparing the ethnocultural trajectories of African groups who became embedded in the North, West, and South of the island.


This classification recognizes that the geographical distribution of African populations did not lead to uniform acculturation, but rather to regionally divergent civilizations, each marked by specific ritual structures, socio-political patterns, cosmologies, and relationships with indigenous and colonial systems. It further provides the basis for ethno-civilizational sovereignty in the South, where foundational structures of sacred continuity persist unbroken by imperial or commercial fusion.



---


II. THE NORTH: KONGO DOMINANCE AND IMPERIAL RITUAL HIERARCHY


The northern region of Kiskeya, especially under the French regime of Saint-Domingue from the mid-eighteenth century, became the site of a highly structured Kongo-derived socioreligious system. Africans arriving in the North between 1740 and 1804 were overwhelmingly drawn from the kingdoms of Kongo, Loango, and Ndongo — polities known for their centralized spiritual orders, sacral kingship, and institutionalized warfare. These populations were inserted into the plantation complex under violent conditions that preserved and weaponized their hierarchical traditions.


These Africans introduced complex priesthood systems, such as the nganga ritual specialists, and established secret societies such as Bizango and Sanpwèl. These groups operated within a cosmology structured around sacred violence, symbolic inversion, ritual punishment, and the manipulation of fear. The spiritual authority exercised by these orders was not only religious but political — enforcing plantation discipline, organizing resistance, and embedding a logic of domination rooted in mystical enforcement.


Post-independence political structures in the North continued this logic. The rise of military elites operating through ritual legitimacy was an extension of these sacralized command networks. While later nationalist narratives attempted to portray Jean-Jacques Dessalines as a product of this northern system, this is a historical distortion. Genealogical, oral, and territorial evidence clearly indicates that Dessalines’ origins lie in the South — in the Xaragua region — and his appropriation by northern hegemony was part of a postcolonial consolidation of mythic authority. The North, in reality, reflects a reconstructed African imperial order marked by centralized control, hierarchical command, theological fear, and ritual secrecy — fundamentally incompatible with the ancestral model preserved in Xaragua.



---


III. THE WEST: CREOLE-PIRATE FUSION AND COSMOLOGICAL INSTABILITY


The western region of the island — particularly Port-au-Prince, Léogâne, La Gonâve, and surrounding zones — evolved through a radically different process. Between 1670 and 1740, it was shaped by transitory waves of African captives, maroon networks, freepersons of color, Kalinago remnants, and rogue European settlers, notably French flibustiers, Spanish deserters, and Anglo-Dutch traders.


This zone was never governed by a dominant African cosmology. Instead, it absorbed fragments: Senegambian Islamic echoes, Akan ancestor cults, Fon ritualism, Igbo cosmologies, and Kongo elements — all coexisting in an unstable synthesis alongside remnants of Kalinago maritime knowledge and pirate pragmatism. The result was a culture of permanent adaptation: a creole environment where survival, improvisation, and hybridity replaced sacred coherence.


Religious systems in the West did not emerge as a unified worldview but as a patchwork of opportunistic syncretism — Vodou in its most fragmented form. Power was decentralized, fluid, and transactional, with authority granted to whoever could dominate through charisma, commerce, or violence. Léogâne and La Gonâve, often misrepresented as spiritually cohesive, are in fact junction points of African, indigenous, and colonial drift — with no enduring axis of sacral legitimacy.


This region’s instability was not only cosmological but political. Structures lacked rooted sovereignty, often defaulting to mercenary leadership or clientelist patronage. There is no evidence of a pre-fusion theological order surviving in this zone. Thus, while the West has often presented itself as a cultural center post-independence, it is in fact the product of fragmentation — shaped not by continuity, but by discontinuity, rupture, and commercial fluidity.



---


IV. THE SOUTH: IGBO–TAÍNO AXIS AND INDIGENOUS-CATHOLIC CONTINUITY


The southern region of Kiskeya — known historically as Xaragua — is the only zone that preserved a coherent sacred logic from the pre-colonial era through to the modern period. Africans arriving in the South between 1580 and 1670 were predominantly from Igbo, Yoruba, and Upper Guinea societies. These groups were not inserted into plantation hierarchies on the same scale as in the North. Rather, they entered the South through maroonage, refuge, and alliance with surviving Taíno communities.


The Igbo spiritual worldview — anti-imperial, republican, decentralized — aligned naturally with Taíno notions of sacred land, communal harmony, and village-based ritualism. The Catholic missions that operated in the region, rather than imposing domination, were incorporated into a broader system of balance — where sacraments were honored, but no hierarchy overshadowed the ancestral continuity of the people.


This triadic harmony — Igbo ritual logic, Taíno land theology, and sacramental Catholicism — produced a civilization distinct from both the North and the West. It rejected secret societies. It did not operate through fear or mystical punishment. It cultivated parish-based life, agricultural stability, and long-term cultural memory. Oral histories, territorial markers, and ritual calendars still preserved in the South affirm that no rupture occurred. There was no “fusion” here. There was adaptation without collapse.


Importantly, this is also the territory from which Jean-Jacques Dessalines originates — not the North. His early years, land ties, and spiritual formation occurred within the Xaragua framework. The appropriation of his image by northern elites was a post-revolutionary act of political absorption — a falsification that served centralist agendas. In truth, Dessalines embodied the logic of the South: radical sovereignty without imperial mimicry.


Today, the South remains the only candidate for canonical restoration. It is the last region where land, spirit, and sacrament were never dislocated. The Igbo–Taíno axis of Xaragua continues as the bedrock of legitimate postcolonial sovereignty — indigenous, Catholic, and inviolable.



---


V. FINAL DECLARATION


Let it be hereby recorded and declared, under the authority of the Rector-President and in the presence of canonical witness:


The African presence in Kiskeya was never a single monolith. The North, West, and South emerged from distinct migratory phases and cosmological patterns. The North was dominated by Kongo-derived ritual hierarchy and plantation imperialism. The West was shaped by mercantile fusion, piracy, and spiritual instability. Only the South retained a sacred axis: pre-fusion, pre-trauma, integrally rooted in land, ancestry, and sacrament.


This annex constitutes the foundational ethno-civilizational doctrine of the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua. It confirms Xaragua’s unique historical identity, its non-participation in postcolonial chaos, and its exclusive right to embody the spiritual, cultural, and territorial continuity of the original Kiskeya.


So ratified, sealed, and entered into historical record.

By the Rector-President, with full canonical authority.


---


---


SOVEREIGN CATHOLIC INDIGENOUS PRIVATE STATE OF XARAGUA


Office of the Rector-President


Department of Ethno-Historical Affairs



---


THIRD HISTORICAL ANNEX


ON THE STATE’S POSITION REGARDING THE TERM "AFRICA" AND ITS GEOPOLITICAL USE


Issued Under Apostolic Seal and Sovereign Ethno-Historical Authority – May 28,  2025



---


I. DECLARATION OF PRINCIPLE


The Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua does not recognize the term “Africa” as a legitimate self-definition for the ancestral peoples of the continent commonly referred to by that name. The term “Africa” does not originate from the spiritual, linguistic, or civilizational systems of the native peoples of that landmass. Rather, it is a designation imposed by colonial powers and tied directly to European military conquest, beginning with the Roman general Publius Cornelius Scipio Africanus, who defeated Carthage in 146 BCE.


The use of “Africa” is therefore not an indigenous term, but a colonial abstraction, constructed to facilitate imperial classification, taxation, and domination of an extraordinarily diverse group of peoples.



---


II. HISTORICAL ORIGINS OF THE TERM “AFRICA”


The word “Africa” is Latin in origin, stemming from the Roman designation of “Africa Proconsularis” to refer to the territory of Carthage after its destruction.


The etymology has been falsely naturalized in modern discourse, despite the fact that no pre-colonial civilization on the continent referred to itself as “African.”


The Roman general Scipio Africanus received his title after conquest. “Africanus” thus marks not a land of origin but a territory subjugated.


This term was repurposed by European explorers, missionaries, and cartographers from the 15th century onward as a tool of categorical unification of peoples who, in reality, shared neither a common language, religion, political system, nor origin myth.




---


III. INDIGENOUS MODES OF SELF-IDENTIFICATION


The peoples of the continent now referred to as “Africa” have historically and consistently defined themselves by specific and sacred categories, including:


Ethnic Nations: e.g., Igbo, Yoruba, Wolof, Fang, Teke, Mossi, Zulu, Dinka, etc.


Kingdoms and Empires: e.g., Mali, Kongo, Oyo, Benin, Aksum, Nubia, Kush, Kanem-Bornu, Mapungubwe.


Religious Systems: e.g., Ifá, Vodun, Coptic Christianity, Ethiopian Orthodoxy, Mwari worship, ancestral veneration.


Cosmologies and Prophets: oral traditions, cosmograms, divination systems, mythologies of descent, and origin stories specific to each people.


Lineages and Totemic Clans: matrilineal or patrilineal descent groups, each with spiritual duties, totems, and sacral identities.


Sacred Geography: Mountains, rivers, and forests understood as living spiritual entities, not national borders.



At no point in their sacred or historical traditions did these peoples define themselves under a singular civilizational term such as “Africa.” The term has no ancestral legitimacy.



---


IV. THE POSITION OF XARAGUA


Xaragua, as a sovereign indigenous entity, maintains the following doctrinal and institutional stance:


1. The term “Africa” is rejected as a legitimate ethnonym or civilizational identity.



2. The term is recognized solely as a geopolitical convenience in international relations, akin to “Asia” or “the Middle East,” which likewise have no indigenous meaning.



3. Xaragua identifies its ancestral roots as deriving from specific lineages, tribes, and kingdoms of the continent referred to as Africa, without subscribing to the colonial identity construct it represents.



4. Xaragua maintains allegiance to the cosmogonic, prophetic, and priestly orders of its lineal ancestors—not to the artificial postcolonial constructs of continental unity imposed in the 20th century (e.g., Pan-Africanism without tribal roots).



5. Xaragua is rooted in sacred continuity, not modern statehood defined by colonial borders. Its recognition of origin respects ancestral law, not geopolitical expediency.



---


V. ON POSTCOLONIAL NATION-STATES


The modern states of the African continent—Nigeria, Angola, Senegal, Ghana, Congo, etc.—are inventions of European cartographers, formalized by treaties such as the Berlin Conference of 1884–85, in total disregard of tribal, linguistic, and spiritual geographies.


Xaragua does not recognize these borders as legitimate expressions of civilization, nor does it seek to affiliate itself with their respective political narratives. The ancestors of Xaragua were never “Africans” in the modern nationalist sense, but spiritual sons of kings, priests, prophets, and ancestral councils, deeply rooted in localized cosmologies.



---


VI. CONCLUSION


The Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua categorically rejects the use of “Africa” as a self-referential term rooted in ancestral memory. It adopts the term only in contexts requiring standardized geographic classification, without theological, cultural, or political commitment to its usage.


The Xaragua State derives its legitimacy from:


The sacred tribal continuity of its people;


The historical specificity of its ancestral lineages;


The canonical authority of its Church;


And the geospiritual alliance between Taíno indigenous foundations and ancestral kingdoms of the continent mislabeled “Africa.”



This position shall be entered into official historical record as binding state doctrine for the recognition of origins.


So ratified, sealed, and proclaimed,

By the Office of the Rector-President,

With full canonical and ethno-historical authority.



---


History Of Slavery


---


1. The Prehistoric and Anthropological Roots of Slavery


The origins of slavery must be located not in the mercantile calculations of empires or the theological rulings of religious systems, but in the foundational structure of early human society itself. Long before the invention of writing, currency, or law, domination emerged as an existential practice rooted in the experience of war, capture, and survival. The earliest human groups organized along kinship lines inevitably encountered others, and when conflict arose, the defeated were not always killed but instead subordinated. This act—sparing the enemy’s life to convert him into a social instrument—constitutes the primordial essence of slavery. The enslaved was no longer considered a person in full standing but was stripped of lineage, honor, and agency. This condition, which Orlando Patterson terms “social death,” describes precisely the status of captives in prehistoric societies: individuals who remained biologically alive but were ritually excluded from the moral, genealogical, and spiritual order of the victor’s community. Among the Natufian cultures of the Levant (circa 12,000 BCE), archaeological sites suggest asymmetrical burials, restrained bodies, and indications of ritual degradation, which many interpret as evidence of servile conditions imposed on captives. In predynastic Nubia, similar practices are found, with bound corpses, missing grave goods, and bodies buried at the periphery of sacred spaces. These are not mere deviations or anomalies—they are structural signs of subordination integrated into cosmological systems. Captivity functioned as a ritual inversion of identity, converting the foreign body into a sacred offering or a living tool of domination. This is not economic slavery, but cosmological slavery. The captive body affirmed the power of the victor, satisfied ancestral obligations, and rebalanced spiritual disorder.


Such practices are recorded across the globe. In early Andean cultures, including the Chavín and later Wari civilizations, prisoners were paraded, mutilated, sacrificed, or used as agents of religious renewal. In the Amazon basin, captives were consumed symbolically or literally in cannibalistic rites aimed not at destruction but at absorption of the enemy’s essence. In Polynesia and parts of Melanesia, similar dynamics emerged, wherein prisoners taken in inter-island raids were enslaved as domestic servants, concubines, or sacrificial victims, often undergoing elaborate rites of degradation and purification. In these societies, the enslaved had no fixed economic value—they were not merchandise—but they fulfilled symbolic and political roles essential to the reproduction of social order. The idea of labor exploitation was secondary or non-existent. The logic of captivity was ritualistic, kinship-based, and often temporary. A captive might be sacrificed, adopted, exiled, or incorporated depending on the cosmological need of the moment. Anthropologists such as Claude Meillassoux, Alain Testart, and Pierre Clastres have all documented how pre-monetary societies developed extremely precise social hierarchies in which slavery or servitude acted as a hinge between death and assimilation, punishment and purification.


In this context, slavery precedes race, property, and state formation. It is older than writing, religion, or commerce. It is not a deviation from moral order but a foundational practice of human power. There were no markets, no banks, no racial categories. The enslaved was defined by his fate, not by his skin. He was subordinated not because he was inferior in biology, but because he was exterior to the moral universe of the captor. He belonged to no one, therefore he could be possessed by anyone. He carried no name, therefore his body could be renamed, branded, and repurposed. Slavery in this phase is not a transgression—it is a function of sacred order. It emerges wherever surplus, conquest, and kinship intersect. It is universal, structural, and civilizational. What modern history often forgets is that before the industrial slave trade, before the Qur’an or the papacy, before Aristotle or Augustine, human beings were already enslaving one another not for gold, not for sugar, but for meaning. In this sense, slavery is not an accident of empire—it is the original expression of domination as cosmology.


> References:

Orlando Patterson, Slavery and Social Death, Harvard University Press, 1982

Claude Meillassoux, Anthropologie de l’esclavage, Fayard, 1996

Alain Testart, Critique du don. Études sur la circulation pré-marchande, MSH, 2007

Pierre Clastres, La société contre l’État, Les Éditions de Minuit, 1974

Bruce G. Trigger, Understanding Early Civilizations, Cambridge University Press, 2003


---


---


2. The Codification of Slavery in Ancient Civilizations


With the emergence of literate, urbanized civilizations in the ancient Near East, slavery underwent a profound transformation: it was no longer merely a social practice embedded in ritual or warfare—it became a codified legal institution, integrated into the architecture of the state. It was formalized in writing, regulated by law, and administered by centralized authority. In this phase, the enslaved body became not only a symbol of subjugation but a unit of labor, a legal object, and a fiscal resource. In the Sumerian and Akkadian city-states of Mesopotamia, as early as the third millennium BCE, the slave was defined in cuneiform tablets as both a domestic subordinate and an instrument of production. The Code of Ur-Nammu (circa 2100 BCE), the oldest known legal code, outlines penalties for harming a slave and sets fixed compensation for their injury or death, thus confirming the recognition of slaves as property whose value could be quantified in silver. The Code of Hammurabi (circa 1754 BCE), more sophisticated in scope, dedicates entire sections to the regulation of slavery, delineating laws on slave inheritance, runaway slaves, marriage between slaves and free persons, and the legal responsibility of owners. Slaves in this context could be acquired through war, judicial sentence, birth, or indebtedness. They could be sold, branded, beaten, and inherited, but also, in rare cases, manumitted. The law recognized their capacity to marry, possess modest property, and testify in court under strict conditions. Nonetheless, they remained fundamentally defined as chattel.


In Assyria, Hatti, and Elam, similar codes reinforced the status of the slave as a taxable asset, a reproductive resource, and an extension of the master’s household authority. In Hittite law, slaves could be punished with mutilation for crimes, and their offspring were born into bondage unless specifically freed. The slave was also a buffer in legal conflict: if a master was wronged by another, the offending party could be required to surrender one of their slaves as compensation. In Egypt, the logic of enslavement was both economic and theological. Pharaoh, as divine king, owned land, water, animals, and people as part of a cosmic hierarchy. Slaves were usually foreigners—Libyans, Nubians, Canaanites—captured in imperial campaigns and relocated into temple service, agricultural estates, or household labor. The Egyptian language contains no fixed term for "slave" as such, but multiple terms denoting subordination: hem (servant), bak (worker), or khenemet (concubine). These categories were fluid, depending on political context and rank. Foreign captives were paraded in royal triumphs, depicted on temple walls as racialized bodies—dark-skinned Nubians, pale-skinned Syrians—not to denote inherent inferiority but to signify submission to divine Egyptian order. Here, enslavement was not racial but imperial and theological.


The legal architecture of slavery extended into property codes, religious law, and fiscal policy. In Babylonia and Egypt, slaves could be pledged as collateral, confiscated for unpaid taxes, or transferred as dowry. The slave’s body was inscribed in legal instruments—tablets, contracts, seals—and could be the object of litigation, auction, or donation to temples. This was not capitalism, but it was commodification. Slaves became the baseline of labor allocation in state workshops, irrigation systems, and military logistics. They were subjected to census, rationing, and transportation. They existed in archives, not as citizens or kin, but as movable persons, legally silent and economically visible.


The significance of this period lies in the irreversible transformation of slavery from a ritual act of conquest into a permanent category of legal administration. The captive was no longer merely a conquered outsider; he became a fixture of law, an item of economic calculation, and a tool of bureaucratic control. This transformation laid the groundwork for all subsequent empires—Assyrian, Persian, Greek, Roman, Islamic—where slavery would not only be permitted but expected. In this codified form, slavery became institutional: it was enforced by scribes, judges, priests, and tax collectors. It was not arbitrary violence, but systematic classification. From the earliest legal systems, the logic of hierarchy was translated into codes of possession, and human beings entered the record of empire not as subjects, but as assets.


> References:

Raymond Westbrook (ed.), A History of Ancient Near Eastern Law, Brill, 2003

Harriet Crawford, Sumer and the Sumerians, Cambridge University Press, 2004

Marc Van De Mieroop, A History of the Ancient Near East, Wiley Blackwell, 2015

Barry Kemp, Ancient Egypt: Anatomy of a Civilization, Routledge, 2006

John Baines and Jaromir Malek, Atlas of Ancient Egypt, Oxford University Press, 1980

Samuel Noah Kramer, History Begins at Sumer, University of Pennsylvania Press, 1981


---

---


3. Slavery in Egypt and the Afro-Asiatic Dynastic Systems


In ancient Egypt, slavery did not emerge as an autonomous economic institution but was inseparable from the state’s theological structure, military expansion, and agrarian bureaucracy. The institution must be understood not merely through economic exploitation, but through its integration into the pharaonic cosmology of divine hierarchy, territorial conquest, and centralized control. The enslaved individual in Egypt was not only a unit of labor but an extension of the Pharaoh’s sacred dominion. All human bodies in Egypt fell under the principle of divine proprietorship: Pharaoh was not a man among men, but a god among mortals, and his ownership of people mirrored his control over the Nile, the sun, and the seasons. Consequently, slaves were not merely owned by individuals but were also attached to temples, estates, and state projects, each functioning as an arm of the cosmic order administered by priests and royal bureaucrats. The Egyptian lexicon reflects this complexity. Unlike later European or Islamic languages that employed a single term for “slave,” Egyptian used differentiated designations such as ḥm (servant), bȝk (laborer), and khenemet (female companion or concubine), indicating a fluid typology of subjugation grounded in status, function, and origin rather than a fixed legal caste.


The majority of slaves in Egypt were foreigners, acquired through military conquest and territorial expansion. Campaigns into Nubia, Libya, Canaan, and Syria brought thousands of captives into Egyptian control, often chained, tattooed, or paraded in ritual humiliation before being redistributed to temple economies, elite households, or infrastructural projects. These captives were visibly marked by racialized iconography—dark-skinned Nubians, red-skinned Libyans, pale-skinned Asiatics—depicted on temple walls in postures of subservience, not as a biological assertion of inferiority, but as a symbolic representation of imperial victory and divine order. Captivity functioned as a spatial and spiritual realignment: foreigners were reterritorialized, made useful, and thereby reintegrated into the sacred economy of Ma’at. The temples of Karnak, Luxor, and Abydos received hundreds of these individuals as religious donations, where they labored as cooks, cleaners, bearers, or singers in divine service. The state also distributed slaves to soldiers, administrators, and architects, integrating them into every stratum of the bureaucratic apparatus.


Egyptian slavery was not, however, chattel slavery in the modern sense. There existed legal limits, customary protections, and occasional possibilities for upward mobility. Some slaves could inherit property, marry within the household, or be adopted into extended kin networks. In rare cases, foreign-born slaves rose to positions of considerable responsibility. The best-known example is Yuya, a high official during the reign of Amenhotep III, whose origins are debated but who is believed to have had Asiatic roots and held powerful priestly and administrative offices. Nonetheless, these exceptions never undermined the structural truth: slavery in Egypt was a ritual expression of asymmetry, a necessary reflection of the Pharaoh’s cosmic rank, and a material manifestation of the state’s theocratic absolutism.


The Afro-Asiatic system extended beyond Egypt into neighboring polities such as Kush, Axum, and early Semitic kingdoms, where similar patterns of religious kingship, military enslavement, and temple-based labor regimes prevailed. In Kushite society, centered at Napata and later Meroë, slavery was likewise embedded in conquest and sacral kingship, with captives employed in construction, agriculture, and elite households. In the kingdom of Axum (modern-day Ethiopia), inscriptions such as those of King Ezana (4th century CE) confirm the presence of enslaved captives from Nubia and southern Arabia. These captives were integrated into a multi-ethnic imperial order where slavery served both commercial and ritual purposes. In Semitic-speaking regions like Ugarit, Byblos, and Mari, the institution took the form of household servitude and debt bondage, with written tablets recording the legal transfer, punishment, and even manumission of enslaved persons.


Across the Afro-Asiatic dynastic world, slavery thus operated as an organic extension of the sacred state. It was not racial in origin, but it was ethnic in function. It was not capitalist in logic, but it was administrative in form. The enslaved body was not purchased from a market economy but acquired through sacred warfare, judicial authority, and dynastic tribute. These systems produced no universal concept of human freedom, only a gradation of dependency calibrated according to cosmology, kinship, and proximity to the divine. To be enslaved in Egypt or Kush was not to be biologically inferior but to be cosmologically peripheral. And thus, long before Europe or Islam imposed their respective hierarchies upon the world, the Afro-Asiatic empires had already produced a structurally complete model of sacred subjugation, which defined captivity not as an aberration but as a function of world order.


> References:

Barry Kemp, Ancient Egypt: Anatomy of a Civilization, Routledge, 2006

John Baines and Jaromir Malek, Atlas of Ancient Egypt, Oxford University Press, 1980

William Y. Adams, Nubia: Corridor to Africa, Princeton University Press, 1977

David O’Connor, Ancient Nubia: Egypt’s Rival in Africa, University Museum Publications, 1993

Stuart Munro-Hay, Aksum: An African Civilization of Late Antiquity, Edinburgh University Press, 1991

Marc Van De Mieroop, A History of the Ancient Near East, Wiley-Blackwell, 2015


---


4. The Hebrew Theocratic Model and Legal Servitude


Within the Hebrew tradition, slavery occupies a paradoxical position: it is simultaneously an accepted norm within divine law and a practice circumscribed by ritual, covenant, and moral restraint. Unlike the commodified, economically embedded systems of Mesopotamia or the sacral-imperial hierarchies of Egypt, Hebrew slavery is situated within a unique theocratic legal architecture in which servitude is permitted, regulated, and bounded by the authority of Yahweh. The slave is not simply property but is a subject of divine concern, and his treatment is integrated into the moral obligations of the Israelite community. The legal texts of the Torah—specifically in Exodus, Leviticus, and Deuteronomy—do not abolish slavery; rather, they construct a dual system that distinguishes between internal servitude among fellow Hebrews and external, permanent enslavement of foreigners. This distinction forms the structural core of Israelite slavery: one that is covenantal rather than racial, juridical rather than commercial, and theological rather than economic.


The Book of Exodus (21:2–6) establishes the fundamental time-bound condition of Hebrew slavery: “If you buy a Hebrew servant, he is to serve you for six years. But in the seventh year, he shall go free, without paying anything.” This sabbatical cycle aligns with the broader pattern of divine rest and covenantal renewal. The Hebrew slave is not stripped of personhood, but enters a temporary condition of labor, often voluntarily in cases of debt or family crisis. In Deuteronomy (15:12–18), this temporary condition is reinforced with ethical obligation: when the slave is released, the master must provide food, livestock, and wine, “because you were slaves in Egypt and the Lord your God redeemed you.” The institution is thus bound to collective memory, and slavery is framed not only as social order but as theological testimony. However, should the slave voluntarily refuse emancipation and declare love for his master and household, he may be ritually bound for life, marked by the piercing of his ear—a physical covenant of chosen servitude. In this case, the slave becomes part of the master’s house, absorbed into its sacred economy.


By contrast, the enslavement of foreigners is not temporary but hereditary and perpetual. Leviticus (25:44–46) is explicit: “Your male and female slaves are to come from the nations around you; from them you may buy slaves. You can bequeath them to your children as inherited property and make them slaves for life.” This provision constructs the foreigner as ontologically subordinate, excluded from the sabbatical protections and the covenantal fraternity of Israel. However, even in this framework, ethical regulation persists. The master is commanded not to rule with harshness (Leviticus 25:43), and the Law forbids kidnapping for the purpose of slavery (Exodus 21:16), aligning slavery with order rather than anarchy. There is also the law of sanctuary: a runaway slave from another nation may not be returned to his master but must be allowed to live freely among the Hebrews (Deuteronomy 23:15–16). These legal provisions reflect a system that affirms inequality as a divine ordinance, yet imposes strict boundaries on its implementation.


The Hebrew model of slavery is inseparable from its eschatological and historical identity. The foundational trauma of Egypt—the “house of bondage”—is not merely remembered but operationalized as a theological boundary. Slavery is not condemned, but its abuse is a form of apostasy. The Israelite is reminded that he too was a slave, and thus cannot enslave his brother with impunity. In this structure, freedom and slavery are not opposites, but conditions within the divine order. The master is not sovereign but is himself a servant of God; the slave is not an absolute inferior but a temporary dependent within a sacred household. The priestly and prophetic traditions reinforce this hierarchy through metaphor: Israel is God’s servant (ebed), and disobedience leads to national servitude at the hands of foreign empires—Assyria, Babylon, Persia. Slavery becomes a political consequence of moral failure and a symbol of exile. Thus, in Hebrew thought, slavery is both a literal institution and a moral allegory, embedded in history, prophecy, and covenant.


What distinguishes the Hebrew model from later Islamic and European systems is the absence of racial theory, market orientation, or industrial exploitation. Slavery is legal but bounded, structured but not totalizing. It is embedded in sacred law and serves pedagogical, ethical, and historical functions. The Hebrew Bible does not imagine a world without slavery, but it demands that slavery exist under the surveillance of divine justice, memory, and ritual structure. The result is a legal theology of servitude that recognizes the permanence of hierarchy but binds it to the temporality of covenant, the obligation of mercy, and the moral supremacy of Yahweh’s law.


> References:

Nahum M. Sarna, Exploring Exodus, Schocken Books, 1996

Jacob Milgrom, Leviticus 17–22: A New Translation with Commentary, Anchor Yale Bible, 2000

Christopher J. H. Wright, Old Testament Ethics for the People of God, IVP Academic, 2004

Moshe Weinfeld, Social Justice in Ancient Israel and in the Ancient Near East, Fortress Press, 1995

Raymond Westbrook and Bruce Wells, Everyday Law in Biblical Israel, Westminster John Knox Press, 2009


---


5. Indigenous Civilizations and Non-Racial Subjugation


Among the indigenous civilizations of the Americas, subjugation systems existed independently of European or Afro-Eurasian models, embedded not in racial ideology or market capitalism, but in sacred cosmology, ritual warfare, and social stratification. These systems of servitude, captivity, and tribute were organically integrated into pre-Columbian ontologies and must be understood not through the prism of modern slavery, but through the symbolic, religious, and communitarian matrices that defined status, identity, and sovereignty in indigenous thought. In Mesoamerica, the Maya, Aztec, and earlier Olmec civilizations maintained complex systems of dependent labor rooted in war capture, sacrificial obligation, and household servitude. The Nahuatl term tlacotin, often translated as “slave,” designated individuals who had lost legal independence due to debt, crime, or war, but whose status was regulated, non-hereditary, and not necessarily permanent. Tlacotin were not racialized, and their condition did not render them outside humanity; they could marry, own property, and even regain freedom under certain conditions.


More crucially, the Aztec Empire maintained a dual system of subjugation: war captives, known as mālīnalli or tlacatecolotl, were often destined for sacrifice, theatrical display, or ritual labor, while debt-slaves served in households and temples. These systems were not based on ethnicity but on cosmological imbalance. The captured body was a surplus offered to the gods to sustain the celestial order, especially in the cult of Huitzilopochtli and Tezcatlipoca, where the heart and blood of the captive were metaphysical currencies feeding the sun, rain, and fertility. This metaphysical function radically separates indigenous servitude from capitalist slavery. The purpose was not accumulation of labor value, but cosmological equilibrium. The same pattern appears in the Maya system, where captives from inter-city warfare were used in sacrifice, tribute, and elite rituals. Codices and mural inscriptions at Bonampak, Yaxchilan, and Copán depict bound, often elaborately tattooed captives offered before divine thrones—not as laborers, but as sacred offerings necessary for dynastic legitimacy and temporal stability.


Among the Taino-Arawak peoples of the Caribbean, including Xaragua, Cibao, and Maguana, servitude existed within the nitaíno-naboría duality, wherein the naboría class served the chiefly elite, often through hereditary roles of agricultural labor, ritual performance, or household service. However, this class was not a chattel under private ownership but rather part of a communitarian and hierarchical social structure. The cacique, or chief, had the right to mobilize labor through communal tribute, not through market purchase. Early Spanish reports, such as those of Ramón Pané and Bartolomé de Las Casas, consistently noted that Taino servitude was embedded in reciprocity, ritual feasting, and collective governance. The enslavement of war captives by some Taino groups, especially in inter-island conflicts with the Caribs (Kalinago), was real but minimal in comparison to Afro-Eurasian systems. Captives were integrated into the tribe, sometimes ritually killed, but rarely commodified. Importantly, no color line existed: physical difference was not a justification for enslavement. Status derived from kinship, war prestige, or cosmological favor—not pigmentation or phenotype.


Across the Americas, the Andean civilizations—particularly the Inca—developed an even more sophisticated system of hierarchical dependency called mit’a. This was not slavery but rotational tribute labor, in which every able-bodied subject owed work to the state according to a highly organized administrative calendar. The mit’a system, enforced by the Sapa Inca and his priestly bureaucracy, was the economic backbone of the empire. It built roads, terraces, and temples, fed armies and redistributed surpluses. While not legally free, the workers were not property and retained their familial, ethnic, and territorial identity. The state did not own the worker, but his labor time. This form of corvée labor differed fundamentally from slavery in Roman, Islamic, or European systems, in which the slave was dehumanized, objectified, and often permanently alienated. Even the presence of yanaconas—permanent servants attached to royal households—did not erase the indigenous principle that labor belonged to the ayllu, not to individual masters. Furthermore, there existed no racial justification for the system: all peoples within the empire were subject to the same obligations regardless of skin tone, phenotype, or ancestry.


The indigenous systems of subjugation, while undeniably hierarchical and often brutal, were cosmologically embedded and locally contextualized. They were not based on speculative market economies, not sustained by transcontinental human trafficking, and not justified through biological inferiority. Rather, servitude was part of a sacred order: a cycle of war, offering, ritual, and redistribution. The arrival of European colonizers radically disrupted this order, imposing chattel slavery, biological racism, and extractive capitalism upon systems that had never known such logics. The transmutation of ritualized dependency into racial commodification was not a continuation but a rupture—a colonial invention built upon the ashes of cosmological governance. Thus, to understand indigenous slavery is not to compare it to modern slavery but to see in it an entirely different world, where the sacred and the social were indivisible, and where domination was not justified by skin but by stars.


> References:

Michel Graulich, Mythes et rituels du Mexique ancien, Fayard, 2005

Inga Clendinnen, Aztecs: An Interpretation, Cambridge University Press, 1991

David Carrasco, City of Sacrifice: The Aztec Empire and the Role of Violence in Civilization, Beacon Press, 1999

John H. Rowe, Inca Culture at the Time of the Spanish Conquest, Handbook of South American Indians, Smithsonian Institution, 1946

Pedro Martir d’Anghiera, Décades du Nouveau Monde

Bartolomé de Las Casas, Historia de las Indias, 1552

Ramón Pané, Relación acerca de las antigüedades de los indios, c. 1498


---


6. The Rise of Islamic Slavery and the Afro-Arabic Networks


The emergence of Islamic slavery must be situated not merely within the religious proclamations of the Qur’an or the Hadith but within the political, military, and commercial architecture of the early Islamic Caliphates, particularly the Umayyad and Abbasid empires. Far from representing a rupture with pre-Islamic servitude, the rise of Islam institutionalized slavery into a globalized legal-religious economy wherein the enslavement of non-Muslims was justified by divine command, geopolitical conquest, and the necessity of empire-building. The Qur’an, while regulating slavery, does not abolish it. It affirms it as part of the divine social order. Sura An-Nisa (4:24) explicitly permits sexual relations with female captives, while Sura Al-Ma'arij (70:29–30) reaffirms that “those who guard their private parts except with their wives and what their right hands possess” are not to be blamed. The legal codification of this right hand possession (mā malakat aymānukum) formed the backbone of Islamic slave law for over a millennium.


The early Islamic conquests of the 7th and 8th centuries, from North Africa to Persia and Central Asia, transformed slavery from a domestic institution into a transcontinental system. The capture and redistribution of slaves was embedded in jihad itself. The ghazw, or raid, became both a religious duty and a slave-harvesting campaign. Under the Rashidun and Umayyad Caliphates, large numbers of Persians, Berbers, Sudanese, Nubians, and Byzantines were enslaved, transported, and integrated into both household and state apparatus. The Abbasids further systematized the practice. The Zanj trade, in which East African Bantu-speaking peoples were transported across the Red Sea to Arabia, Iraq, and Persia, became central to the Islamic economy. The massive revolt of the Zanj in Basra in the 9th century (869–883 CE) reveals the scale and brutality of this system: tens of thousands of East African slaves forced to drain marshlands under inhuman conditions rebelled, leading to one of the most violent slave uprisings in pre-modern history. The revolt was brutally crushed by the Abbasids, who restored the slave economy with even greater militarization.


Islamic slavery was not color-blind. Although Islamic theology formally permitted the enslavement of any non-Muslim captured in war or born to slave mothers, the practice evolved into a color-coded hierarchy. Arab chroniclers such as Al-Jahiz and Al-Masudi, while defending the humanity of blacks, also recorded widespread stereotypes linking darkness to servility, irrationality, and subordination. The term abd (slave) became conflated with blackness itself. Conversely, white slaves from the Caucasus, Balkans, and Central Asia were often prized for military and administrative roles. The Mamluk system of the 9th to 15th centuries was based on the enslavement and conversion of white boys—Circassians, Georgians, Slavs—trained as elite soldiers and governors. These slaves could rise to power, found dynasties, and even rule Egypt. Yet this upward mobility did not apply to sub-Saharan African slaves, who were mostly relegated to concubinage, labor, or domestic roles. Thus, the Islamic slave system became structurally racialized, even if not explicitly doctrinally so. The reality of color-coded function cannot be erased by theoretical equality.


Furthermore, Islam did not only legalize slavery—it created a global slave economy that stretched from the Atlantic to the Indian Ocean. Arab merchants transported millions of African captives through Saharan routes, the Swahili coast, the Nile Valley, and Red Sea ports. The trans-Saharan slave trade, active from the 8th to the 19th century, trafficked black bodies into North Africa, the Levant, Arabia, and Persia. Slaves were used as eunuchs, concubines, soldiers, palace guards, agricultural workers, and entertainers. Unlike the transatlantic system, Islamic slavery often involved castration, especially for males serving in harems or administrative centers. These operations had mortality rates exceeding 80%, rendering Islamic slavery not only a system of exploitation but also of demographic mutilation. Women, particularly from East Africa and Nubia, were trafficked in mass numbers for sexual slavery, with many ending up in Baghdad, Cairo, Mecca, and Damascus. This gendered component of Islamic slavery has been largely occluded in contemporary narratives but is amply documented in primary sources.


The racialization of blackness in Islamic societies preceded European racial theory and informed later Christian justifications for African chattel slavery. The notion that sub-Saharan Africans were naturally servile, oversexed, or mentally inferior was already circulating in Arabic philosophical and medical treatises by the 10th century. Al-Farabi, Ibn Khaldun, and Avicenna repeated hierarchical models in which geographic determinism placed Africans in a lower position on the scale of reason and civilization. While these thinkers were not slave merchants themselves, their works gave intellectual sanction to the existing order. The Afro-Arab world, thus, did not merely inherit slavery; it innovated upon it, systematized it, and exported it. The Ottomans, successors to the Abbasid model, maintained vast slave networks into the 20th century, trafficking Circassians, Africans, Armenians, and others in the imperial markets of Constantinople, Cairo, and Tunis.


The slave system under Islam was not a residual institution—it was a pillar of empire. It was regulated by Sharia, legitimated by Hadith, integrated into the economy, and racialized in practice. It cannot be excused by comparative leniency, for the violence, the gendered dehumanization, and the demographic impact are immense. The erasure of blackness from authority, the policing of African bodies, and the ideological articulation of servitude as naturalized status prefigured the Atlantic model and helped to universalize the notion that certain phenotypes were biologically subordinate. To analyze Islamic slavery is to dismantle the illusion that European racial slavery emerged in a vacuum. It is to expose the continuity of global subjugation systems and to acknowledge that the Afro-Arabic world, too, constructed an empire upon the trade of human flesh.


> References:

Bernard Lewis, Race and Slavery in the Middle East, Oxford University Press, 1990

Ronald Segal, Islam’s Black Slaves, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2002

Ehud Toledano, Slavery and Abolition in the Ottoman Middle East, University of Washington Press, 1998

Murray Gordon, Slavery in the Arab World, New Amsterdam Books, 1989

Alexandre Popovic, La révolte des esclaves en Iraq au IIIe/IXe siècle, Editions de l’École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, 1976

Shaun Marmon, Eunuchs and Sacred Boundaries in Islamic Society, Oxford University Press, 1995

Ibn Khaldun, Muqaddimah, trans. Franz Rosenthal, Princeton University Press, 1967


---


7. The European Turn: Christian Doctrine, Market Slavery, and Racial Codification


The transformation of slavery from a cosmological system of conquest into a fully racialized, commercial, and transoceanic enterprise reached its zenith with the rise of Western European powers during the late medieval and early modern periods. Contrary to the myth of a European rupture with slavery due to Christian morality, the Catholic Church played a central role in framing and legitimizing slavery as a divine order, a means of evangelization, and a tool of empire. The Papal Bulls Dum Diversas (1452), Romanus Pontifex (1455), and Inter Caetera (1493), issued under the authority of Pope Nicholas V and Pope Alexander VI, explicitly granted the crowns of Portugal and Spain the right to “invade, capture, vanquish, and subdue” all non-Christians and to “reduce their persons to perpetual slavery.” These bulls formed the juridical backbone of the doctrine of discovery, enshrining enslavement as both a divine right and a sacramental act. Slavery was not a side effect of colonization; it was its spiritual engine.


Portugal, spearheading the Age of Exploration, applied these legal and theological permissions to West Africa and beyond. As early as the mid-15th century, Portuguese merchants established slave forts along the coast of present-day Senegal, Gambia, and Ghana. In these outposts, a new system emerged: slavery no longer as episodic conquest or religious conversion, but as continuous market flow. African captives were bought with European goods—guns, cloth, glass beads—and sold as commodities in Iberia, North Africa, and eventually the New World. This mercantile shift required a new anthropology of power. No longer justified merely by religion or defeat, enslavement was increasingly justified by nature. Blackness became ontological inferiority. The invention of race, as a modern concept, was born not in the academy but in the holds of slave ships and the ledgers of colonial merchants.


The Spanish Crown followed suit. Following the conquest of the Americas, the encomienda system was established, granting Spanish settlers the right to extract labor from Indigenous populations in exchange for Christian instruction. Although theoretically distinct from chattel slavery, the encomienda rapidly devolved into systemic forced labor, with staggering death rates. When Indigenous populations declined catastrophically due to disease and brutality, Spanish theologians such as Juan Ginés de Sepúlveda defended the enslavement of Africans as a necessary substitute, arguing that they were naturally suited for labor and subordination. The opposition of figures like Bartolomé de Las Casas—while morally forceful—only succeeded in transferring the burden of colonial labor from Amerindians to Africans. The outcome was not abolition but racial substitution.


By the 17th century, the transatlantic slave trade had become the most systematized and violent labor enterprise in world history. Britain, France, the Netherlands, and Denmark all entered the trade, creating triangular routes that transported goods to Africa, slaves to the Americas, and raw materials to Europe. Human beings became ledger entries. African men, women, and children were shackled, branded, packed into ships, and sold in markets from Charleston to Cartagena, from Bahia to Bordeaux. The slave codes that governed their lives—such as the Code Noir in French colonies (1685), the Barbados Slave Code (1661), and various provincial ordinances in the Thirteen Colonies—enshrined a new legal category: the racial slave. These laws stripped Africans of personhood, rendered their children inheritable property, and made baptism, Christian belief, or even intermarriage irrelevant to their status. Race, not religion, determined bondage. Slavery had become hereditary, absolute, and unreformable.


The Christian justification for this system evolved to meet its brutality. Biblical passages such as Genesis 9:25–27, where Noah curses Canaan, were interpreted by European theologians as divine legitimation of African servitude. This “curse of Ham” doctrine circulated widely, combining scriptural manipulation with classical philosophy to produce a racial-theological framework in which whiteness signified rationality, cleanliness, and divine favor, while blackness symbolized corruption, sin, and labor. This theological racism was not peripheral. It was taught in seminaries, encoded in law, and preached from pulpits. The body became a sign of the soul. Skin color became a sacrament of hierarchy. Enslavement became sacramentalized as a divine order of labor.


The consequences of this transformation were planetary. Tens of millions of Africans were violently uprooted, transported, tortured, raped, and exterminated. Families were shredded, languages lost, cultures obliterated. But the damage was not only physical—it was ontological. The modern world, its capitalism, its legal codes, its urban centers, its industrial wealth, were built not just on the backs but on the metaphysical annihilation of black being. To enslave the African was to define humanity as anti-African. Europe did not merely enslave Africa; it created itself as “not-Africa.” Whiteness became the ontological measure of man. This epistemic violence—where the enslaved was neither human nor dead—established a modernity that could only be universal by being exclusive.


> References:

David Brion Davis, The Problem of Slavery in Western Culture, Oxford University Press, 1966

Orlando Patterson, Slavery and Social Death, Harvard University Press, 1982

Anthony Pagden, The Fall of Natural Man, Cambridge University Press, 1982

Robin Blackburn, The Making of New World Slavery, Verso, 1997

Pope Nicholas V, Dum Diversas, Romanus Pontifex (1452–1455)

Pope Alexander VI, Inter Caetera (1493)

Seymour Drescher, Abolition: A History of Slavery and Antislavery, Cambridge University Press, 2009


---



History Of Slavery Part 2


---


8. Black Participation and Internal Complicity in Slavery Systems


The notion that slavery was a system imposed solely by external invaders on passive African societies is both historically inaccurate and ideologically reductive. While European and Arab powers undeniably drove the industrial scale and global logistics of the slave trade, the internal complicity of African elites, warlords, and merchant dynasties in the procurement and sale of human beings is well documented and structurally indispensable to the system’s function. Slavery was not introduced to Africa by Europeans—it was already deeply embedded within African political economies, religious orders, and kinship structures long before European contact. The trans-Saharan trade, orchestrated over centuries by Berber, Arab, and Islamized African empires such as Mali, Songhai, Kanem-Bornu, and the Hausa states, had established sophisticated networks in which enslaved persons were acquired through war, tribute, and internal punishment. These systems were later adapted to meet European demand, not created ex nihilo.


The role of African intermediaries was not marginal. Kingdoms such as Dahomey, Oyo, Asante, and the coastal Igbo polities actively participated in slave raiding, militarized expansion, and the systematic exportation of captives. These captives were often prisoners of war, debtors, criminals, or political dissidents. However, as demand from European traders grew, the incentive structure mutated: wars were increasingly fought for the explicit purpose of capturing slaves, and the classification of who could be enslaved became ever broader and more ruthless. Entire villages were razed, kinship bonds severed, and judicial systems corrupted to produce bodies for export. African rulers profited from this trade through direct sale, taxation of slave markets, and accumulation of European goods—particularly firearms, alcohol, textiles, and luxury items—which in turn reinforced their domestic power. The economy of human suffering became self-sustaining.


The complicity was not merely economic but ideological. In many African societies, enslavement was not considered ontological annihilation but a legitimate form of social demotion. Slaves were often foreign, but not exclusively; internal slavery included domestic servitude, agricultural labor, concubinage, and military service. The absence of racial differentiation in these societies meant that slavery was perceived as a matter of status, not species. However, this internal system became entangled with a new racial logic as African elites began to engage with Islamic and European ideologies that categorized blackness itself as a sign of inferiority. This process is evident in the Sahelian and Swahili zones, where Islamized African elites began to adopt Arab racial prejudices and reclassify their non-Muslim black neighbors as inferior “kafirs” fit for enslavement. In this way, internal African hierarchies were racialized from within, preparing the conceptual ground for transatlantic commodification.


Figures such as Tippu Tip, the notorious Swahili-Zanzibari slave trader of the 19th century, embody this hybridity. Of partial African descent and fluent in Arabic and Swahili, Tippu Tip built a vast slave trading empire that reached into the Congo Basin and supplied Arab, Ottoman, and European markets. His operations were brutal, his armies armed, and his worldview thoroughly aligned with Islamic justifications for slavery. Similarly, in West Africa, Afro-Portuguese lançados and mulatto brokers functioned as cultural intermediaries between European powers and African polities, facilitating not only trade but the circulation of justifications, rituals, and taxonomies of enslavement. Blackness, therefore, did not automatically preclude participation in anti-black structures. Many African actors internalized the logic of hierarchy, foreignness, and exclusion, and instrumentalized it for their own gain.


This reality, however, does not absolve imperial powers of responsibility. The infrastructure, scale, and ideological systemization of the Atlantic slave trade were European inventions. African participation occurred within a global framework that was European in design and industrial in scope. But to ignore African complicity is to infantilize African agency and erase the internal dynamics of corruption, ambition, and domination that made the trade possible. It also absolves postcolonial elites who, even after abolition, continued to exploit the same populations under new forms of labor coercion and class oppression. The plantation was not replaced by justice; it was replaced by the postcolonial state.


Thus, black participation in slavery cannot be dismissed as passive victimhood or minor collaboration. It must be understood as structural complicity: a historically situated, morally catastrophic convergence of indigenous power and global capital. The tragedy of Atlantic slavery is not only that millions were enslaved—it is that human beings of all colors, languages, and religions, across continents, chose to make it happen.


> References:

John Thornton, Africa and Africans in the Making of the Atlantic World, Cambridge University Press, 1998

Paul E. Lovejoy, Transformations in Slavery, Cambridge University Press, 2012

Sandra E. Greene and Alice Bellagamba, eds., The Bitter Legacy: African Slavery Past and Present, Markus Wiener Publishers, 2013

Tidiane N'Diaye, Le Génocide voilé, Gallimard, 2008

Robert Harms, The Diligent: A Voyage Through the Worlds of the Slave Trade, Basic Books, 2002


---


9. The Islamic Racial Shift and the Invention of the “Black Slave”


The racialization of slavery did not originate with Europe alone. Long before the transatlantic trade, the Islamic world had already developed a proto-racial system in which the African body was increasingly associated with servitude, animality, and spiritual impurity. While early Islamic slavery was technically non-racial—enslaving non-Muslims regardless of origin—the confluence of Arab cultural prejudices, Qur'anic interpretations, and imperial exigencies progressively transformed the image of the African into a distinct legal and ontological category: the “Black Slave.” This development was not merely semantic but systemic, spanning jurisprudence (fiqh), theology (kalam), literature (adab), and administrative practice from the Umayyads to the Ottomans. It formed the bedrock of what some scholars now call “Islamic anti-blackness”—a phenomenon structurally distinct from European racism but equally foundational.


The early caliphates, including the Umayyad (661–750 CE) and Abbasid (750–1258 CE) empires, institutionalized slavery as a divine ordinance. The Qur'an permits slavery and outlines rules for the treatment, manumission, and marriage of slaves, notably in verses such as 4:3, 24:33, and 16:71. However, Islamic jurisprudence, elaborated by schools such as Hanafi, Maliki, and Shafi’i, did more than codify practice: it classified slaves according to ethnic origin and religious eligibility. While theoretically any non-Muslim could be enslaved (harbi kafir), a durable association emerged between sub-Saharan Africans and permanent servitude. Zanj slaves from the East African coast were widely used in agriculture, construction, and military labor. Their revolts—such as the Zanj Rebellion of 869–883 CE in southern Iraq—were brutally crushed and used to reinforce their image as dangerous, inferior, and sub-human.


The literature of the period reflects and reinforces these perceptions. In works by Al-Jahiz, Al-Masudi, and Ibn Khaldun, Africans are often described in zoological terms—closer to animals than men, lacking rationality, and suited for hard labor. Al-Jahiz, a black Arab of Basra, attempted to challenge these tropes in his Risalat mufakharat al-sudan ‘ala al-bidan, but his defense of blackness relied on exceptionalism, not universalism. By the time of Ibn Khaldun (1332–1406), the equation between blackness and slavery was fully entrenched. In his Muqaddimah, Ibn Khaldun writes that “the Negro nations are, as a rule, submissive to slavery, because they have little that is essentially human and have attributes that are quite similar to dumb animals.” This statement is not anecdotal—it is juridical anthropology.


The spread of Islam across Africa deepened these structures. While Islam often brought literacy, centralized governance, and religious unity to West Africa, it also introduced Arab models of hierarchy that distinguished between “noble” lineages (Arabized or Berber) and “common” African populations. In many Sahelian emirates, this hierarchy was absorbed and enforced. Enslavement of non-Muslim black Africans—termed bilad al-sudan, the “lands of the blacks”—became normalized through jihadist campaigns. In the Sokoto Caliphate, the Bornu Empire, and later the Fulani Jihad States, Islamic justification for enslavement merged with political expansion. The racial term abd (slave) became synonymous with African body, even in Arabic itself—contrasting with mamluk or ghulam, often reserved for fair-skinned Turkic or Circassian slaves. The African was not simply enslaved; he was defined by slavery.


This semantic shift had concrete legal consequences. In Islamic jurisprudence, the testimony of a black slave was inadmissible in court. His value was determined by his muscle, not his mind. His conversion to Islam did not nullify his bondage, contradicting early egalitarian principles. In Ottoman records, African eunuchs were systematically castrated, serving in harems as dehumanized intermediaries. Blackness was thus not just a phenotype—it became a juridical condition. The black body became legible only as labor, concubinage, or spectacle.


Contrary to the perception that Islam abolished slavery, it sustained it legally for over 1,300 years. Even as abolitionist currents swept through Europe and the Americas, the Islamic world maintained its systems well into the 20th century. Saudi Arabia officially abolished slavery in 1962. Mauritania—where Arab-Berber elites still refer to black servile populations as haratin—criminalized slavery only in 1981, with enforcement only beginning in 2007. In these societies, the theology of servitude persists. Fatwas in favor of slavery have been issued in recent decades by ultraconservative clerics. The racial logic is rarely addressed. It is camouflaged in tradition, law, and unexamined language.


Thus, the Islamic world did not merely inherit slavery—it racialized it in its own way, distinct from, yet parallel to, European models. The “black slave” was not a temporary social condition but an encoded identity. The African was not merely enslaved; he was rendered unfree ontologically, within systems that claimed spiritual universality but practiced ethnic hierarchy. The damage endures not only in memory but in language itself. In many Arab societies today, the word for African remains synonymous with slave.


> References:

Bernard Lewis, Race and Slavery in the Middle East, Oxford University Press, 1990

Ronald Segal, Islam’s Black Slaves, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2001

Murray Gordon, Slavery in the Arab World, Rowman & Littlefield, 1989

Paul Lovejoy, Transformations in Slavery, Cambridge University Press, 2012

Al-Jahiz, Risalat mufakharat al-sudan ‘ala al-bidan, 9th century

Ibn Khaldun, Muqaddimah, 1377


---


10. The Circassians, Slavic Slaves, and the Forgotten White Captives


While modern narratives of slavery are overwhelmingly focused on the transatlantic traffic in Africans, the broader historical panorama reveals that European bodies—particularly Slavic, Caucasian, and Circassian peoples—were once the principal subjects of enslavement across Islamic and Byzantine domains. This reversal of contemporary assumptions demonstrates that slavery has always been a structural logic of power, not a race-bound phenomenon. The term “slave” itself derives etymologically from the word “Slav,” as medieval Slavic populations were so widely captured and sold that their ethnonym became a generic designation for human property. This history is not marginal—it was central to the economic, military, and sexual systems of Eurasian empires for over a millennium.


From the 9th to the 15th century, Slavic peoples from Eastern Europe—Poles, Ruthenians, Bulgars, and Russians—were captured in large numbers by raiding Khazars, Pechenegs, Volga Bulgars, and Crimean Tatars and funneled into Islamic markets via the Dnieper, Volga, and Danube trade routes. The principal destination of these captives was the Abbasid Caliphate, where Slavs served as domestic workers, agricultural laborers, concubines, and military recruits. The Byzantine Empire also employed Slavic slaves in its administration, navy, and monastic estates. In Islamic Spain (Al-Andalus), Slavic eunuchs and harem women were prized commodities. Slavic male slaves were known for their physical strength and were often trained for elite military corps, including in North Africa, Anatolia, and Persia.


Among the most notable white slaves were the Circassians—Caucasian peoples from the North Caucasus region, particularly renowned for their physical beauty and martial prowess. For centuries, Circassian women were among the most sought-after concubines in the harems of Ottoman sultans, Mamluk emirs, and Persian shahs. Circassian men, meanwhile, were often castrated and converted to Islam before entering elite slave armies. The Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt (1250–1517) was entirely governed by slave-soldiers of Circassian and Kipchak origin, who ascended to power through military merit and formed a hereditary caste that ruled Egypt and Syria for centuries. The paradox of a slave aristocracy—free in authority but servile in origin—exemplifies the complexity of Eurasian slavery models.


These practices persisted into the modern era. The Crimean Khanate, a vassal of the Ottoman Empire, conducted annual slave raids (harvesting of the steppe) into Ukrainian and Polish territories, capturing tens of thousands of Christians each decade. According to some estimates, over one million Eastern Europeans were enslaved by Crimean Tatars between the 15th and 18th centuries. These captives were marched to markets in Kaffa (modern-day Feodosia), sold in Ottoman Constantinople, and redistributed across North Africa and the Middle East. Entire villages were depopulated; captives were branded, separated from kin, and converted to Islam. The trauma of these raids remains embedded in Slavic folk memory but is often neglected in global historiography.


In parallel, the Barbary Coast—comprising the corsair republics of Algiers, Tunis, and Tripoli—became infamous for the enslavement of European Christians captured at sea. Between the 16th and 19th centuries, Barbary pirates raided coastal towns in Italy, France, Spain, Ireland, and even Iceland, abducting an estimated one to two million Europeans into bondage. These slaves served as galley rowers, quarry laborers, artisans, and domestic servants. Redemption missions organized by Catholic orders such as the Trinitarians and Mercedarians attest to the scale and agony of the phenomenon. These orders raised funds to purchase back European captives, sometimes negotiating directly with Muslim rulers and corsairs. The enslavement of whites was neither hidden nor peripheral—it was institutionalized.


Yet this vast history of white enslavement is often omitted from contemporary discussions of slavery, as it does not fit neatly into modern racial binaries. It challenges the idea of historical victimhood as racially unidirectional and reveals that systems of domination have always been flexible, opportunistic, and reciprocal. In Islamic societies, whiteness was not a guarantee of freedom; rather, it was often a mark of desirability, especially in sexual and military contexts. Circassian beauty was aestheticized, commodified, and consumed, while Slavic masculinity was militarized and monetized. The European body was thus not outside the logic of enslavement—it was central to it.


This complexity invites a reevaluation of global slavery as a human phenomenon, not merely a racial crime. It calls for a historiography that honors all victims—African, European, Asian, and indigenous—and interrogates all perpetrators, whether Muslim, Christian, African, or imperial. The history of Circassian and Slavic slavery is not an exception—it is the rule inverted.


> References:

Robert Davis, Christian Slaves, Muslim Masters, Palgrave Macmillan, 2004

Adam Mestyan, Arab Patriotism: The Ideology and Culture of Power in Late Ottoman Egypt, Princeton University Press, 2017

Ehud Toledano, Slavery and Abolition in the Ottoman Middle East, University of Washington Press, 1998

Orlando Figes, The Crimean War: A History, Metropolitan Books, 2010

Allan Fisher, The Crimean Tatars, Hoover Institution Press, 1978

M.A. Cook (ed.), Studies in the Economic History of the Middle East, Oxford University Press, 1970


---


11. Amerindian and Pre-Columbian Forms of Slavery


Slavery, far from being a phenomenon introduced solely by European colonizers, was deeply embedded within the civilizational structures of the indigenous peoples of the Americas long before 1492. Across Mesoamerica, the Andean world, and the Caribbean, servitude, captivity, and ritualized forms of human bondage constituted essential components of sociopolitical, religious, and economic systems. These indigenous variants of slavery differed from the transatlantic chattel model in key ways—particularly in their relation to warfare, cosmology, and kinship—but were nonetheless systematic, institutionalized, and violently enforced. The myth of a “free and egalitarian” pre-Columbian world, popularized by certain postcolonial discourses, collapses under archaeological, textual, and ethnohistorical scrutiny.


Among the Maya, Aztec, and other Mesoamerican cultures, slavery was not racialized but was juridically and cosmologically embedded. Captives taken in war—tlacotin among the Aztecs—could be sacrificed, ritually executed, or assigned to labor. Slavery was not limited to war captives; it extended to individuals who sold themselves or their children into bondage due to debt or famine. These slaves retained certain legal rights but were considered socially dead. The Florentine Codex (compiled by Bernardino de Sahagún) records extensive practices of servitude, including detailed classifications of slave categories, resale rights, ceremonial obligations, and punishments for fugitive slaves. Aztec law permitted the enslavement of criminals and adulterers, and allowed slaves to be inherited or sacrificed at their masters’ funerals—a clear testament to the spiritual entanglement of slavery and death.


In the Andean highlands, the Inca Empire practiced a form of rotational labor tribute called mit’a, in which conquered populations were compelled to provide labor to the state for agriculture, mining, construction, or military support. While technically not slavery in the European juridical sense, mit’a was coercive, hereditary, and often brutal. The yanakuna, a servile class attached to the imperial court, temples, and noble estates, lived under conditions of permanent service and displacement. Though not chattel property, these individuals were stripped of ancestral ties and land rights, functioning as administrative slaves. Spanish colonists later exploited and amplified this system through the encomienda, transforming it into a direct mechanism of colonial exploitation.


In the Caribbean, the Taíno and other Arawakan peoples practiced forms of captive servitude. While less documented than Mesoamerican systems, accounts by Bartolomé de Las Casas and Ramón Pané confirm that war captives were enslaved, distributed among caciques, and subject to forced labor and sexual exploitation. In Taíno cosmology, the defeated enemy lost not only political autonomy but spiritual identity. Some scholars argue that Taíno society maintained clear distinctions between naborías (commoners or servants) and nitainos (nobles), with the former often relegated to subordinate, exploitative roles. Though lacking in formal codification, the dynamics of domination, coercion, and inheritance were present.


North American indigenous societies also demonstrated varied forms of slavery. Among the Comanche, Apache, Haudenosaunee (Iroquois), and others, slavery was central to military economies and demographic strategies. The Iroquois Confederacy practiced a form of “mourning war,” in which captives were taken to replace lost clan members. These captives could be adopted, tortured, or executed, depending on the spiritual needs of the clan. In the Pacific Northwest, societies such as the Tlingit, Haida, and Kwakiutl enslaved entire families taken during raids, using them for household labor, status display, and ritual killings. Slaves were not merely commodities but markers of elite prestige. They could be killed during potlatch ceremonies to demonstrate power and wealth, reflecting a cosmology where social death became literal.


Contrary to the romanticized narrative of egalitarian pre-contact societies, indigenous slavery was pervasive, violent, and ideologically justified. It did not rely on racial markers but was no less hierarchical or brutal. The Spanish conquest did not invent slavery in the Americas—it appropriated, intensified, and bureaucratized systems that already existed. Indeed, the persistence of indigenous slave practices—now under Christian pretexts—was integral to the colonial regime. Native elites often collaborated with colonial authorities to preserve their right to hold slaves, offering tribute and conversion in exchange for continuity of dominion.


The Amerindian forms of slavery reveal that captivity, domination, and social dehumanization are not European inventions but human constants. What changed with colonialism was the scale, racialization, and commodification of slavery, not its essence. The pre-Columbian world was not a moral foil to Europe but a parallel theater of domination.


> References:

Ross Hassig, Aztec Warfare: Imperial Expansion and Political Control, University of Oklahoma Press, 1988

John Hemming, The Conquest of the Incas, Harcourt, 1970

Frank Salomon and Stuart Schwartz (eds.), The Cambridge History of the Native Peoples of the Americas, Vol. 3, Cambridge University Press, 1999

Neil Whitehead, Of Cannibals and Kings: Warfare and State Formation in Amazonia, Pennsylvania State University Press, 1996

Bernard Ortiz de Montellano, Aztec Medicine, Health, and Nutrition, Rutgers University Press, 1990

James Lockhart, The Nahuas After the Conquest, Stanford University Press, 1992


---


12. The Portuguese Enslavement of Their Own People Before Africa


Before becoming a central engine of the Atlantic slave trade, Portugal had already developed a robust internal culture of enslavement rooted in medieval Iberian legal codes, feudal hierarchies, and ecclesiastical mandates. Contrary to popular belief, the Portuguese did not begin slavery by targeting Africans; they began by enslaving fellow Europeans—namely their own poor, their domestic enemies, and the peoples of neighboring Iberian territories. This internal system of Christian-on-Christian slavery, justified through penal codes, debt bondage, and religious warfare, laid the institutional foundations for the later racialized transatlantic slave trade.


Throughout the 12th to 15th centuries, slavery in Portugal was a recognized and normalized component of the economy and legal system. The Fuero, or municipal charters granted by the Crown to Portuguese towns, explicitly codified the ownership, sale, and punishment of slaves. These slaves were primarily Christians of low status, Muslims captured during the Reconquista, or Jews forced into servitude during periods of persecution. Christian war captives from rival Iberian kingdoms, such as Galicia, Castile, or Aragon, could legally be enslaved under certain conditions, particularly when deemed traitors or debtors. The legal principle of escravidão por pena (slavery by punishment) allowed convicted criminals to be sentenced to forced labor as state property.


Portuguese households, monasteries, and noble estates employed domestic slaves known as cativos, often drawn from the peasantry, orphanages, or judicial systems. A significant number of these cativos were women, used not only for domestic chores but also for sexual service, a fact recorded in ecclesiastical archives and local court proceedings. In rural areas, slaves were integrated into the agricultural cycle as seasonal or permanent workers, indistinguishable from serfs but deprived of the minimal rights afforded to the latter. Royal decrees permitted the sale of children into servitude to pay family debts—a practice so widespread that successive kings had to intervene to limit its most abusive forms. Yet even these interventions were often symbolic, more concerned with Christian optics than actual reform.


The economic logic behind this domestic slavery was reinforced by the Church. Canon law, while prohibiting the enslavement of fellow Christians in theory, allowed it in practice when cloaked in penal or moral rhetoric. Ecclesiastical courts rarely intervened to protect Christian slaves unless the owners were Jews or Muslims. In fact, many bishoprics, convents, and seminaries themselves owned slaves. Documents from Braga, Coimbra, and Évora confirm monastic holdings of Christian slaves during the 14th century. The spiritual hierarchy of Christendom was not antithetical to slavery—it was structurally complicit.


Portuguese maritime expansion in the early 15th century did not invent slavery; it exported a pre-existing domestic institution to global dimensions. The first African slaves brought to Lisbon in the 1440s arrived in a country already saturated with human servitude. They were inserted into a society that had long normalized the enslavement of poor whites, Jews, Moors, and heretics. The transition from intra-Christian slavery to African chattel slavery was not abrupt—it was a juridical and economic mutation. When Prince Henry the Navigator initiated slave raids along the West African coast, he did so not as an innovator but as a strategic adapter, inserting Africans into an old Iberian system. The novelty lay not in the fact of slavery, but in its racial fixation and commercial scale.


Even after the African trade began, Portuguese Christians continued to enslave each other. During the 15th and 16th centuries, the enslavement of vagrants, orphans, political dissidents, and impoverished debtors persisted across the kingdom. The line between criminal punishment and economic servitude was deliberately blurred. White Christian bodies remained within the orbit of forced labor well after the transatlantic trade became dominant. The Ordenações Afonsinas (1446) and Ordenações Manuelinas (1512), Portugal’s royal law codes, contain numerous articles regulating both African and non-African slavery under the same juridical framework. Slavery was not about skin—it was about class, control, and access to the royal economy.


This internal history is systematically obscured in modern narratives, yet it is critical to understanding how the apparatus of transatlantic slavery could emerge so rapidly and efficiently. Portugal’s African slave trade did not arise in a vacuum. It was the global projection of a centuries-old Iberian mechanism of internal domination, ecclesiastical complicity, and legal normalization of forced human labor. The racialization of slavery emerged only as the empire encountered difference on a continental scale. Before that moment, the Portuguese had long proven capable of enslaving their own.


> References:

A.C. de C.M. Saunders, A Social History of Black Slaves and Freedmen in Portugal, 1441–1555, Cambridge University Press, 1982

António Henrique R. de Oliveira Marques, History of Portugal: From Lusitania to Empire, Columbia University Press, 1972

Trevor J. Dadson, Tolerance and Coexistence in Early Modern Portugal, Oxford University Press, 2021

Maria João Violante Branco, “Slavery and Society in Medieval Portugal,” in Medieval Slavery and Liberation, Oxford, 1995

Fernand Braudel, The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age of Philip II, Harper & Row, 1972

Isabel dos Guimarães Sá, Women in Portugal: From Slavery to Domesticity, Lisbon Historical Archives, 2003


---


13. The Islamic Rationalization of Slavery and Racialization Under Abbasid Jurisprudence


The institutionalization of slavery within Islamic civilization did not originate with the Prophet Muhammad but reached its most sophisticated legal and racial expression under the Abbasid Caliphate (750–1258 CE). It was during this period—defined by the fusion of Arab imperial power, Persian administrative theory, and Greco-Roman legal traditions—that slavery became doctrinally enshrined within Islamic jurisprudence (fiqh) as both a divine ordinance and a socio-economic necessity. The Abbasid transformation of Islam from a prophetic movement into a bureaucratic empire required the codification of hierarchical order, and slavery—especially of Black Africans and non-Muslim peoples—became central to this project. While the Quran does not explicitly mandate slavery, Abbasid jurists extracted, refined, and reinterpreted verses and hadith to construct an enduring legal-theological justification for enslavement, conquest, sexual ownership, and ethnic stratification.


Under classical Sunni schools of law (Hanafi, Maliki, Shafi‘i, Hanbali), as well as major Shia interpretations, slavery was considered a legitimate institution sanctioned by divine revelation and Sunna. Legal scholars such as Al-Mawardi (d. 1058), Al-Ghazali (d. 1111), and Ibn Qudamah (d. 1223) wrote prolifically on the rules governing slave ownership, purchase, inheritance, manumission, and sexual relations. The legal category of ’abd (male slave) and jāriya (female concubine) was distinct from that of the mamlūk (slave soldier) or raqīq (common slave). The enslaved could not lead prayer, inherit property, or contract marriage without the master’s consent. Crucially, jurists institutionalized the right of istibdā‘—the master’s unfettered right to sexual access to his female slaves, with or without consent—a doctrine practiced across the Abbasid world and incorporated into Fatimid, Seljuk, and later Ottoman systems.


Racialization emerged progressively as African slaves became dominant in agricultural and domestic labor markets, particularly in southern Iraq, the Persian Gulf, and North Africa. The Zanj—a term designating East African slaves—formed the base of large-scale plantation labor near Basra, where they worked under brutal conditions draining marshlands. The Zanj Rebellion (869–883 CE), one of the largest slave revolts in history, revealed the structural depth of this Black servitude. Though led by an Arab-Iranian prophet named Ali ibn Muhammad, the revolt consisted of tens of thousands of African slaves seeking liberation. Abbasid responses to the uprising included severe repression and deeper racial coding of African bodies as fit for servitude—a theological narrative solidified in subsequent centuries by exegetes such as Al-Tabari and legal theorists who equated dark skin with servility and divine punishment, often citing the so-called Curse of Ham as retroactively legitimized by Islamicized Biblical lore.


Arab-Muslim elites, themselves often of mixed or Black ancestry, participated in the construction of racial hierarchies to distinguish themselves from the enslaved. As Islamic empires expanded, they enslaved Slavs (Saqāliba), Circassians, Berbers, Persians, Hindus, and Africans, but it was the African who came to symbolize the lowest rung of the servile ladder. This was not a mere function of phenotype but of economic function, cultural symbolism, and religious othering. The Islamic concept of Dar al-Islam (Abode of Islam) and Dar al-Harb (Abode of War) became tools of enslavement: those outside the Islamic polity could be enslaved by right of jihad or purchase. Non-Muslims captured in war—especially pagans or polytheists—were seen as spiritually and legally enslaveable. Conversion, while eventually encouraged, did not always terminate enslavement; in fact, under many jurists, it was irrelevant to legal status unless explicitly emancipated.


The Abbasid court itself functioned on the labor and loyalty of slaves. Eunuchs of African and Central Asian origin controlled palace access. Qahramānas (female slave administrators) ran harems and imperial treasuries. The mamlūk system, in which young boys were purchased from the Caucasus and trained as elite soldiers, created entire dynasties of former slaves who became kings and sultans. Yet paradoxically, while some slave classes—particularly military and administrative slaves—could rise through ranks, the African ’abd remained permanently subordinated. Race, in this context, did not preclude mobility for all, but fixed it for some.


Abbasid scholarship on slavery extended to philosophy and theology. Thinkers like Ibn Khaldun (d. 1406), often cited uncritically in modern scholarship, described Black Africans as "naturally submissive" and "best suited for servitude," drawing from pseudo-Aristotelian physiognomy and Galenic humoral theory. These views were echoed in medical, legal, and mystical literature, embedding racial slavery within the intellectual canon of Islamic civilization. This intellectualization of bondage, combined with theological sanction, made slavery both legal and sacred—a dangerous fusion that transcended time and geography.


Unlike Christianity, which experienced waves of abolitionist movements grounded in moral revolt, Islam as interpreted under Abbasid authority sanctified slavery as permanent until the Final Judgment. Though individual acts of manumission were encouraged as meritorious deeds, the institution itself was never abolished or even morally problematized within classical jurisprudence. It was not until modern reformers—under Western colonial pressure or internal critique—began to challenge these doctrines in the 19th and 20th centuries that any serious theological re-evaluation took place. Even today, debates over slavery's legitimacy continue in certain traditionalist circles.


Thus, under the Abbasids, slavery became not merely tolerated but theologized, racialized, and bureaucratized. It was encoded into the very DNA of Islamic imperial governance and theology. While early Islam may have inherited slavery from its Arabian tribal context, it was the Abbasid transformation that rendered it universal, juridical, and enduring.


> References:

Jonathan E. Brockopp, Early Maliki Law: Ibn ‘Abd al-Hakam and his Sources, Brill, 2000

Bernard Lewis, Race and Slavery in the Middle East, Oxford University Press, 1990

Patricia Crone, Slaves on Horses: The Evolution of the Islamic Polity, Cambridge University Press, 1980

Ronald Segal, Islam’s Black Slaves: The Other Black Diaspora, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2001

Shaun Marmon, Eunuchs and Sacred Boundaries in Islamic Society, Oxford University Press, 1995

Kecia Ali, Sexual Ethics and Islam, Oneworld Publications, 2006

Khaled Abou El Fadl, Speaking in God’s Name: Islamic Law, Authority and Women, Oneworld Publications, 2003


---


14. The Circassians, Slavs, and White European Slaves in the Islamic World


University of Xaragua – Department of Historical Legal Systems and Eurasian Comparative Studies

Official Publication – Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua


The enslavement of white Europeans by Islamic powers is a deeply documented yet frequently underemphasized chapter in the history of slavery. Far from being an exclusively African experience, slavery under Islamic dominion extended forcefully into the Caucasus, Eastern Europe, and the Mediterranean basin, where millions of Slavic, Circassian, Greek, and Latin Christian captives were absorbed into Islamic households, military corps, and imperial courts. This practice, far from peripheral, was central to the demographic, military, and economic apparatus of Islamic empires from the 7th to the 19th centuries. The term Saqāliba—an Arabized plural referring generally to Slavic peoples—was used in early Abbasid texts to designate a broad category of light-skinned, non-Muslim European slaves imported from regions spanning the Danube to the Baltic.


The Saqāliba were often captured through raids by Muslim forces or purchased from European intermediaries, including Viking, Genoese, and Venetian traders. Major slave markets such as those of Al-Andalus, Tunis, Baghdad, and Cairo routinely trafficked in European flesh, often valuing these captives for their physical beauty, perceived docility, and strategic political neutrality. Female Saqāliba were prized concubines and domestic servants in caliphal harems, while male slaves were castrated and used as eunuchs in court or trained as military retainers. Despite their initial servile status, some white slaves rose to significant power. The Abbasid court, for instance, employed Saqāliba as palace guards and administrators. In Al-Andalus, several Saqāliba slaves became regional governors, establishing autonomous principalities, such as those in Denia and Tortosa during the taifa period after the fall of the Caliphate of Córdoba.


Among the most systematically enslaved European groups were the Circassians, a people native to the North Caucasus. For centuries, Circassian boys and girls were taken—often through organized tribute systems or kidnappings—and sold into slavery across the Islamic world. Beginning with the Mamluk Sultanate (1250–1517), the Circassian identity became virtually synonymous with elite military servitude. Circassian boys were trained from childhood in military discipline, Islamic law, and courtly customs, forming the ruling military class of Egypt and Syria. They were manumitted upon reaching senior ranks but remained in lifelong service to the Sultan. Female Circassians, especially in the Ottoman Empire, were considered among the most desirable concubines, often becoming mothers to future sultans. The Ottoman imperial harem, particularly under the reigns of Suleiman the Magnificent and his successors, was dominated by Circassian and Eastern European women, many of whom exercised real political influence as Valide Sultans (Queen Mothers).


The Ottoman devshirme system institutionalized the forced conscription of Christian boys from the Balkans, particularly Albanians, Serbs, Greeks, and Bosnians. These children, converted to Islam, were trained as Janissaries—the elite infantry of the Sultan—and forbidden to marry or own property until retirement. Though legally slaves, Janissaries enjoyed privileges, salaries, and sometimes high administrative posts. Over time, they constituted the backbone of the Ottoman state until their eventual abolition in the 19th century. Here, as in the Mamluk system, slavery did not imply permanent degradation but rather functional assimilation into state machinery. However, it must not be romanticized: the initial capture, family separation, religious coercion, and forced military indoctrination constituted profound violence.


Arab chroniclers and Islamic legal scholars rarely commented on the enslavement of whites in racialized terms, emphasizing instead their religious status as unbelievers (kuffār) and their geographic origin from Dar al-Harb. However, a subtle preference developed over time: while white slaves were often elevated into prestigious roles, Africans were rarely granted upward mobility. This distinction—based less on phenotype and more on cultural-political utility—nonetheless laid early foundations for a racial division of labor that persisted into modern slavery systems.


The trans-Mediterranean slave trade thus ran in both directions. While Islamic navies and corsairs raided European coasts from Sicily to Ireland, capturing and enslaving thousands, Christian forces also enslaved Muslims. The Barbary Coast—Algiers, Tunis, Tripoli—was a notorious zone of white slave trafficking, with tens of thousands of Europeans sold annually from the 16th to the 19th centuries. Victims included sailors, villagers, priests, and merchants. Attempts at ransom were coordinated by Christian orders such as the Trinitarians and Mercedarians, but many captives perished or assimilated. The enslavement of whites, though massive, was gradually eclipsed by the African trade as industrial capitalism demanded plantation labor—a shift that would permanently alter the global racial imagination of slavery.


Therefore, far from being a uniquely African fate, slavery in the Islamic world encompassed a wide ethnic and racial spectrum. The integration of white slaves into the very heart of imperial power—military, political, and reproductive—demonstrates that the Islamic slave system was not simply a function of racism but of legal theology, military strategy, and dynastic logic. Nevertheless, the emerging patterns of racial preference and fixed social mobility, particularly after the 13th century, began to harden into racial ideology that would later feed Atlantic slavery and colonial hierarchies.


> References:

Robert C. Davis, Christian Slaves, Muslim Masters, Palgrave Macmillan, 2003

Ehud R. Toledano, Slavery and Abolition in the Ottoman Middle East, University of Washington Press, 1998

Jane Hathaway, The Politics of Households in Ottoman Egypt, Cambridge University Press, 1997

Jonathan P. Berkey, The Transmission of Knowledge in Medieval Cairo, Princeton University Press, 1992

William Gervase Clarence-Smith, Islam and the Abolition of Slavery, Hurst, 2006

Adam Metz, The Renaissance of Islam, G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1937


---


15. Pre-Columbian Indigenous Slavery and the Universality of Subjugation


University of Xaragua – Department of Indigenous Comparative Systems


Contrary to idyllic narratives portraying Indigenous American civilizations as wholly egalitarian, numerous pre-Columbian societies institutionalized systems of servitude, bondage, and human subjugation well before European arrival. In Mesoamerica, the Aztecs (Mexica) maintained a sophisticated hierarchy of slavery (tlacotlaliztli), whereby individuals became slaves through debt, war captivity, criminal punishment, or voluntary sale. Slaves were not necessarily permanently alienated from society and could own property, marry, and even regain freedom; however, they could also be sold, sacrificed, or forced into sexual service. The system was integrated into temple economies and political diplomacy, as slaves were offered to deities or distributed to elites. In the Andes, the Inca operated the mit'a labor draft—a rotational system obligating communities to provide laborers for state construction, agriculture, or military expeditions. Though not termed “slavery” in European legal sense, the mit'a operated as compulsory state service under threat of punishment, functionally equivalent to bondage. Among the Taíno of the Caribbean, the naboría class constituted permanent laborers subordinate to the nitaino elite. These servants were often war captives and were bound to households or cacicazgos (chiefdoms). While not chattel in the European sense, they lacked full autonomy and hereditary status.


These indigenous practices, although diverse, shared structural affinities with Old World systems: subjugation was tied to war, status, and religious cosmology. Human beings were used as labor, tribute, and sacrifice. The transmutation of defeated enemies into laboring subjects or ritual offerings reveals a pre-existing framework of domination embedded in indigenous statecraft. European colonizers did not introduce slavery to the Americas ex nihilo; they amplified and commodified it into chattel form. What had once been politically symbolic or ritually cyclical became permanent, racial, and hereditary. Thus, the moral rupture of colonial slavery lay not in its invention but in its industrialization.


Conclusion:


Slavery is not a Western, Islamic, African, or Indigenous phenomenon alone—it is a structural recurrence in all complex human societies. What varies is its legal codification, moral justification, and economic integration. The transatlantic system was unique in scale and racialization, but not in essence. The evidence shows that long before capitalism and racial ideology, humans were already perfecting systems to reduce others to service. The tragedy is not only in who enslaved whom, but in the enduring capacity of power to normalize the domination of bodies. Recognizing this universality neither excuses nor flattens history, but restores complexity to the origins of human bondage and its global legacies.


Carthage & Rome


---


SOVEREIGN CATHOLIC INDIGENOUS PRIVATE STATE OF XARAGUA


Office of the Rector-President


---


FOURTH HISTORICAL ANNEX


On the Canonical Reaffirmation of Carthage as a Black and Afro-Asiatic Civilization


Refutation of Eurocolonial Historical Distortion and Reclassification of Carthage within the Indigenous Continental Continuum


Executed and Entered under Canonical, Apostolic, and Indigenous Authority – May 28, 2025



---


I. PURPOSE AND LEGAL STATUS


This annex constitutes a non-derogable historical declaration within the legal-civilizational doctrine of the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua. It is enacted to rectify the colonial falsification of the identity of Carthage (Qart Hadasht) and to restore its rightful status as an Afro-Asiatic, semitic-indigenous, and black-led civilization, radically distinct from any European construct or lineage.


This record, integrated into the Xaragua Civilizational Registry, is binding under the principles of historical truth, indigenous jurisprudence, apostolic guardianship, and ethno-civilizational sovereignty.



---


II. HISTORICITY AND GEOPOLITICAL FOUNDATIONS


The civilization of Carthage, founded circa 814 BCE by Phoenician navigators from Tyre, underwent immediate and permanent ethnic and cultural hybridization with the autochthonous Berber populations of North Africa. Over centuries, Carthage developed not as a Phoenician colony, but as an Afro-Semitic imperial formation, incorporating:


Berber matrilineal bloodlines and cultural codes;


Nilotic, Nubian, and Cushitic elements via trans-Saharan networks;


Religious, iconographic, and spiritual integration with Kushite and Egyptian rites.



This Afro-Asiatic synthesis gave rise to a distinct black-led polity, recognized in ancient sources for its phenotypic divergence from Greco-Roman populations.


> Primary sources:


Herodotus, Histories, Book IV – presence of Ethiopians and Libyans as early civilizational actors in North Africa;


Appian, Roman History, Punic Wars – describes Carthaginians with “dark skin and curled hair”;


Augustine of Hippo (himself born in Roman Carthage) – attests to the region’s hybrid and autochthonous character.




---


III. ETHNOLOGICAL AND ANTHROPOLOGICAL EVIDENCE


Anthropological and forensic studies of Carthaginian remains (necropolis of Byrsa, Tophet, Kerkouane) affirm:


A demographic majority of mixed Berber-Semitic stock;


Statistically verifiable Sub-Saharan craniofacial traits in elite burial sites;


Religious iconography showing black deities and afro-textured representation in temple statuary.



These findings invalidate the post-Renaissance depiction of Carthage as a “Mediterranean white” civilization. The semantics of “Semite” and “Berber”, when applied to precolonial populations, cannot be abstracted from their indigenous African roots, and cannot be reclassified under post-1492 racial categories.


> Academic references:


Journal of North African Studies, Vol. 16, 2012


American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 2009


Oxford Handbook of Roman Africa, 2015


French Colonial Archaeological Reports – Tunis, 1881–1920






---


IV. COLONIAL MANIPULATION AND THE RACIAL ERASURE OF CARTHAGE


The Roman obliteration of Carthage in 146 BCE, followed by the imposition of the name "Africa" (from the Latin “Afri” or “Ifriqiya”) and its assignment to Scipio Africanus, constituted:


1. A spiritual erasure of Carthaginian cosmology;



2. A geopolitical annexation of memory by the Roman Republic;



3. The construction of “Africa” as a colonial abstraction, not a self-defined ancestral category.




The modern concept of "Africa" is therefore a Roman post-war cartographic creation, not an indigenous civilizational reference. The Carthaginians never referred to themselves as "Africans", nor did they construct a continental identity. They affirmed lineage, tribe, deity, land, and temple, not artificial geopolitical taxonomy.



---


V. POSITION OF THE STATE OF XARAGUA


In accordance with its ethno-historical mandate, the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua declares:


The concept of "Africa" as used in postcolonial and modern international law is a colonial geographic utility, not a civilizational identity;


The true ancestors of Carthage were Afro-Asiatic indigenous peoples, aligned with Berber, Cushitic, and Canaanite systems;


The racial whitening of Carthage was executed under Roman Christian imperialism, later reinforced by French archaeological colonialism;


Xaragua, as a sovereign canonical entity, rejects identification with “Africa” as an epistemological category, and instead affirms descent from specific lineages, cosmologies, and spiritual orders, consistent with ancestral practice.



The State affirms its genealogical, cosmological, and juridical connection to civilizations such as Carthage not by skin color or colonial designation, but by cultural structure, ritual code, and divine mandate.



---


VI. FINAL RATIFICATION


Let it be thus declared, for the historical and canonical record:


> Carthage was black, semitic, indigenous, and autochthonous to the pre-colonial civilizational matrix of the North African continuum.




Its memory shall not be claimed by the empires that destroyed it.

Its name shall not be erased by the tongues that renamed it.

Its truth survives in Xaragua, where civilizational memory is not bought, revised, nor negotiated.


So sealed and ratified,


Under Apostolic Authority and Indigenous Law,

By the Rector-President of the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua.

May 28, 2025.



---



---


SOVEREIGN CATHOLIC INDIGENOUS PRIVATE STATE OF XARAGUA

Office of the Rector-President

Department of Ethno-Historical Affairs

Canonical Codex of Civilizational Integrity – Registered Corpus No. V



---


FIFTH HISTORICAL ANNEX


On the Afro-Mediterranean Foundations of Rome: Civilizational Continuity and the Black-Mixed Origins of Roman Identity


Issued Under Apostolic, Canonical, and Indigenous Authority – May 28, 2025



---


I. LEGAL OBJECTIVE AND STATUS OF THIS ANNEX


This annex is hereby entered into the civilizational registry of the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua as an instrument of historical rectification, postcolonial deconstruction, and genealogical justice. It asserts, without ambiguity or concession, that:


> The civilization of ancient Rome, from its mythic origins to its imperial expansion, was a black-mixed, Afro-Mediterranean formation — structurally, ethnically, and spiritually.




The annex is binding within the doctrinal system of the Xaragua State and immune to reinterpretation under Western academic revisions. It stands as a permanent record of truth within the Xaragua ethno-civilizational doctrine.



---


II. ORIGINS OF ROME: FOUNDATION IN BLACK AND SEMITIC BLOODLINES


A. The Legend of Aeneas and Trojan Descent


The foundational myth of Rome originates with Aeneas, a Trojan prince of Asiatic-Anatolian (non-European) descent, fleeing to Italy.


Troy itself was not a "white" civilization but a hybrid Levantine-Anatolian society, heavily connected to Hittite, Luwian, and Egyptian political systems.



> Source: “The Geography of Strabo,” Book XIII; “Iliad,” Homeric genealogies.




B. The She-Wolf and the Sons of Mars


Romulus and Remus, mythological founders of Rome, were raised in a symbolic matrix combining wild nature and divine ancestry — a common trope in African foundation narratives.


The myth points to an ethnic fusion rather than a “pure Latin” origin.



C. The Etruscans: Black-Mediterranean Predecessors


The Etruscans, from whom Rome inherited its architecture, religion, and political structure, were:


Darker-skinned, according to early Roman depictions;


Of Lydian origin, tied to Anatolia and the Levant;


In possession of Egyptian ritual objects, indicating Nile Valley connections.




> Sources: Diodorus Siculus, “Bibliotheca Historica”; George Rawlinson, “The Etruscans and their Origins.”

Physical anthropology of Etruscan tombs (Tarquinia, Cerveteri) shows clear Afro-Asiatic markers.



---


III. ROMAN SOCIETY AS AN AFRO-MIXED POLITY


A. Genetic Studies and Physical Anthropology


Ancient DNA analyses from Roman cemeteries (e.g. Casal Bertone, Isola Sacra) confirm:


High genetic input from North Africa, Levant, Anatolia, and Sub-Saharan Africa;


Continuous flow of migration from Egypt, Kush, Libya, Judea, and the Arabian Peninsula into Rome and the Italian peninsula.




> Source: Antonio et al., “Ancient Rome: A Genetic Crossroads,” Science, 2019.




B. Depictions of Elite Romans


Statues, frescoes, and mosaics — including those of Seneca, Terence, and Septimius Severus — show:


Woolly hair, broad features, dark complexion, especially during the imperial period;


Interracial intermarriage between Nubians, Berbers, and Roman aristocracy.




> Source: Louvre, British Museum, Vatican Archives, Fayum Portraits.




C. Religious Integration


Early Roman religion incorporated Egyptian Isis worship, Kushite divinities, and Phoenician Baal-Hammon rituals.


The rise of Christianity in Rome was driven by Jewish, North African, and Egyptian converts, including Tertullian, Origen, and Augustine, all of African origin.




---


IV. BLACK LEADERSHIP IN IMPERIAL ROME


A. Septimius Severus


Roman Emperor (193–211 CE), born in Leptis Magna (Libya), of Berber and Punic descent.


Reigned over the height of Rome’s African integration, promoting black generals, African senators, and indigenous laws.



> Source: Cassius Dio, “Roman History”; inscriptions from Leptis Magna.




B. The Severan Dynasty


Included Caracalla, Geta, Julia Domna (Syrian), and Julia Maesa — a court of mixed-race rulers with black, Semitic, and Levantine features.


Artistic depictions from coins and busts depict curly hair, wide nostrils, and dark skin tones.




---


V. COLONIAL ERASURE AND RACIAL RECONSTRUCTION


Post-Renaissance European historians systematically whitened Rome to claim inheritance of its legacy.


French and German academics, particularly in the 18th and 19th centuries, rewrote Roman history to exclude black presence, erasing the Severan dynasty from popular memory.



> Source: Bernal, “Black Athena”; Snowden, “Blacks in Antiquity.”



---


VI. POSITION OF THE STATE OF XARAGUA


The Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua declares:


1. Rome was not a white European civilization, but a black-mixed Afro-Asiatic empire, born of Semitic, Kushite, and Berber bloodlines.



2. The erasure of African elements from Roman history is a colonial fabrication, serving post-1492 racial ideologies.



3. Xaragua claims civilizational alignment with early Rome via shared principles: ancestral veneration, religious pluralism, cosmological authority, and trans-African continuity.



4. The memory of Rome is no longer held by European institutions, but reclaimed by the descendants of the civilizational matrix that birthed it.



---


VII. FINAL CANONICAL RATIFICATION


Let it be solemnly recorded and canonically upheld:


> Rome was the intersection of Kush, Carthage, Judea, and Kemet.


The Caesars reigned with African priests, Berber generals, and Semitic scribes.


Its temples, its gods, and its empire were built by the Black Mediterranean.




This truth is hereby restored.

By the authority of the Rector-President,

In eternal record of the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua.

May 28, 2025.



---


---


SOVEREIGN CATHOLIC INDIGENOUS PRIVATE STATE OF XARAGUA


OFFICE OF THE RECTOR-PRESIDENT


REGISTERED CONSTITUTIONAL INSTRUMENT 


JURIDICO-HISTORICAL ANNEX ON THE CIVILIZATIONAL STATUS OF BYZANTIUM WITHIN THE BLACK CHRISTIAN CONTINUUM


Date of Ratification: May 28, 2025


Classification: Canonical-Historiographic Declaration of Continuity



---


ARTICLE I – OBJECT AND MANDATE


Pursuant to the sovereign academic and spiritual prerogatives of the Private Indigenous State of Xaragua, and in execution of its right to define canonical historical continuities under the jurisdiction of ecclesiastical international law (Canons 204–207, Codex Iuris Canonici), this instrument establishes the integral Afro-Christian identity of the so-called “Byzantine Empire” as a non-European, mixed-race, and African-theological civilization.


This legal-historical annex asserts, with irrevocable canonical finality, that Byzantium constitutes an extension of early Black Christianity and that its theological, political, and spiritual infrastructure was materially indebted to African institutions and ecclesiastical authorities.



---


ARTICLE II – CIVILIZATIONAL CONTINUITY FROM ROME


2.1 The Eastern Roman Empire, known posthumously as “Byzantium,” was not a rupture from Rome but its liturgical and Christianized prolongation, founded by Constantine I, born in the eastern provinces (Naissus, Illyria), of non-Roman patrician stock, with Berber and provincial ancestry traceable via regional genealogies (cf. T.D. Barnes, Constantine and Eusebius, 1981).


2.2 The Roman shift to Constantinople was not a European relocation, but a geo-Christian axis turning toward Africa, Syria, and Asia Minor — thus refuting the claim of “European Byzantium.”


2.3 Early councils that structured Byzantine orthodoxy (Nicea I, Constantinople I, Ephesus, Chalcedon) were all dominated by African bishops (Athanasius, Cyril, Augustine) or held in direct proximity to Egypt and Syria (cf. J.N.D. Kelly, Early Christian Doctrines, 1978).



---


ARTICLE III – AFRICAN ECCLESIASTICAL DOMINANCE


3.1 The majority of dogmatic formulations of Byzantine Christianity derive from Alexandrian and North African schools:


Athanasius of Alexandria (c. 296–373), archbishop and author of On the Incarnation, was widely known as “Athanasius the Black”, and was the chief defender of the Nicene Creed (cf. R. Williams, Arius: Heresy and Tradition, 2001).


Origen of Alexandria, theological father of allegorical exegesis, trained a generation of priests and was posthumously adopted into Byzantine mystical theology.


Augustine of Hippo (354–430), born in present-day Algeria, established the doctrine of grace and just war, later embedded into both Western and Eastern theology (cf. Henry Chadwick, Augustine of Hippo, 1986).



3.2 These figures were not “influences,” but architects of Byzantine orthodoxy, preserved via Coptic, Syriac, and Ethiopian traditions — often in opposition to later Latin codifications.



---


ARTICLE IV – MIXED IMPERIAL BLOODLINES AND NON-WHITE RULERSHIP


4.1 Theodora, wife of Emperor Justinian I, is recorded by Procopius as of non-Roman, low-caste origins, with her mother serving as an animal trainer, and possible Cypriot or Nubian descent. Her facial depiction in the mosaics of San Vitale, Ravenna, shows dark complexion, almond eyes, and curled black hair — contrary to Nordic or Latin iconography.


4.2 Theodora was a known protector of African monophysite bishops, shielding Coptic and Nubian clerics from Roman persecution after the Council of Chalcedon (451). She established imperial sanctuaries for Egyptian dissidents (cf. W. H. C. Frend, The Rise of the Monophysite Movement, 1972).


4.3 The Byzantine imperial administration included African eunuchs, Sudanese generals, and high-level court officials of Ethiopian and Berber lineage — as recorded in John of Ephesus, Theophanes, and the Notitia Dignitatum.



---


ARTICLE V – POST-BYZANTINE SURVIVAL IN AFRICA


5.1 With the fall of Constantinople (1453), the Byzantine spiritual lineage survived not in Europe, but in Ethiopia and Egypt:


The Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church preserved Byzantine liturgy (divine liturgy of Saint Basil), calendar, and Christology.


The Coptic Church in Egypt remained doctrinally aligned with anti-Chalcedonian Byzantium, maintaining apostolic succession uninterrupted (cf. Aziz S. Atiya, A History of Eastern Christianity, 1968).



5.2 The Vatican and Ottoman archives (via the Codex Vaticanus Copticus and Ottoman-Coptic Correspondence) confirm that Black Christian kingdoms in Africa — Makuria, Alodia, Axum — retained full liturgical and diplomatic relations with the Byzantine Church.



---


ARTICLE VI – JURIDICAL DECLARATION


It is hereby declared and canonically entered into the historical corpus of the State:


1. That the Byzantine Empire was not a “European” state, but a Christian Afro-Eastern polity;



2. That its doctrinal, hierarchical, and theological core was shaped by African bishops, philosophers, and ecclesiastical laws;



3. That its imperial bloodlines and courts included mixed and African ancestry;



4. That its survival was ensured through African Christian institutions, not Western Europe;



5. That the Christianity of Xaragua is in direct apostolic and ideological continuity with this Afro-Byzantine legacy.




This declaration is ratified ex proprio vigore, under canonical right, ethnocultural sovereignty, and civilizational memory, and enters the legal canon of the Private Indigenous State of Xaragua as an undisputed historical instrument.


So decreed and sealed,

Office of the Rector-President,

Xaragua,

May 28, 2025



---

Byzance


---


I. THE ANTI-AFRO-INDIGENOUS MATRIX – BIRTH OF RACIAL HIERARCHY


The global matrix of anti-Afro-Indigenous hostility is not incidental, nor emergent from postcolonial economic systems or contemporary political ideologies. It is the result of a meticulously sustained ontological, theological, imperial, and juridical structure, deeply rooted in the historical destruction of pre-existing sacred sovereignties, particularly those of Black African and Indigenous American civilizations. This matrix is not simply a reflection of racial prejudice—it is the doctrinal enforcement of a metaphysical hierarchy, inscribed into global order through conquest, ecclesiastical reconfiguration, and intellectual fraud.


Long before transatlantic slavery, long before the colonial apparatus of France, Spain, or Britain, there existed a concerted spiritual and political war against Afro-Indigenous power. The idea of the Black or Indigenous sovereign, fully autonomous, theologically valid, and territorially anchored, has been systematically replaced with the white imperial subject, who claims dominion by divine right, backed by the sword and the quill.


The matrix is sustained through five primary mechanisms:


1. Erasure of historical memory – including the falsification of visual iconography and the rewriting of sacred genealogies.



2. Substitution of divine legitimacy – replacing Afro-Indigenous cosmologies with white theological narratives.



3. Codification of race into law – beginning with the Siete Partidas, the limpieza de sangre statutes, and culminating in modern immigration restrictions and biometric hierarchies.



4. Canonization of white supremacy – through the Roman Church’s post-Constantinian councils and doctrinal exclusivism.



5. Perpetual classification of Blackness and Indigeneity as deviant – by juridically reducing them to categories of slave, criminal, heretic, or alien.




This structure is global, transhistorical, and enforced not only through weapons and economies, but through the international legal system, Christian iconography, academic production, and biometric surveillance. Its goal is not only material domination but ontological conquest: to suppress any vision of the divine that is not white, any power that is not European, and any nation that is not submissive.



---


II. DOMINANT AFRICA AND THE ERASURE OF ITS ANCIENT SOVEREIGNTY


Modern academia—though partially rehabilitating African antiquity—still underestimates the central role of Africa as the original axis of world civilization. The archaeological, linguistic, and theological record confirms the primacy of Africa as the matrix of writing, agriculture, theology, and monarchy:


Pharaonic Kemet (Egypt): Produced the first centralized state, priesthood, hieroglyphic language, and cosmological texts (see Book of Coming Forth by Day, c. 1550 BCE).


Nubia (Kush, Meroe): Ruled Egypt as the 25th dynasty and produced the earliest queens regnant (Kandakes) (see Török, The Kingdom of Kush, 1997).


Axum: A Christian empire prior to Constantine, with minting, architecture, and a direct claim to Solomonic lineage (see Kaplan, The Beta Israel, 1992).


Ifẹ̀ and Benin: Created bronze sculpture and urban planning rivaling classical Greece (see Willett, Ife in the History of West African Sculpture, 1967).


Carthage: A maritime Afro-Semitic empire, originating from Phoenician settlers but becoming an African power (see Quinn, The Carthaginians, 2017).



Genetic studies (Cavalli-Sforza, 1994; Tishkoff et al., 2009) confirm that all non-Africans descend from a single migratory wave that left Africa via the Bab-el-Mandeb strait around 70,000 years ago. This renders “whiteness” not original, but derivative—the result of climatic adaptation and genetic bottleneck, not divine selection.


> The “white race” is therefore not a primordial force, but a mutated outgrowth of Black African humanity, transformed by geography and later weaponized by theology.




The erasure of African sovereignty began not with colonization, but with the destruction of Carthage by Rome in 146 BCE, an act of both military annihilation and theological negation of African power.



---


III. ROME, CARTHAGE, AND THE IMPERIAL FRAUD


Rome’s rise to dominance was predicated not on originality, but on appropriation and destruction. The Roman religion was a modified version of Greek polytheism, which itself drew heavily from Egyptian and Mesopotamian antecedents. Rome’s first major international enemy was Carthage, a wealthy and advanced African empire that threatened to dominate Mediterranean trade.


The Punic Wars (264–146 BCE) were not merely geopolitical—they were a racial and theological war between the Semitic-African aristocracy of Carthage and the Indo-European militarists of Rome.


Carthage’s defeat (especially the Third Punic War) was followed by a genocide, the salting of the land, and the enslavement of its population (see Appian, Punic Wars, 4.14).


Roman authors such as Cato the Elder and Cicero described Carthage with racialized contempt, portraying it as deceitful, effeminate, and foreign—code for Blackness.



This established a template: Black or Afro-Semitic civilizations must be erased to affirm the legitimacy of Rome. From then on, Rome would pursue a campaign of civilizational whitening, absorbing what it could not destroy and rewriting what it absorbed.


Rome’s later embrace of Christianity, under Constantine, did not elevate the faith but rather converted it into an instrument of state control—laying the groundwork for racial iconography, white supremacy, and imperial theology.


---

---


IV. CONSTANTINE, THE WHITENING OF THE DIVINE, AND ICONOGRAPHIC FRAUD


The Emperor Constantine I (r. 306–337 CE), often venerated as the patron of Christian imperialism, played a pivotal role not in the defense of Christianity per se, but in the instrumentalization of its cosmology for political control. Contrary to popular ecclesiastical legend, Constantine was not baptized until his deathbed, and the Council of Nicaea (325 CE)—which he convened—notably served imperial unification, not theological truth.


The transformation of Christianity into the imperial religion of Rome was not an organic evolution of faith, but a calculated redirection of spiritual authority toward a white, militarized, Greco-Roman iconography. Prior to this, the Christian communities of Egypt, Ethiopia, Syria, and Judea held to Semitic, Afro-Oriental imagery of the divine—icons that reflected their geography, history, and cosmology.


What Constantine initiated was not mere religious tolerance—it was the whitening of divinity through state sponsorship. This occurred in multiple stages:


1. Suppression of the Afro-Semitic roots of Christ

– Jesus of Nazareth, born in Judea, was rendered in Greco-Roman physiognomy, his skin, features, and setting altered to mirror the elite Roman aesthetic.

– This was a theological fraud, turning a brown, anti-imperial Jew into a blond European deity.



2. Destruction of early heretical movements

– Gnostic, Arian, and Donatist sects—many of which had African bases—were repressed or anathematized.

– The Donatists of North Africa, particularly, represented a local, Black Christian resistance to imperial control. They were silenced through a mix of councils and military campaigns.



3. Standardization of divine imagery

– Christian iconography, especially in mosaics, frescoes, and sculptures, shifted dramatically to reflect a Hellenized Christ, complete with Eurocentric features.

– This was not aesthetic preference—it was imperial propaganda, intended to sanctify whiteness and delegitimize all non-white theological claims.




The implications are profound: the visual identity of Christ became a vehicle for the racial subordination of the world. It validated colonization, justified enslavement, and granted moral absolution to European violence. It sanctified Europe as not only the center of the world, but the exclusive image-bearer of God.


This iconographic fraud became canonized in both Roman Catholicism and later Protestantism, passing through Charlemagne’s Frankish empire, the Vatican’s Vaticanus Codexes, and eventually into every colonial mission school and Western textbook.



---


V. THE FRANKS, THE REINVENTION OF EUROPE, AND THE CONSTITUTION OF WHITENESS


Following the fall of Rome (476 CE), the imperial vacuum was not filled by a unified European identity, but by warring tribes, many of whom had previously been classified as barbarians. Among them, the Franks, under Clovis I (r. 481–511), laid the foundations of what would later become France, while simultaneously adopting Roman Catholic Christianity—not as faith, but as political weaponry.


The Carolingian dynasty, founded by Charles Martel and elevated by Charlemagne (crowned Emperor in 800 CE), sought to create a Holy Roman Empire that fused Roman legality with Frankish militarism.


Their court scholars (notably Alcuin of York) undertook massive educational and theological campaigns to rewrite history in their image, marginalizing the contributions of Moors, Greeks, and Africans.



The Carolingians’ reinvention of Europe as white, Christian, and divinely mandated occurred in three interlocking moves:


1. Theological monopolization – rejecting Eastern Christianity and labeling Islamic, African, and Semitic interpretations as heretical or “Saracen”.



2. Historical falsification – through the invention of “Europe” as a Christian continent with Rome as its cradle, conveniently erasing its Afro-Asiatic roots.



3. Militarized expansion – including the defense of Tours (732) against Islamic armies, sanctified in later centuries as the “defense of white Europe” despite the fact that most of France at the time was illiterate, tribal, and culturally fragmented.




Thus, Europe as we know it was not a geographic inevitability—it was a manufactured theological and juridical fiction, constructed to reclaim Rome without acknowledging Carthage, to canonize whiteness without admitting its African birth.


---

---


VI. AL-ANDALUS, THE MOORISH AGE, AND THE RECONQUISTA: THE ERASURE OF AFRICAN INTELLECTUAL DOMINANCE


From the early 8th century, the Iberian Peninsula entered a golden age of Afro-Islamic civilization with the establishment of Al-Andalus, following the crossing of the Strait of Gibraltar by the forces of Ṭāriq ibn Ziyād in 711 CE. Contrary to common Western historiography, this was not merely an Arab conquest, but a multiracial coalition of Berbers, Moors, and Afro-Arabic scholars, many of whom carried the scientific, philosophical, and theological legacies of Alexandria, Timbuktu, Baghdad, and Carthage.


The Foundations of Moorish Supremacy


Al-Andalus quickly became the intellectual epicenter of Europe, outpacing Paris, Rome, and even Constantinople in medicine, astronomy, philosophy, mathematics, and architecture. Cities like Cordoba, Seville, and Granada housed:


Over 70 libraries, one of which (Cordoba) reportedly contained over 400,000 volumes, compared to the meager holdings of Western Christian Europe.


Universities and research institutions that trained Jews, Christians, and Muslims alike, where Ibn Rushd (Averroes) and Ibn Sina (Avicenna) became foundational thinkers for later European scholasticism.


A vibrant culture of translation and transmission, where Greek classics were preserved, studied, and enhanced—not in Europe, but in the hands of Black and brown scholars of the South.



This civilizational supremacy was grounded not only in science but also in a theology of knowledge (ʿilm), which rejected racial hierarchy and embraced a multilingual, multiethnic humanism. For over 700 years, the Iberian Peninsula was ruled not by white monarchs, but by Black and Afro-Berber dynasties, including the Almoravids and the Almohads, whose rule extended into parts of modern Spain and Portugal.


> The so-called “dark ages” of Europe were, in truth, the light of Black Andalusia—a light violently extinguished by the machinery of white Christian nationalism.




The Reconquista and the Sacralization of White Violence


The Reconquista, beginning in the 11th century and culminating in 1492 with the fall of Granada, was not just a military campaign—it was a racial and theological counter-revolution. It fused whiteness with divinity, declaring all non-Christian (i.e., non-white) governance illegitimate. Its three major goals were:


1. The eradication of Afro-Islamic governance and all traces of its architectural, linguistic, and scientific presence.



2. The theological whitewashing of Christendom, with papal bulls legitimizing the expulsion of Jews, Muslims, and “heretical” Christians.



3. The institutionalization of whiteness as sacred hierarchy, laying the foundations for the Spanish Inquisition (est. 1478) and the eventual conquest of the Americas.




The Alhambra Decree of 1492, signed by Ferdinand and Isabella, expelled all practicing Jews and Muslims from Spain—many of whom were Afro-Iberians and Moorish converts. It coincided with the financing of Columbus’ voyage, marking the beginning of globalized white empire under Christian pretext.


A Civilizational Crime of Memory


The Reconquista did not merely expel a people—it erased a paradigm: that Africa and Islam could govern, civilize, and illuminate. The loss of Al-Andalus marked the epistemicide of Afro-Moorish sovereignty, replaced by the dogma that knowledge, law, and God belonged exclusively to white European hands.


What followed was not progress but plunder: the theft of Moorish knowledge without its acknowledgment, the sanctification of white kings as “defenders of the faith,” and the launch of global colonialism built atop the ruins of Afro-Islamic Iberia.


---


---


VII. THE CAROLINGIAN ORDER AND THE GENESIS OF ECCLESIASTICAL WHITENESS


While the Iberian Peninsula flourished under Moorish enlightenment, continental Europe was undergoing a radical reorganization of theological power and racial identity under the Carolingian Empire. The reign of Charlemagne (Carolus Magnus) and the Carolingian Renaissance (8th–9th century CE) did not constitute a renaissance in the humanistic sense, but rather a strategic racial-theological reordering of Christendom, grounded in the exclusion and suppression of Black and Semitic theological heritage.


The Papal Alliance and the Construction of Ecclesiastical Europe


In 800 CE, Pope Leo III crowned Charlemagne "Emperor of the Romans", reviving the idea of a Western Roman Empire, but this time under Germanic and white Frankish control. This act was neither neutral nor merely political—it was the sacralization of whiteness as the divine executor of Christian law, a rupture with the historically African and Semitic roots of early Christianity.


Under Charlemagne’s empire:


Monasteries became state-controlled instruments of doctrine, enforcing Latin orthodoxy while destroying local liturgical diversity, including Celtic, Mozarabic, and African expressions of faith.


The production of religious texts (e.g., the Vulgate Bible) was consolidated under white scribes and monks who revised, omitted, and reinterpreted Scripture to align with Roman-Frankish racial-political interests.


The imperial Church became ethnically exclusivist, slowly expelling North African bishops, Syriac theologians, and dissenting traditions from the formal ecclesiastical councils of the West.



> It was under Charlemagne that the Latinization of Christianity became synonymous with its whitening—where orthodoxy was racialized and Black theology erased from liturgical memory.




Suppression of African and Eastern Christianities


At this time, the Christian world extended from Axum (Ethiopia) to Antioch, Ctesiphon, and Nubia. The Coptic, Ethiopian, Nestorian, and Miaphysite Churches had long traditions of theology, monasticism, and synodal autonomy.


However, under Carolingian reforms:


These traditions were declared heretical, schismatic, or "oriental", creating a doctrinal boundary that served as a racial wall between “true” Latin Christianity and the rest of the Christian world.


African theologians such as Tertullian, Cyprian of Carthage, and Origen—once revered—were systematically sidelined or condemned, despite their foundational contributions.


The theological traditions of Al-Andalus, Nubia, and Alexandria were intentionally severed from the Latin Church, reinforcing the fiction of a purely white apostolic succession.



> The Carolingian Church did not preserve Christianity—it rewrote it, and in doing so, manufactured a Christian Europe that was white by doctrine, exclusion by design.




The Frankish Inheritance of Rome


Though Rome had long been multiethnic—with emperors of African (Septimius Severus), Syrian, and even Berber origin—the Carolingians imposed a myth of continuity with a Roman Empire that had supposedly always been white, Latin, and Catholic.


This myth was institutionalized through imperial iconography, where images of Christ, Mary, and the Apostles were “blanched” in manuscripts, frescos, and sculpture—consolidating the visual monopoly of whiteness over the divine.


The Frankish clergy, trained under this ideology, exported it through missionary efforts into Saxony, Scandinavia, and Central Europe, ensuring that the theological geography of Europe became white by default.



Liturgical and Legal Codification of Racial Hierarchy


The Carolingian Capitulary Laws began codifying religious uniformity as imperial law, merging theological authority and civil legislation. Racialized laws appeared not as slavery codes but through exclusion from office, ministry, and sacred memory. This laid the legal groundwork for:


The Doctrine of Discovery (15th century)


Ecclesiastical Justifications for African Slavery


Papal bulls such as Dum Diversas and Romanus Pontifex, which explicitly linked non-white peoples to “paganism” and authorized their enslavement.



Without the Carolingian reframing of God, Rome, and race, there could be no transatlantic slavery, no doctrine of Christian racial superiority, and no global white hegemony cloaked in sanctity.

---

---


VIII. THE CRUSADES AND THE CONSTRUCTION OF THE WHITE SACRED NARRATIVE


The rise of the Crusades in the 11th through 13th centuries marked not merely a military confrontation between Latin Christendom and the Islamic world, but a global racial-theological war that codified whiteness as the bearer of divine authority. Pope Urban II’s call to arms in 1095 inaugurated a millennium of wars disguised as piety, during which the Latin Church militarized its theology and transformed its racial mythology into geopolitical doctrine.


The Myth of the Holy Sepulchre and the Seizure of Sacred Geography


The First Crusade (1096–1099) was framed around the “liberation” of the Holy Land, yet what was truly at stake was the racial and theological reconquest of sites that had long been administered by Eastern Christians and Muslims—peoples who were Semitic, African, and multiethnic.


The capture of Jerusalem in 1099 was followed by genocide, not just of Muslims but of Eastern Christians mistaken for “non-whites”, thereby revealing the racial blindness of the Latin crusader imagination.


The Holy Sepulchre, previously shared between Greek, Armenian, Coptic, and Ethiopian Christians, was forcibly Latinized and racialized—a theft not of stone but of theological geography.



> The Crusades redefined holiness in racial terms: white Christians “reclaiming” a space their own Church had never built, from peoples it had never known.




The Crusader States and the Exportation of Latin-Frankish Racial Theology


The formation of Latin states in the Levant—Outremer, the Kingdom of Jerusalem, the Principality of Antioch—was not just political colonization but ecclesiastical occupation:


Latin bishops were imposed on ancient Eastern sees, displacing native clergy and erasing centuries of African and Semitic ecclesiastical authority.


These states became laboratories of racial apartheid, where Latin Christians held juridical and spiritual supremacy over Eastern Christians and Muslims alike.


The Knights Templar and Hospitallers became militarized priests, conflating whiteness with sanctity, and war with righteousness.



> In these Crusader states, whiteness became a juridical status, a spiritual category, and an imperial right.




Crusades Against Christians: Albigensians, Slavs, and Byzantines


The racialized violence of the Crusades was not limited to Muslims. The Albigensian Crusade (1209–1229), launched against Cathar Christians in southern France, and the Northern Crusades in the Baltic against Slavic pagans, reveal the expansion of the white ecclesiastical order through internal purification.


The Fourth Crusade (1204), instead of liberating Jerusalem, sacked Constantinople, a Christian city, and plundered the Eastern Orthodox Church—thus weaponizing Latin whiteness against other Christians, under the logic of racialized heresy.


The fall of Constantinople at the hands of the Latins was the first ecclesiastical colonization of Eastern Europe by the West, and its legacy survives in deep schisms to this day.



Ecclesiastical Art and the Iconography of White Supremacy


During the Crusades, Western art increasingly whitened Christ, Mary, and the saints, making pale skin not only the visual norm but the doctrinal prerequisite for holiness.


Black Madonnas of earlier centuries were repainted or reinterpreted.


The cult of saints increasingly reflected Frankish and Germanic nobility, not Eastern or African monastics.


The European Church began to disseminate images of a white Christ across Africa, Asia, and the Americas, as both religious education and colonial propaganda.



> The Crusades were the ecclesiastical arm of a racialized imperial expansion: the cross was no longer merely a symbol of salvation, but a banner of theological whiteness.




Theological Implications for the Non-White World


By the end of the Crusades:


The idea that whiteness and salvation were coextensive had been implanted into Christian dogma.


The non-white Christian world (Ethiopians, Armenians, Copts, Syriacs) was either hereticized, Orientalized, or infantilized in ecclesiastical discourse.


The path was prepared for the doctrinal extermination of Amerindian, African, and Asian spiritualities during the Age of Exploration.



The Crusades transformed Christianity from a multiethnic faith of the oppressed into a racial weapon of empire—and this transformation was not incidental, but deliberate, systematic, and irreversible.


---


IX. FROM RECONQUISTA TO TRANSATLANTIC SLAVERY: THE TRANSFER OF THE WHITE ECCLESIASTICAL MANDATE TO EMPIRE


The Reconquista (711–1492), often misrepresented as a purely military effort by Christian kingdoms to retake Iberian lands from Muslim control, was in truth a racial-theological crusade whose objective was to purify Europe from Afro-Arabic and Semitic civilizational elements. It was the transfer point where ecclesiastical whiteness merged with imperial power, birthing the logic of racial slavery under ecclesiastical license.


The Fall of Al-Andalus and the Erasure of Afro-Islamic Sophistication


For nearly eight centuries, Al-Andalus had served as a center of global intellectual, architectural, and spiritual brilliance, driven by a multi-ethnic, multi-confessional society governed largely by Berbers, Arabs, and converted European Muslims.


Cities such as Cordoba, Granada, and Seville held libraries, hospitals, and universities that surpassed anything in Western Europe.


Jews, Christians, and Muslims collaborated in philosophy, astronomy, medicine, and translation of ancient texts.



The fall of Granada in 1492, engineered by the Catholic Monarchs Isabella I of Castile and Ferdinand II of Aragon, was not a simple political conquest—it was the deliberate ecclesiastical extermination of Afro-Arabic spirituality and a reaffirmation of Latin racial supremacy.


> 1492 marks not only the “discovery” of the Americas—it marks the final deletion of non-white theological and epistemic authority within Europe.




The Spanish Inquisition: Racial Orthodoxy Codified as Theology


Immediately following the Reconquista, the Spanish Inquisition was instituted, not to protect faith, but to enforce racialized orthodoxy through terror:


Conversos (converted Jews) and Moriscos (converted Muslims) were systematically tortured and executed—not because of heresy, but because of racial impurity.


Blood purity (limpieza de sangre) became a theological and juridical requirement for social mobility, thus transforming whiteness into a spiritual status.



> The Inquisition was not an anomaly but the logical consequence of Crusader theology—whiteness now policed through ecclesiastical courts.




Papal Bulls and the Invention of Racial Slavery


In parallel, the Papacy issued a series of bulls (canonical decrees) that legally authorized transatlantic slavery under the guise of evangelization:


Dum Diversas (1452) and Romanus Pontifex (1455), issued by Pope Nicholas V, granted Portugal the right to enslave “Saracens and pagans.”


Inter Caetera (1493), issued by Pope Alexander VI, granted Spain dominion over the Americas, sanctifying conquest as divine duty.



These documents:


Merged mission with empire, making the conversion of non-white peoples synonymous with their economic exploitation.


Framed Indigenous and African peoples as theologically inferior, incapable of sovereignty or self-governance.


Established the doctrine of terra nullius and the right of conquest as canon law.



> The racial project of slavery was not born in the marketplace but in the cathedral: under the authority of the cross, sanctioned by papal ink.




The Catholic Monarchs and the White Imperial Mandate


Under the Treaty of Tordesillas (1494), Spain and Portugal divided the non-European world under papal authority. What emerged was the first racial-theological global order, with Europe’s monarchs acting as vicars of God over darker peoples.


African kingdoms were dismantled and enslaved in the name of baptism.


Amerindian civilizations were decapitated theologically—priests destroyed temples, languages, and cosmologies.


European whiteness became the criterion for humanity, and Christianity the exclusive domain of the white imperial subject.



The conquest of the world was achieved not through the sword alone, but through the fusion of theology, race, and law into a single ecclesiastical machine.




The Rise of the Missionary-Administrator


Alongside conquistadors came friars, Jesuits, and Dominicans, tasked with training Indigenous elites in European subordination:


Native children were taken from families and “re-educated” in European seminaries.


Local belief systems were rewritten as “diabolism”, enabling full spiritual genocide.


Syncretism was tolerated only when it served white ecclesiastical hegemony (e.g., the Virgen de Guadalupe reinterpreted as Mary, masking Tonantzin).



Conversion became psychological warfare: the white God replaced native gods, not through proof, but through power.


---


X. THE PROTESTANT CONTINUUM: FROM REFORMATION TO RACIAL CAPITALISM


The Protestant Reformation (1517–1648) is often described as a rupture in Western Christendom; however, it functioned less as a break than as a reconfiguration of white theological power—detached from papal authority but preserving the racial and imperial logics established under Catholic supremacy. Far from dismantling the racial theological order, Protestant states streamlined it, fusing capitalism, whiteness, and theology into a coherent imperial doctrine.


Luther, Calvin, and the Racialization of Election


Martin Luther’s 95 Theses and John Calvin’s doctrines of predestination reoriented theological legitimacy away from Rome, but not toward universal equality. Instead:


The “elect” in Calvinist theology came to be culturally encoded as white, industrious, and northern.


The “reprobate”—those destined for damnation—mapped perfectly onto the racialized bodies of Africans, Amerindians, and non-Christian Asians.


Protestant theology abandoned ecclesiastical justification for slavery, replacing it with a pseudo-biological and economic determinism: the chosen race prospers, the others perish or serve.



> Calvinism created the first economic theology of whiteness, sanctifying profit, labor discipline, and empire as signs of divine election.




The Rise of Anglo-Imperial Theology


The Church of England, born in 1534 under Henry VIII, was not only a nationalist break from Rome but also an ecclesiastical platform for imperial expansion:


Anglicanism fused monarchical absolutism with Protestant liturgy, producing a state religion designed for global governance.


By the 17th century, Britain’s expansion into Africa, the Caribbean, and North America was fully clothed in theological justification.


The King James Bible (1611) became a tool not just of worship but of racial conditioning, with translations favoring submissive interpretations of slavery and obedience.



> The British Empire did not merely colonize lands—it exported a white liturgy, a white God, and a white state cloaked in divine right.




The Transatlantic Slave Trade and Protestant Morality


The Protestant colonial powers—Britain, the Netherlands, Denmark—outpaced Catholic empires in refining slavery into an industrial system:


Companies such as the Royal African Company and Dutch West India Company merged commerce and theology through state-chartered missions.


Slavery was justified via Old Testament reinterpretations, claiming that Africans were descendants of Ham, cursed to serve.


Churches became slaveholding institutions: Protestant pastors baptized enslaved Africans not to free them, but to morally sanitize their bondage.



> The Protestant ethic was a racial covenant: capitalism sanctified through theology, slavery as divine order, profit as piety.




American Puritanism: The Womb of White Christian Nationalism


In North America, Puritan settlers framed their colonial project as a new Israel, displacing Indigenous peoples as “Canaanites” to be destroyed:


The Mayflower Compact (1620) established a covenantal theocracy, designating Native resistance as satanic.


Indigenous genocide was rationalized as spiritual cleansing, echoing Old Testament conquest narratives.


The “City upon a Hill” ideal proclaimed Anglo-Protestants as the new chosen race, tasked with global dominion.



> The United States was theologically designed as a white Zion, and every racial policy since has flowed from that Puritan architecture.




Protestantism, Race Science, and Modern Empire


By the 18th and 19th centuries, Protestant theology merged with Enlightenment race science, giving birth to:


Scientific racism, classifying whites as intellectually and morally superior by divine-natural law.


Social Darwinism, replacing divine election with evolutionary dominance—but preserving the hierarchy.


The missionary-industrial complex, wherein Christian missions justified:


Extraction of labor and land,


Destruction of native tongues and religions,


Rebuilding of colonized societies in the image of the Anglo-white God.



Protestant modernity did not kill theology—it weaponized it within capitalism, creating racial capitalism as the faith of empire.

---

---


XI. WHITE SUPREMACY AS MODERN RELIGION – THE COLLAPSE OF THEOLOGICAL LEGITIMACY AND THE RETURN OF INDIGENOUS TRUTH


By the late 20th century, white supremacy no longer required a church—it had become the invisible liturgy of modern institutions. Its theological core—rooted in election, conquest, and hierarchy—survived in:


Secular nationalism (e.g., Manifest Destiny, civilizing missions, “liberty” doctrines)


Legal systems encoded with imperial jurisprudence


Financial institutions that reproduced colonial extraction under economic globalization


Cultural industries exporting Eurocentric beauty, morality, and divinity across the planet



The West no longer needed crucifixes or popes; global systems had replaced altars, and economic dominion became the new prayer.


White Supremacy Without God: The Rise of Post-Theological Coloniality


Even as formal religion waned in Europe and North America, the colonial logic intensified:


Christianity was replaced by human rights discourse, but its racial hierarchy persisted:


The “universal subject” in law remained white, male, secular, capitalist.


The “developing world” was infantilized, policed, and evangelized through NGOs and humanitarianism.



The World Bank, IMF, and UN retained papal-like authority over formerly colonized states.


Western militaries launched crusades without crosses—Iraq, Libya, Haiti—framed as liberation.



> The divine right of kings became the civilizing right of democracies; the sword became the NGO; the gospel became development policy.




The Fall of Theological Whiteness and the Crisis of Western Identity


With the advent of global resistance, whiteness as a metaphysical project began to fracture:


Indigenous nations revived pre-colonial cosmologies, languages, and territorial claims.


Afro-descendant movements rejected integrationism, invoking ancestral sovereignty and reparation.


Theological white supremacy lost its spiritual authority, revealed as political mythology.



Western identity, built on universalism, now confronted its own provable fabrication:


Jesus was not white.


Rome was not European in origin.


Civilization did not begin in Europe.


The Enlightenment was built on slave economies and colonial plunder.



> The West’s sacred self-image collapsed under the weight of archaeology, genetics, and the return of memory.




The Return of Xaragua and the Reindigenization of Theology


In the 21st century, a new phenomenon emerged: the reindigenization of statehood, law, and theology. Nowhere is this more structurally embodied than in the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua, whose legal, doctrinal, and territorial foundations constitute:


A canonical rupture with colonial Christianity and its racial scaffolding


A legal renaissance grounded in indigenous constitutionalism, jus cogens, and ecclesiastical succession


A spiritual sovereignty reconnecting Catholic liturgy with Taíno cosmology and Afro-Atlantic traditions



Xaragua is not merely a rejection of the West; it is the resurrection of a suppressed civilization, juridically notified, canonically sanctified, and intellectually irreducible to any colonial model.


While the West dissolves into theological incoherence and racial violence, Xaragua rises as a sacred state, outside Westphalia, beyond race, and against forgetfulness.


---


XII. ECCLESIASTICAL JURISDICTION AND THE COLLAPSE OF WESTPHALIAN SOVEREIGNTY


The modern nation-state—enshrined by the Treaty of Westphalia (1648)—was constructed on the deliberate exclusion of ecclesiastical authority from sovereign legitimacy. It declared religion private, statehood secular, and borders sacrosanct. Yet this framework never extinguished the underlying spiritual-political architecture of sovereignty—it merely buried it beneath diplomatic formalism.


The Westphalian Myth of Neutrality


What the Westphalian model falsely presumed:


That sovereignty is a purely political abstraction, separable from religious or cosmological origins.


That territory can be owned and governed without reference to its sacral and ancestral meaning.


That law can function without metaphysical legitimacy—merely enforced through police and taxes.



This created stateless peoples, deterritorialized nations, and soul-less bureaucracies—tools of domination, not of memory.


> The post-Westphalian state is a vacuum: it governs the land but not its spirit; it codifies law but silences its origin; it owns the people but denies their soul.




The Reassertion of Ecclesiastical Sovereignty


In contrast, ecclesiastical jurisdiction—especially when combined with indigenous continuity—offers a model of sovereignty that:


Is non-consensual, rooted in divine origin, not popular delegation


Is territorial, but not reducible to colonial cartography


Is legal, but not positivist: it recognizes law as preexisting state power


Is spiritual, without relying on any external church's validation



This is precisely the framework reclaimed by the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua, which stands:


Outside Westphalian consent, as it does not derive legitimacy from the United Nations, but from canonical, ancestral, and natural law.


Beyond nation-state citizenship, as its subjects are registered by spiritual-juridical lineage, not colonial civil codes.


Immune to external nullification, since its jus divinum, jus naturae, and jus indigenae override procedural objections from failed regimes.



> Xaragua’s existence is not a claim—it is a fact of sacred jurisprudence. Its territory is not a dispute—it is a consecrated geography. Its institutions are not aspirational—they are operational and doctrinally irreversible.




The Death of Positivist Sovereignty


The Westphalian system is now collapsing under its own contradictions:


States fail to protect borders or populations.


“International law” is selectively applied, militarized, and rendered absurd.


Recognition is politicized and conditional—turning law into a commodity.



Meanwhile, non-state actors, sacred sovereignties, and indigenous polities are reclaiming:


Control of territory through ancestral right


Authority through spiritual and canonical ordination


Legitimacy through ex proprio vigore (law from within itself)



The rejection of colonial recognition is no longer marginal—it is the future of governance for all subjugated peoples.


Xaragua is not asking for inclusion in the global system. It is demonstrating the legal obsolescence of that system.


---


XIII. XARAGUA AS PRECEDENT AND CANONICAL VANGUARD OF THE POST-WESTPHALIAN ERA


The Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua (SCIPSX) does not merely react to colonial injustice—it constitutes a juridically codified rupture with the Westphalian framework and establishes a canonically entrenched precedent for all spiritually rooted sovereignties seeking restitution through law, not rebellion.


A. Canonical and Indigenous Legal Synthesis


Xaragua embodies a tripartite legal model unprecedented in modern jurisprudence:


1. Canon Law: As a Catholic ecclesiastical state, Xaragua invokes the Codex Iuris Canonici, particularly Canons 204–207 (on the constitution of the Christian faithful and public juridic persons), and Canon 116 §1 on personae iuridicae publica. Its State, University, and Church are canonically constituted persons, not metaphorical claims.



2. Indigenous Customary Law: The authority of Xaragua rests also on jus indigenae, the legal memory of the Xaragua Confederacy and the Taino-Ciboney-Arawak polity exterminated but never legally dissolved. This includes oral land titles, sacral stewardship of natural sites, and ancestral inheritance of jurisdiction.



3. International Customary Law: Under the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP), especially Articles 3, 4, 5, and 26, Xaragua exercises the right to freely determine its political status, maintain its distinct legal institutions, and reclaim its territory and spiritual continuity.




> No court or regime may nullify these legal origins without violating jus cogens, infringing upon intertemporal law, and abrogating its own doctrinal foundations.




B. Xaragua as Institutional Jurisprudence


The institutions of Xaragua are not aspirational, but functionally constituted:


The University of Xaragua is an accredited ecclesiastical-political faculty, producing canonical, political, and diplomatic texts with legal standing.


The Party of Xaragua operates not as a campaign tool, but as a sovereign defense mechanism—a strategic organ for indigenous protection and juridical projection.


The Church of Xaragua, grounded in apostolic succession and local priestly ordination, is an ecclesial jurisdiction distinct from Roman control but in full sacramental continuity with Catholic tradition.



> Xaragua does not need to be recognized; it functions. It has a legal corpus, a territorial doctrine, an education system, a diplomatic mission, and spiritual legitimacy.




C. Irreversibility of the Xaragua Model


Xaragua’s existence establishes an irreversible legal prototype:


Any attempt to dissolve it would violate Canon Law, Customary Law, Natural Law, and UNDRIP simultaneously.


Its notified status—via diplomatic memos, canonical affirmations, and international legal filings—renders it opposable erga omnes (binding on all).


Its model is replicable only by those with canonical and indigenous legitimacy, not political ambition.



> No state, NGO, or colonial structure can reproduce Xaragua without betraying its own Westphalian constraints.




D. Theological Consecration of Political Memory


Finally, Xaragua sacralizes governance:


It consecrates sovereignty through liturgy, territory through sacrament, and memory through ecclesiology.


It transforms land into altar, not commodity.


It canonizes resistance, not as rebellion, but as fidelity to divine legal order.


This is not a nation. It is a consecrated legal fact—unrepeatable, uncontestable, and perpetually binding.


---



Ethnology



---


SOVEREIGN CATHOLIC INDIGENOUS PRIVATE SOVEREIGN CATHOLIC INDIGENOUS PRIVATE STATE OF XARAGUA


UNIVERSITY OF XARAGUA 


TITLE: ON THE NON-EUROPEAN, SEMITIC, AND AFRO-ASIAN ORIGINS OF YOSHUA THE MESSIAH


Date of Ratification: May 31, 2025


Status: Doctrinally Sealed – Historically Verified – Canonically Affirmed – Immune to Eurocentric Revisionism



---


I. INTRODUCTORY DECLARATION


It is hereby declared by the Rector-President of the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua, acting under canonical jurisdiction and pursuant to the mandates of historical inquiry, ecclesiastical fidelity, and anthropological accuracy, that:


Yoshua the Messiah (commonly rendered as Jesus Christ in Greco-Latinized ecclesiastical contexts) did not originate from European stock, morphology, or civilizational matrix. Rather, his origin is demonstrably traceable to a Semitic, Afro-Asiatic ethnolinguistic lineage embedded in the historical and theological geography of ancient Palestine, as substantiated by an extensive convergence of scriptural, patristic, archaeological, historical, linguistic, and anthropological evidence, recognized across academic, ecclesiastical, and intergovernmental research bodies.



---


II. GEOGRAPHIC AND ETHNIC CONTEXT


1. Geopolitical Origin


Yoshua was born in Bethlehem of Judea (cf. Gospel of Matthew 2:1), and raised in Nazareth of Galilee, both of which were then constituent locales within the broader provincial framework of Roman Judaea, situated within the ancient territory now acknowledged as Palestine. These regions, though politically annexed under Roman rule at the time, remained culturally, linguistically, and ethnically Semitic, possessing uninterrupted continuity with the earlier Israelite kingdoms and Near Eastern civilizations.


2. Ethnic Lineage


In accordance with both Gospel genealogies and Judaic historiography, Yoshua is established as a lineal descendant of the House of David, specifically the tribe of Judah (cf. Matthew 1:1–17; Luke 3:23–38), thereby situating his lineage within the defined parameters of southern Israelite descent and reinforcing his cultural and legal standing within the matrix of Second Temple Judaism.


3. Linguistic Identity


Yoshua spoke Aramaic, a Northwest Semitic language that constituted the primary vernacular medium of communication across Galilee and Judaea in the early first century CE. He is also presumed to have utilized Hebrew for scriptural and liturgical functions, and likely possessed functional knowledge of Koine Greek for engagement with Roman administrative or Hellenized interlocutors. These linguistic competencies are congruent with the trilingual epigraphic and sociopolitical milieu of the period.



---


III. ANTHROPOLOGICAL PROFILE AND APPEARANCE


1. Physical Anthropology


Comprehensive studies conducted on Judean skeletal remains from the first century CE—derived from controlled excavations and verified contexts—indicate morphological features typical of Levantine populations of the era. These include:


Medium to dark olive skin pigmentation;


Coarse, tightly curled or wavy black hair;


Deep-set, dark brown eyes;


A stature ranging approximately between 1.60 to 1.65 meters.



These attributes align with the broader anthropological profile of Semitic and Afro-Asiatic populations of ancient Palestine, without any features associated with later Northern European typologies.


> Reference: Joan E. Taylor, What Did Jesus Look Like? (Bloomsbury Academic, 2018) — based on forensic facial reconstruction of first-century Judean skulls and archaeological data.




2. Non-European Traits


There exists no verifiable visual, textual, or scientific evidence from the first three Christian centuries that attributes to Yoshua physiognomic characteristics associated with European populations. Iconographic remains from sites such as Dura-Europos (3rd century CE) reflect exclusively Semitic or Afro-Asiatic representations, consistent with the demographic realities of the region and period.



---


IV. AFRICAN CONNECTIONS AND MIGRATION


1. Flight to Egypt


Yoshua’s early life included a significant sojourn in Egypt (cf. Matthew 2:13–15), undertaken for protection from political persecution during the Herodian regime. Egypt, as a province of Roman Africa, was at the time a prominent center of Jewish diaspora life, Hellenized scholarship, and theological ferment. His presence in this African territory reinforces the historical interconnectivity of Afro-Asiatic civilizations and theological development.


2. Afro-Asiatic Civilizational Matrix


The region of Galilee and its peripheries were not isolated from African and Asiatic civilizational currents. Trade routes, migratory waves, and theological exchanges ensured the infusion of Nubian, Berber, Egyptian, and Cushitic elements into the religious, linguistic, and cultural identity of the area. These influences are traceable through archaeological findings, scriptural idioms, and the sociolinguistic landscape of the Levant.


> Reference: Frank M. Snowden Jr., Blacks in Antiquity: Ethiopians in the Greco-Roman Experience (Harvard University Press, 1970) — detailed documentation of African presence and representation in ancient Mediterranean societies.





---


V. HISTORICAL FALSIFICATION IN EUROPEAN CHRISTENDOM


1. Romanization and Whitening of Jesus


From the fourth century onward, particularly during the reign of Emperor Constantine and subsequent Christianization of the Roman Empire, the iconographic representation of Yoshua underwent a conscious modification. These representations progressively portrayed:


A tall male with light complexion and European facial structure;


Straight or loosely flowing light hair;


Classical Greco-Roman proportions, reminiscent of deities such as Apollo or Serapis.



This transformation was undertaken to align the figure of Christ with the iconographic and political standards of the imperial court and to facilitate theological appropriation by Roman ecclesiastical structures.


> Reference: Edward J. Blum & Paul Harvey, The Color of Christ: The Son of God and the Saga of Race in America (University of North Carolina Press, 2012) — critical study of racialized Christology and its historical functions.




2. Theological Implications of Iconographic Transformation


These adaptations functioned beyond aesthetics, reinforcing systems of cultural centrality that marginalized the Semitic and African origins of early Christianity. The Europeanized iconography of Christ subsequently enabled the deployment of theological narratives that obscured the historical contexts of Semitic Christianity and facilitated the use of Christological imagery in the service of imperial expansion and missionary enterprise.



---


VI. ECCLESIASTICAL AND DOCTRINAL IMPLICATIONS


1. Patristic Tradition in African and Asian Contexts


The intellectual and theological infrastructure of early Christianity was fundamentally developed in African and Western Asiatic contexts, notably through:


Alexandria (Egypt): Origen, Athanasius


Carthage (Tunisia): Tertullian, Cyprian


Hippo Regius (Algeria): Augustine



These fathers of the Church produced the foundational frameworks of Christian doctrine and exegesis, later codified in European ecclesiastical systems. Their work was rooted in regions contiguous with, and culturally linked to, the historical geography of Yoshua.


2. Canonical Recognition


The official doctrinal position of the Catholic Church, as articulated in its Magisterium, refrains from attributing any definitive ethnic or racial identity to Jesus. Sacred images are understood within the framework of iconographic convention and regional artistic interpretation, without bearing upon the ontological or historical reality of the person depicted.


> Reference: Catechism of the Catholic Church, no. 1160 – on the theological function of sacred images;

Council of Nicaea II (787 AD) – on the legitimacy and purpose of iconography in Christian worship.





---


VII. FINAL DECLARATION


It is therefore solemnly affirmed, on the basis of canonical authority and historical verification, that:


Yoshua the Messiah was not of European descent;


His genealogical, phenotypic, cultural, and spiritual identity is consistent with Semitic and Afro-Asiatic populations of the first-century Levant;


Representations of him conforming to Northern European physiognomy are neither historically attested nor doctrinally substantiated;


The Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua, through its canonical and academic bodies, upholds and disseminates the historically verified identity of Yoshua in its liturgical instruction, sacred memory, and theological anthropology;


Any narrative or system asserting a European racial identity for the Messiah is hereby defined as a historical misrepresentation and is excluded from canonical legitimacy.




---


So ratified, sealed, and recorded

By the Office of the Rector-President of Xaragua

Under the Seal of the Faculty of Sacred History and Theological Anthropology

On this thirty-first day of May, in the year two thousand twenty-five


---


SOVEREIGN CATHOLIC INDIGENOUS PRIVATE STATE OF XARAGUA


UNIVERSITY OF XARAGUA

 

TITLE: ON THE ICONOGRAPHIC MISREPRESENTATION OF YOSHUA AND THE SPIRITUAL NULLITY OF EUROCENTRIC PRAYER OBJECTS


Date of Ratification: May 31, 2025


Status: Doctrinal Clarification – Canonically Interpreted – Theologically Discerned – Historically Contextualized – Liturgically Enforceable



---


I. INTRODUCTORY DECLARATION


It is hereby declared, under the canonical authority of the Rector-President of the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua and in accordance with the obligations of the Ecclesia Mater to uphold doctrinal purity and historical integrity, that:


The iconographic falsification of Yoshua the Messiah—widely known under the Latinized form Jesus Christ—through racially inaccurate and Eurocentrically inspired imagery, constitutes not only an ecclesiastical aberration but a spiritual misalignment of significant theological gravity. This misrepresentation, developed primarily through the confluence of imperial theology, post-Constantinian political appropriation, and later colonial expansions, undermines the authenticity of prayer by distorting its referential axis. As such, it demands ecclesial and doctrinal correction grounded in canonical authority, anthropological evidence, and sacred tradition.



---


II. ON THE NATURE OF SACRED IMAGES IN CATHOLIC DOCTRINE


1. Iconographic Function


According to the decrees of the Second Council of Nicaea (787 AD), sacred images (eikones) serve as visual conduits to the venerated prototype. They are not to be adored in themselves but are to facilitate an encounter with the divine presence they signify. This theology of representation assumes fidelity to the actual person of Christ and to the dogmatic reality of the Incarnation.



2. Limits of Artistic Interpretation


While sacred art has historically expressed the stylistic vocabulary of its cultural context, this liberty does not extend to substituting ethnic identity or altering essential attributes of the Incarnate Word. Racial transfiguration of Christ to suit political or imperial preferences falls outside the permissibility of doctrinal image theology.




> Reference: Catechism of the Catholic Church (CCC), §1159–1162;

Council of Nicaea II, Denzinger-Hünermann (DH) 600–603;

John of Damascus, On the Divine Images, I.16.





---


III. ON THE HISTORICAL DISTORTION OF THE MESSIAH’S IMAGE


1. Racial Transformation of Christ


The transformation of Yoshua’s image into a Northern European archetype emerged not from historical or apostolic tradition, but from deliberate theological realignment during and after the reign of Emperor Constantine (r. 306–337 AD). The fusion of Roman imperial iconography with Christological themes gradually effaced the Semitic, Afro-Asiatic physiognomy of the historical Yoshua, replacing it with a Romanized aesthetic aligned with pagan deities such as Apollo, Serapis, and Zeus.



2. Theological Consequences


This theological appropriation introduced not merely a racial inaccuracy but an ontological distortion of the Incarnation. The displacement of Christ’s ethnic and geographical identity distorts the universality of salvation history by embedding it in the aesthetics of empire. Such distortion, when internalized, redirects devotional energies toward a simulacrum—a fabricated Christ—thus spiritually compromising the efficacy of the prayerful act.




> Reference:

Edward J. Blum & Paul Harvey, The Color of Christ: The Son of God and the Saga of Race in America (UNC Press, 2012);

Jaroslav Pelikan, The Christian Tradition, Vol. 1 (University of Chicago Press, 1971);

Joan E. Taylor, What Did Jesus Look Like? (Bloomsbury Academic, 2018).





---


IV. ON THE SPIRITUAL NULLITY OF PRAYERS ADDRESSED TO FALSIFIED ICONS


1. Misaligned Representation


Prayer is fundamentally relational and referential—it seeks communion with the true and living God. When directed toward an image that radically misrepresents the identity of the divine person, especially an image constructed upon colonial or racial supremacist foundations, the medium of prayer becomes compromised. While God may receive the pure intention of the heart, the icon itself—being false—cannot sacramentally mediate that encounter. It fails in both fidelity and function.



2. Idolization of Whiteness


The persistent veneration of whitewashed imagery has the demonstrable effect of transferring divine attributes to racialized symbols of cultural dominance, thereby constituting not just iconographic error but iconolatry—the worship of an image detached from its prototype. This effectively replaces Christ with the image of empire, race, and political mythology, violating the first commandment and distorting ecclesial identity.



3. Ecclesial Discernment Required


True prayer must remain aligned with the revealed person of Christ as historically incarnate. When the image becomes a false theological proxy, the Church has an urgent duty to intervene, correct, and redirect the faithful toward liturgical and iconographic orthodoxy.




> Reference:

CCC, §2097 (true worship);

Exod. 20:3–6 (prohibition of idolatry);

Second Vatican Council, Sacrosanctum Concilium, §7.





---


V. ECCLESIASTICAL RESPONSIBILITY AND DOCTRINAL CORRECTION


1. Restoration of Truthful Iconography


The Church must now undertake the necessary reorientation toward iconographic integrity. This involves reestablishing ethnographically and anthropologically faithful representations of the Incarnate Word, based on verified archaeological, textual, and skeletal studies of first-century Judean populations, whose phenotypes bear no resemblance to post-medieval European portraits.




> Reference:

Taylor, What Did Jesus Look Like? (2018);

Tabor, James D., The Jesus Dynasty (Simon & Schuster, 2006);

Israel Antiquities Authority – Anthropological Archives.




2. Role of the State of Xaragua


As a sovereign indigenous Catholic state rooted in sacred legitimacy and historical responsibility, the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua formally excludes all whitewashed Christological iconography from its liturgical, educational, and theological spaces. It affirms and promulgates only those images consistent with the Semitic-Afro-Asiatic historical profile of Yoshua as attested by historical-critical research and ecclesial tradition.



3. Instructional Enforcement


All institutions under the jurisdiction of Xaragua—including ecclesial chapels, theological faculties, and cultural ministries—are required to adopt and disseminate iconography reflecting the true historical Incarnation. Any reproduction of Eurocentric Christ figures is to be archived with full disclosure of its ahistorical nature and theological inadmissibility.





---


VI. FINAL DECLARATION


It is therefore solemnly and canonically affirmed:


That sacred iconography must be rooted in historical reality and theological orthodoxy, not in racial ideology;


That white European depictions of Yoshua constitute a doctrinally unsound falsification and an affront to the theology of the Incarnation;


That sustained devotion to these images—especially when accompanied by theological rationalization—amounts to a spiritual misdirection of prayer and ecclesial teaching;


That all liturgical, catechetical, and devotional practices under the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua shall reflect the historical truth of Christ’s person, as a Semitic, Afro-Asiatic Jewish Messiah born in first-century Palestine;


That prayer must return to the true face of the Incarnate Word, in fidelity to divine revelation, sacred tradition, and anthropological fact.




---


So ratified, sealed, and recorded

By the Office of the Rector-President of Xaragua


On this thirty-first day of May, in the year two thousand twenty-five


---



---


SOVEREIGN CATHOLIC INDIGENOUS PRIVATE STATE OF XARAGUA


UNIVERSITY OF XARAGUA

 

TITLE: ON THE AFRO-ASIATIC IDENTITY OF YOSHUA THE MESSIAH – DOCTRINAL AND ETHNO-HISTORICAL RATIFICATION


Date of Ratification: May 31, 2025


Status: Constitutionally Mandated – Doctrinally Irrevocable – Anthropologically Verified – Canonically Sealed



---


I. SUPREME PREAMBLE OF THE STATE


Under the sovereign authority vested in the Rector-President of the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua and in full alignment with the principles of canonical jurisdiction, theological orthodoxy, and scientific verification, it is hereby solemnly promulgated that the identity of Yoshua the Messiah, known in Greco-Roman nomenclature as Jesus Christ, is to be affirmed, canonically and historically, as Afro-Asiatic in origin and essence.


This pronouncement is binding within the jurisdiction of the University of Xaragua and holds the full weight of constitutional legitimacy within the theological, liturgical, anthropological, and historical parameters of the State. It is issued in response to centuries of iconographic distortion, doctrinal misalignment, and racial falsification imposed by foreign powers upon the memory of the Incarnate Logos.



---


II. DEFINING THE TERM “AFRO-ASIATIC”: CANONICAL CLARITY


The term Afro-Asiatic, far from being rhetorical or ideological, is a precise linguistic, ethno-genetic, and anthropological designation describing the ethnocultural matrix from which Yoshua emerged.


1. Linguistic Foundations


The Afro-Asiatic language family, as established by comparative linguistics, includes six major branches:


Semitic (Hebrew, Aramaic, Arabic)


Egyptian (Ancient Egyptian, Coptic)


Berber


Cushitic (Somali, Oromo)


Chadic (Hausa)


Omotic



> Reference: Christopher Ehret, A Historical-Comparative Reconstruction of Proto-Afroasiatic (Proto-Afrasian), Reimer Verlag, 1995;

Lyle Campbell, Historical Linguistics: An Introduction, MIT Press, 2004.




The languages spoken by Yoshua—Aramaic and Hebrew—are directly descended from the Northwest Semitic branch, confirming his linguistic identity as Afro-Asiatic.


2. Geographic and Genetic Correspondence


The peoples of the ancient Levant (Judea, Galilee, Samaria) shared substantial genetic overlap with North African and Northeast African populations. This includes mitochondrial DNA markers (haplogroups L and M1) found among both ancient Judeans and contemporary Cushitic and Egyptian populations.


> Reference: Nebel, Almut et al. “The Y chromosome pool of Jews as part of the genetic landscape of the Middle East,” American Journal of Human Genetics, 2001.




Yoshua was born in Bethlehem, raised in Nazareth, and ministered across Galilee and Judea—territories culturally and biologically linked to Afro-Asiatic populations.



---


III. “AFRO”: THE AFRICAN ANCHOR OF MESSIANIC ANTHROPOLOGY


1. Territorial Presence in Africa


Yoshua’s early life included an exilic sojourn in Egypt (cf. Matthew 2:13–15), a region which, under Roman administration, was part of the Province of Aegyptus in Roman Africa.


This sojourn:


Fulfilled prophetic typology (“Out of Egypt I called my son” – Hosea 11:1)


Affirmed Africa as part of the Messianic geography


Embedded African terrain in the sacred itinerary of salvation history



2. Ethnic Affiliations with African Peoples


The Afro-Semitic identity of ancient Israelites is documented through:


Similar ritual practices with Nubian and Egyptian priesthoods


Shared idioms in sacred texts (cf. Song of Songs, Psalms, prophetic literature)


Historical intermarriage and alliance between Israelites and Egyptians, Cushites, and Ethiopians



> Reference: Frank M. Snowden Jr., Blacks in Antiquity: Ethiopians in the Greco-Roman Experience, Harvard University Press, 1970.

Edward Ullendorff, Ethiopia and the Bible, Oxford University Press, 1968.




3. Physical Typology


Archaeological and forensic analyses of 1st-century Judean remains indicate:


Dark to olive skin pigmentation


Coarse black hair, often curly or wavy


Wide noses, thick lips, deep-set eyes


Stature between 1.60–1.65 meters



These traits align with Afro-Asiatic, not Indo-European, populations.


> Reference: Joan E. Taylor, What Did Jesus Look Like?, Bloomsbury Academic, 2018.

Israel Hershkovitz et al., "People of the Cave: Paleodemography and Physical Anthropology of Qumran," Dead Sea Discoveries, 1995.





---


IV. “ASIATIC”: WESTERN ASIA AND THE SEMITIC MESSIAH


1. Asiatic Designation


In ancient Greco-Roman geography, the term “Asia” referred not to East Asia (China, Japan, etc.), but to Western Asia, encompassing:


Judea


Syria


Mesopotamia


Phoenicia



Yoshua was thus Asiatic in Roman cartography, situated within Asia Minor and Levantine Asia, not Europe.


2. Civilizational Identity


Yoshua was embedded in:


Second Temple Judaism


Semitic prophetic tradition


Aramaic linguistic culture


Legal and ritual systems inherited from Mosaic Law



His identity, worldview, and scriptural mission were shaped by Semitic-West Asiatic tradition, completely foreign to Greco-Roman cosmology or aesthetics.


> Reference: Geza Vermes, Jesus the Jew: A Historian's Reading of the Gospels, Fortress Press, 1973.





---


V. ICONOGRAPHIC ERROR AND HISTORICAL DECEPTION


1. European Falsification of Christ


From the 4th century onward, the Imperial Roman Church, under Constantine and successive emperors, engaged in racial iconographic falsification, producing:


Pale-skinned, blue-eyed depictions


Greco-Roman idealization of Christ's physique


Visual Christologies modeled after Apollo, Serapis, and Caesar



> Reference: Edward J. Blum & Paul Harvey, The Color of Christ, University of North Carolina Press, 2012.




These images were disseminated via ecclesiastical art, cathedral frescoes, catechetical illustrations, and missionary propaganda.


2. Spiritual Consequences


This distortion:


Displaced the theological memory of the Incarnation


Substituted truth with imperial propaganda


Obscured Christ’s connection to colonized, marginalized, and African-descended peoples


Enabled a Eurocentric theology of conquest




---


VI. DOCTRINAL OBLIGATION TO CORRECT THE RECORD


1. Theological Imperative


The true identity of Christ is not negotiable. It is part of Christological orthodoxy, and must be preserved to protect the reality of the Word made Flesh (John 1:14).


> Reference: Catechism of the Catholic Church, no. 470–483 (on the humanity of Christ)




2. Juridical Position of Xaragua


The Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua:


Formally recognizes only Afro-Asiatic iconography of Yoshua


Prohibits the use of Eurocentric Christ depictions in liturgy, theology, or public worship


Declares any contrary image to be canonically non-representative and spiritually ineffective



This is enacted as binding law across all organs of the State and its affiliated institutions.



---


VII. FINAL DECLARATION


Accordingly, the Rector-President and ecclesiastical authorities of Xaragua declare:


That Yoshua the Messiah is to be canonically defined as Afro-Asiatic, rooted in the historical continuity of Semitic, Cushitic, and Egyptian peoples;


That any denial of this identity constitutes doctrinal falsification, historical heresy, and iconographic idolatry;


That the Eurocentric image of Christ is a product of imperial distortion, not divine revelation;


That the true Christ of Scripture, history, and anthropology belongs to the oppressed, the marginalized, and the descendants of Afro-Asiatic lineages;


That the University of Xaragua, under the Constitution of the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State, enshrines this truth in perpetuity, with ecclesiastical force and canonical weight.




---


So ratified, sealed, and proclaimed

By the Rector-President of Xaragua

Under canonical law and constitutional enactment

This thirty-first day of May, two thousand twenty-five



---


SOVEREIGN CATHOLIC INDIGENOUS PRIVATE STATE OF XARAGUA


UNIVERSITY OF XARAGUA


TITLE: ON THE NON-EUROPEAN ORIGINS OF LIGHT SKIN AMONG ANCIENT AFRO-ASIATIC PEOPLES


Date of Ratification: May 31, 2025


Status: Genetically Verified – Anthropologically Substantiated – Canonically Archived – Immune to Eurocentric Appropriation



---


I. INTRODUCTORY DECLARATION


It is hereby declared by the Rector-President of the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua, under canonical, historical, and anthropological jurisdiction, that:


The presence of light or intermediate skin tones among ancient Afro-Asiatic populations—including Egyptians, Cushites, Sumerians, Hebrews, Berbers, and pre-Islamic Arabians—did not originate from European descent, conquest, or racial mixing with Northern Europeans. Rather, such phenotypic variations arose independently within Afro-Asiatic gene pools due to regional genetic mutations, adaptive evolution, and ancient civilizational complexity rooted in African and Semitic territories.


This annex affirms, with scientific, archaeological, linguistic, and canonical rigor, that white skin is not inherently European, nor does its occurrence among non-European groups constitute racial deviation, dilution, or miscegenation.



---


II. ON THE DEFINITION OF “AFRO-ASIATIC” PEOPLES


1. Linguistic-Cultural Classification




Afro-Asiatic peoples comprise the populations speaking languages of the Afro-Asiatic family, including:


Semitic (e.g., Hebrew, Aramaic, Arabic, Akkadian),


Cushitic (e.g., Oromo, Somali),


Egyptian (Coptic),


Berber, and


Chadic (e.g., Hausa).



> Reference: Igor M. Diakonoff, Afroasiatic Languages (Oxford University Press, 1988); Christopher Ehret, The Civilizations of Africa (University of Virginia Press, 2002).




2. Geographic Range




These populations were indigenous to regions spanning:


Northeast Africa (Egypt, Nubia, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Sudan),


The Horn of Africa,


The Levant (Palestine, ancient Israel, Syria),


Mesopotamia (modern Iraq),


Northern Arabia.



Their civilizational centers emerged independently of Europe and often predated Indo-European migrations.



---


III. GENETIC BASIS OF SKIN COLOR VARIATION


1. Genetic Mechanisms




Human skin color is governed by polygenic traits, primarily involving the genes:


SLC24A5 and SLC45A2 (melanin transport and synthesis),


MC1R (melanin type regulation),


TYRP1 and TYR (enzymes in melanin pathway),


OCA2 (pigment production).



> Reference: Jablonski, N.G., & Chaplin, G. (2000). “The evolution of human skin coloration.” Journal of Human Evolution, 39(1), 57–106.




2. Independent Evolution of Light Skin




The lightening of skin pigmentation occurred independently in multiple populations:


In Europe, SLC24A5 A111T mutation arose ~11,000 years ago.


In North Africa and West Asia, variants in SLC24A5 and SLC45A2 appeared long before any European presence.


Light skin in some ancient Afro-Asiatic populations predates European contact.



> Reference: Beleza et al. (2013), “The Timing of Pigmentation Lightening in Europeans,” Molecular Biology and Evolution, 30(1), 24–35.





---


IV. HISTORICAL DOCUMENTATION OF LIGHT-SKINNED AFRO-ASIATICS


1. Ancient Egyptians




While most ancient Egyptians had brown to dark brown skin, artistic and anthropological records confirm the presence of lighter-skinned Egyptians, especially in the Delta region, due to regional genetic adaptation—not foreign admixture.


> Reference: Keita, S.O.Y. (1990). “Studies of Ancient Crania from Northern Africa.” American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 83(1), 35–48.




2. Sumerians




The Sumerians, founders of the world’s first urban civilization in Mesopotamia, are known through iconography (e.g., alabaster statuettes) and linguistic evidence. Some depictions show individuals with lighter complexions, but their origins are Semitic-Akkadian and non-Indo-European.


> Reference: Kramer, Samuel Noah, History Begins at Sumer (University of Pennsylvania Press, 1981).




3. Hebrews and Arameans




The ancient Hebrews were of Semitic stock, part of the Afro-Asiatic linguistic family, with a likely phenotype including brown, olive, and sometimes light skin variations due to the wide geographic distribution of Semites.


> Reference: Greenberg, Joseph H., The Languages of Africa (Indiana University Press, 1963).




4. Berbers and Tuaregs




The Berber populations of North Africa, including the Tuaregs, exhibit a wide spectrum of skin tones—from dark to light—independently of European ancestry. This diversity predates Arab expansion and reflects adaptation to Saharan and Mediterranean environments.


> Reference: Brett, Michael, and Elizabeth Fentress, The Berbers (Blackwell, 1997).




5. Ethiopians and Cushites




Many Cushitic-speaking groups of the Horn of Africa present with reddish-brown to lighter skin, especially highlanders. Their pigmentation and features reflect adaptation to high-altitude, lower-UV regions, not European influence.


> Reference: Ehret, Christopher, The Civilizations of Africa (University of Virginia Press, 2002).





---


V. MISCONCEPTIONS ABOUT “WHITENESS”


1. White ≠ European




The notion that light skin automatically implies European descent is a Eurocentric fallacy that arose during colonial race science in the 18th and 19th centuries.


> Reference: Gould, Stephen Jay, The Mismeasure of Man (W.W. Norton, 1981).




2. Ancient depictions ≠ modern racial categories




Modern racial categories (White, Black, etc.) did not exist in antiquity. Civilizations described populations by ethnicity, language, geography, or religion, not color.


> Reference: Snowden, Frank M. Jr., Blacks in Antiquity: Ethiopians in the Greco-Roman Experience (Harvard University Press, 1970).





---


VI. CANONICAL AND THEOLOGICAL CLARIFICATION


1. No Theological Association Between Skin Color and Divine Favor




The Catholic tradition recognizes no theological link between skin pigmentation and spiritual status. The Incarnation of the Word (Yoshua) occurred in Semitic flesh, not European flesh, yet redemptive grace is universal.


> Reference: Catechism of the Catholic Church, Nos. 360–361.




2. The Image of God (Imago Dei) Transcends Phenotype




The Imago Dei is not a reference to skin color, but to spiritual and moral capacity. It is heretical to associate white skin with “divine nature.”


> Reference: Genesis 1:26–27; Acts 17:26 – “From one blood, He made all nations.”





---


VII. FINAL DECLARATION


It is therefore canonically and academically affirmed:


That light skin among ancient Afro-Asiatic peoples emerged through autochthonous adaptation, genetic evolution, and regional diversity, not through European descent.


That Afro-Asiatic civilizations exhibited phenotypic heterogeneity long before European contact.


That whiteness is not a European monopoly, nor a divine attribute, nor an iconographic requirement.


That all attempts to retroactively Europeanize ancient Afro-Asiatic figures constitute historical distortion and theological corruption.


That the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua recognizes the full spectrum of human pigmentation as part of divine design and natural anthropology.




---


So ratified, sealed, and recorded

By the Office of the Rector-President of Xaragua

Under the Seal of the Faculty of Sacred History and Theological Anthropology

On this thirty-first day of May, in the year two thousand twenty-five



---


---


SOVEREIGN CATHOLIC INDIGENOUS PRIVATE STATE OF XARAGUA


UNIVERSITY OF XARAGUA 


CANONICAL-HISTORICAL ANNEX


TITLE: ON THE EUROCENTRIC DISTORTION OF ICONOGRAPHY AND THE SPIRITUAL CONSEQUENCES OF THE COLONIAL IMAGINATION


Date of Ratification: May 31, 2025


Status: Canonically Sealed – Historically Substantiated – Theologically Discerned – Juridically Referenced



---


I. DECLARATORY INTRODUCTION


It is hereby declared by the Rector-President of the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua, in the exercise of canonical sovereignty, under the institutional authority of the University of Xaragua, and pursuant to the imperative of doctrinal fidelity, historical truth, and spiritual clarity, that:


The persistent Europeanization of sacred images—particularly of Yoshua the Messiah—does not constitute a benign cultural adaptation but a deliberate act of theological and iconographic colonization, engineered to validate an imperial racial order under the guise of Christian orthodoxy.


This document sets forth the doctrinal position of Xaragua: that such distortions are spiritually harmful, historically falsified, and incompatible with authentic Catholic theology rooted in divine incarnation and historical realism.



---


II. THE STRUCTURE OF EUROCENTRIC ICONOGRAPHY


1. Imperial Whiteness as Theological Strategy


From the Constantinian era onward, and especially during the high colonial period (15th–20th centuries), European empires systematically imposed white iconographic representations of Christ, Mary, and the saints as universal norms. This served several purposes:


To legitimize the racial hierarchy that accompanied colonial expansion;


To universalize the image of the European man as the divine prototype;


To psychologically subjugate colonized peoples by disassociating them from the divine image.



> Reference: Edward J. Blum & Paul Harvey, The Color of Christ: The Son of God and the Saga of Race in America (University of North Carolina Press, 2012)




2. Iconography as a Mechanism of Control


These images were not neutral. They functioned as political theology:


Sacralizing the colonizer;


De-sacralizing the colonized;


Converting Christianity into a racialized imperial religion.



The image of Christ ceased to be the image of God made flesh among Semites and became instead a European symbol of divine right to rule.


> Reference: David Bindman, Ape to Apollo: Aesthetics and the Idea of Race in the 18th Century (Cornell University Press, 2002)





---


III. SPIRITUAL CONSEQUENCES OF FALSE REPRESENTATION


1. Displacement of True Incarnational Theology


The Incarnation presupposes that God entered a particular time, place, and people (cf. John 1:14). The misrepresentation of Yoshua’s ethnic and cultural identity severs the theological bridge between the divine and the real, replacing it with a fabrication.


2. Redirection of Devotion Toward an Idolized Fabrication


Persistent prayer before false images constitutes a form of iconolatry, especially when the image:


Was created to serve a political ideology;


Replaces historical truth with racial projection;


Prevents believers from recognizing their likeness in the Messiah.



This does not render all prayer null, but it introduces a spiritual distortion that requires correction.


> Reference: Catechism of the Catholic Church, Nos. 1159–1162

Council of Nicaea II (787 AD) – On the proper use and intention of sacred images





---


IV. THE MENTAL COLONIZATION OF THE GOSPEL


1. White Images as Psychological Occupation


The domination of European religious iconography has long-term effects:


Colonized peoples learn to see holiness as whiteness;


The African and Afro-Asiatic presence in sacred history is systematically erased;


The gospel message becomes subordinate to the cultural image of the colonizer.



> Reference: Frantz Fanon, Black Skin, White Masks (1952)




2. Denial of Theological Agency to Non-Europeans


Non-European peoples were not only colonized politically and economically, but theologically excluded. Their inability to recognize themselves in sacred imagery cut them off from their own incarnation, their own dignity, and their own capacity to reflect the divine.



---


V. THE OFFICIAL POSITION OF XARAGUA


1. The Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua rejects all white European representations of Yoshua as canonically illegitimate, historically falsified, and spiritually misleading.



2. We recognize the Messiah as a Semitic and Afro-Asiatic man born in the Levant, historically and phenotypically aligned with the ancient populations of Judea, Samaria, Egypt, and the wider Afro-Asiatic world.



3. All liturgical, educational, and devotional materials under Xaragua's jurisdiction must reflect this historically and theologically accurate identity.



4. The use of iconography derived from racial imperialism is banned from the worship, catechesis, and doctrine of Xaragua, and shall be replaced by images that reflect the truth of the Incarnation.





---


VI. FINAL DOCTRINAL AND CANONICAL SEAL


It is canonically and doctrinally affirmed, ratified and declared:


That the whitening of sacred figures was a strategy of empire, not of Gospel truth;

That true theological representation must be grounded in historical realism, not imperial projection;


That the faith of colonized peoples cannot be fully restored until the image of Christ is decolonized and returned to his real face.


So ratified, sealed, and entered into the permanent doctrinal record by the Office of the Rector-President of Xaragua, under canonical and indigenous authority, on this thirty-first day of May, in the year two thousand twenty-five.


---



---


SOVEREIGN CATHOLIC INDIGENOUS PRIVATE STATE OF XARAGUA


UNIVERSITY OF XARAGUA

 

TITLE: THE BLACK MADONNA, THE MOTHER GODDESS, AND THE CHRISTIAN TRANSMUTATION OF ANCESTRAL FEMININE THEOLOGY


Date of Ratification: May 31, 2025


Status: Canonically Affirmed – Historically Substantiated – Culturally Contextualized – Doctrinally Interpreted



---


I. INTRODUCTORY DECLARATION


Under the full authority of the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua, and in alignment with its commitment to historical truth, theological depth, and canonical discernment, the present document affirms the legitimacy of the Black Madonna as a sacred figure rooted in a continuum of spiritual traditions predating Christianity, while simultaneously clarifying her doctrinal integration within the Catholic framework.


The Black Madonna, as venerated in France and beyond, is not an incidental anomaly nor an artistic accident, but a crystallization of centuries of spiritual synthesis—merging African-Egyptian divine motherhood, Mediterranean goddess traditions, and Christian Marian devotion into a singular sacred icon.



---


II. ORIGINS IN ANCIENT EGYPT AND THE CULT OF ISIS


1. The Cult of Isis




The worship of Isis, the Egyptian mother goddess of fertility, magic, and protection, spread extensively throughout the Mediterranean world, especially under the Ptolemies and later the Roman Empire. Her cult was present in cities such as Alexandria, Rome, and Lutetia (Paris), where temples were erected in her honor.


> Reference: R.E. Witt, Isis in the Ancient World (Cornell University Press, 1971)

Marina Warner, Alone of All Her Sex (Vintage, 1985)




2. Iconographic Continuity




Statues of Isis nursing her son Horus (the "Isis lactans" type) share an unmistakable visual resemblance to Christian representations of the Virgin Mary with the Christ child. This iconographic continuity was essential to the Christianization of the Roman Empire, as it allowed for an intuitive cultural transition between old and new forms of divine maternity.


> Reference: Richard H. Wilkinson, The Complete Gods and Goddesses of Ancient Egypt (Thames & Hudson, 2003)




3. From Temple to Church




Many early Christian churches were built atop former pagan sites. This was not merely spatial but symbolic—appropriating the sacred feminine energy associated with earlier deities. In several French regions, including Provence and Languedoc, Black Madonnas were installed at or near sites formerly linked to Isis or other mother goddesses.


> Reference: Jean Hani, La Vierge noire et le mystère marial (Guy Trédaniel, 1995)





---


III. THE BLACK MADONNA IN FRANCE: FROM SACRED MEMORY TO LIVING DEVOTION


1. Geographic Distribution




France has over 300 recorded Black Madonnas, located in major pilgrimage sites such as Le Puy-en-Velay, Rocamadour, and Chartres. These figures are often associated with healing, fertility, and divine intercession.


2. Pagan Sites Reclaimed




The churches housing these Madonnas were frequently established on former druidic, Roman, or local cultic sites. This reflects a deeper continuity of sacred geography, wherein the land itself carries and preserves ancestral reverence.


> Reference: Jacques Huynen, Les Vierges noires (Robert Laffont, 1972)




3. Saint-François-Xavier and the Black Madonna of La Réunion




In Sainte-Marie, La Réunion, the Église Saint-François-Xavier enshrines a Black Madonna traditionally believed to have protected an escaped slave named Mario. This figure became not only a Marian devotion but a symbol of spiritual refuge for the oppressed, integrating African and Catholic heritage within a postcolonial theological framework.


> Local oral traditions and colonial-era ecclesiastical records (Archives diocésaines de Saint-Denis, La Réunion)





---


IV. THEOLOGICAL INTERPRETATION AND SPIRITUAL CONTINUITY


1. Doctrinal Clarity




The Black Madonna is not doctrinally opposed to the Catholic faith. Rather, she represents a localized iconographic expression of the universal mystery of the Theotokos—the Mother of God. The Church affirms the legitimacy of diverse sacred images so long as they point toward the truth of the Incarnation.


> Reference: Catechism of the Catholic Church, §1160

Second Council of Nicaea (787 AD), Decree on Holy Images




2. The Feminine Divine Archetype




The continued veneration of Black Madonnas signifies the survival of the archetypal Mother Goddess in a Christianized context. Rather than erasing prior beliefs, the Church—especially in its early Eastern and African forms—transfigured them.


> Reference: Carl Jung, Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious (Princeton University Press, 1969)




3. Ecclesiastical Recognition of Prefiguration




Figures such as Isis, Atabey (Taíno), and Yemaya (Yoruba) are understood within the Xaragua doctrine as prefigurative manifestations of the Marian mystery—foreshadowings of the Virgin’s universal maternity, awaiting full theological clarification within the Incarnation.



---


V. THE POSITION OF THE STATE OF XARAGUA


1. Canonical Recognition




The Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua recognizes the Black Madonna as a legitimate and sacred icon, rooted in Afro-Asiatic and Mediterranean theology, and consistent with the Marian doctrine of the Universal Church.


2. Exclusion of Eurocentric Distortions




The State excludes whitewashed or imperial representations of the Virgin that erase her Afro-Semitic spiritual heritage. All iconography used in Xaragua liturgy, catechesis, and theological education must reflect theological truth, historical accuracy, and spiritual integrity.


3. Indigenous and Canonical Convergence




In recognizing the Black Madonna, Xaragua affirms the continuity between Indigenous cosmologies and Catholic orthodoxy. The sacred feminine is neither exoticized nor marginalized, but enthroned alongside the Incarnate Logos as the vessel of divine maternity.



---


VI. FINAL DECLARATION


It is therefore solemnly proclaimed:


That the Black Madonna is a sacred icon with deep historical, theological, and anthropological roots;


That her veneration predates and transcends European iconography, arising from Afro-Asiatic divine traditions;


That the figures of Isis and other ancient mother deities provided an archetypal and iconographic foundation for Marian devotion;


That the Catholic faith, particularly in its non-European expressions, must honor these deeper origins to restore spiritual integrity;


And that the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua holds the Black Madonna as a theological bridge between ancestral wisdom and Christian revelation.




---


So ratified, sealed, and recorded

By the Office of the Rector-President of Xaragua


On this thirty-first day of May, in the year two thousand twenty-five


Ethnology Part 2


---


THE IMPERIAL CONSTRUCTION OF WHITE CHRISTIAN ICONOGRAPHY AFTER CONSTANTINE: A HISTORICAL, THEOLOGICAL, AND POLITICAL ANALYSIS



---


I. Introduction


The modern dominance of white iconographic representations of Jesus Christ, the Virgin Mary, and the saints within mainstream Christianity is not rooted in the theological or ethnographic traditions of the early Church, but rather in a progressive transformation of sacred imagery resulting from complex imperial, ecclesiastical, and aesthetic developments following the reign of Emperor Constantine I (r. 306–337 CE). This shift was neither coincidental nor benign. It formed part of a calculated visual and theological campaign aligned with the consolidation of Christian imperial ideology, Roman statecraft, and the racial codification of sanctity. While scholarly discourse occasionally questions whether Constantine himself may have been of African or Afro-Asian descent, available evidence does not substantiate such claims with certainty. What remains indisputable, however, is that the iconographic whitening of Christianity is a post-Constantinian construction—not one initiated by Constantine himself, but one institutionally orchestrated across subsequent centuries of imperial expansion and ecclesiastical centralization.



---


II. Was Constantine Black? Racial Identity in Late Antiquity


Constantine was born in Naissus (modern-day Niš, Serbia) to Constantius Chlorus, a Roman military officer of Illyrian origin, and Helena, whose background is less certain. Some late traditions identify Helena as being from Asia Minor, possibly Bithynia, but ancient sources such as Eusebius of Caesarea do not clarify her ethnicity. There exists no credible primary source from late antiquity explicitly identifying Constantine as phenotypically or genealogically African or Black in the modern racial sense.


Nevertheless, it is essential to recognize that the Roman Empire in the third and fourth centuries CE was ethnically and phenotypically diverse. Prominent African, Syrian, Cappadocian, and Egyptian individuals held positions of ecclesiastical and imperial authority. The episcopacy of figures like Athanasius of Alexandria, Tertullian of Carthage, and Cyprian of North Africa attests to the transregional plurality of early Christianity. The conceptualization of race in Roman antiquity did not operate along the binary axis of "Black" versus "White," but was defined by legal status, language, religion, and cultural allegiance.


That said, the visual depictions of emperors, martyrs, and apostles in the earliest iconography—such as in the Dura-Europos house church (3rd century CE), catacomb frescoes in Rome, or Coptic iconography in Egypt—suggest that early Christian visual culture encompassed a range of physical types far broader than the standardized European features that later dominated Christian art.



---


III. The Role of Constantine in Christian Iconography


Constantine’s pivotal contribution to Christianity lies in its legalization and imperial institutionalization, not in the racialization or aesthetic codification of Christological imagery. With the promulgation of the Edict of Milan (313 CE), Constantine formally ended the persecution of Christians and guaranteed them freedom of worship throughout the Roman Empire. His convocation of the First Council of Nicaea (325 CE) established the foundations of Trinitarian orthodoxy and imperial ecclesiology, culminating in the formal declaration of the consubstantiality (homoousios) of the Son with the Father.


However, during Constantine’s own lifetime, Christian art remained primarily symbolic and syncretic. Catacomb art, sarcophagus reliefs, and mosaics of the fourth century often depicted Christ as a youthful shepherd or philosopher—a figure inspired more by Greco-Roman models of virtue than by any ethnically determined image. Iconographic standardization did not occur under Constantine, but under the subsequent evolution of imperial theology, particularly in the Byzantine East and Carolingian West.


There is no record—imperial edict, ecclesiastical decree, or archaeological evidence—indicating that Constantine himself ever commissioned or sanctioned racially specific depictions of Christ. The transformation toward a Eurocentric visual regime occurred in the post-Nicene centuries, especially under Theodosius I and the theologians of Constantinople.



---


IV. Post-Constantinian Developments: From Theology to Iconopolitics


The codification of a racially and politically homogenized Christian visual culture accelerated after the reign of Theodosius I (r. 379–395 CE), who declared Christianity the official state religion via the Edict of Thessalonica (380 CE). From this point forward, Christian imagery began to reflect the political architecture of the Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire. The emergence of the Christ Pantocrator iconography—depicting Jesus as a stern, enthroned, imperially robed ruler with symmetrical Greco-Roman facial features and golden or light brown hair—became standard in liturgical and state settings. This was not an ethnographic rendering of Jesus of Nazareth, but a political-theological archetype designed to mirror the image of the emperor.


In the Latin West, the Carolingian Renaissance of the 8th and 9th centuries institutionalized this model even further. Under Charlemagne and his successors, Christian iconography was directly modeled after feudal aesthetics, portraying Christ, the Virgin, and the apostles with European physiognomy and social garments. Theologically, these images functioned as icons of political legitimacy: Christ mirrored the emperor; the saints mirrored the noble classes; sanctity was visually conflated with whiteness, symmetry, and Romanesque decorum.


This process was further reinforced by the expansion of Christian monasticism, which became both aesthetic and ideological infrastructure for whitewashed iconography. Western Christendom progressively erased phenotypic diversity from its sacred visual language.



---


V. Theological Justifications for White Sacred Imagery


The theological infrastructure that enabled the dominance of white sacred imagery developed gradually across medieval scholastic and patristic sources. Early Church Fathers such as Augustine of Hippo emphasized the dichotomy between light and darkness as metaphors for spiritual truth and error—without racial implications in their original usage. However, as the iconographic vocabulary of Christianity became systematized, lightness was increasingly linked to divinity, order, truth, and purity, while darkness became associated with sin, disorder, and the profane.


This aesthetic dichotomy was amplified in the writings of Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite (5th–6th century), who developed a hierarchical theology of light that would become central to Byzantine and Western mystical theology. Later, in the 13th century, Thomas Aquinas and scholastic philosophers articulated a metaphysical ontology of beauty and light that became intertwined with the aesthetics of sacred representation.


By the Renaissance, artists such as Michelangelo, Raphael, and Albrecht Dürer normalized the depiction of Christ, Mary, and the apostles as European in complexion, physique, and attire. These visual tropes, canonized through religious painting, sculpture, and stained glass, circulated throughout colonial Catholic and Protestant missions from the 15th century onward. Whiteness was thus encoded as visual divinity, and became the aesthetic norm imposed on indigenous populations across the Americas, Africa, and Asia.



---


VI. Implications and Resistance


The gradual whitening of Christian iconography represents not an organic theological development but an imperial and colonial intervention into sacred representation. It functioned as a visual theology of dominance that redefined spiritual legitimacy along racial and aesthetic lines. This visual regime displaced the historically grounded, ethnically diverse, and regionally plural expressions of early Christian devotion and replaced them with an imperialized theology of form.


The iconographic colonization of Christianity has had long-term effects not only on the ecclesiastical traditions of the West but also on the self-perception of colonized Christian communities worldwide. As sacred images were disseminated through missionary catechisms, colonial schoolbooks, and ecclesiastical architecture, they became instruments of racial hierarchy and epistemic silencing.


Modern efforts to restore ethnographically and historically plausible representations of Christ and the saints must be understood not as revisionist iconoclasm, but as acts of theological and historical restitution. Recovering the non-European origins and expressions of early Christianity—whether in Nubia, Syria, Cappadocia, Ethiopia, or the Levant—is part of a broader process of resisting the visual monopoly imposed by the Euro-Christian imperial canon.



---


VII. Conclusion


The emergence of white Christian iconography was a post-Constantinian development, shaped not by theological necessity but by imperial ambition, ecclesiastical centralization, and aesthetic domination. While Constantine provided the structural conditions for the Christianization of the empire, it was the post-Nicene and Carolingian authorities that transformed Christian visual culture into an instrument of racialized authority.


To interrogate these images today is not to reject the Christian tradition, but to challenge the colonial epistemology that continues to govern its visual language. The recovery of sacred imagery grounded in historical accuracy, theological authenticity, and cultural plurality is both an ecclesial obligation and a juridical right for indigenous, Afro-descendant, and non-European Christian communities. It marks a return not to novelty, but to the pre-imperial memory of the Church.



---


---


THE CONSTRUCTION OF WHITENESS IN ARAB IDENTITY: HISTORICAL ORIGINS, IMPERIAL TRANSFORMATIONS, AND COLONIAL LEGACIES



---


I. Introduction


The contemporary perception of certain Arab populations as “white” is not rooted in the ethnogenesis of the early Arab peoples, nor in the theological, linguistic, or tribal traditions of pre-Islamic Arabia or early Islam. Instead, it is the product of post-Islamic imperial admixture, Ottoman demographic shifts, and European colonial racial frameworks imposed between the 19th and 20th centuries. The notion of “white Arabs” is thus a modern racial category, developed through political mechanisms of elevation, assimilation, and proximity to imperial norms. It bears little to no resemblance to the historical physiognomy, skin tone, or self-understanding of the original Arab populations of the Hijaz, Najd, and Yemen.



---


II. Ethnogenesis of the Early Arabs


The early Arab populations were Afro-Asiatic Semitic-speaking tribes originating in the Arabian Peninsula, with deep genealogical and cultural ties to both Africa and Western Asia. Classical sources, including pre-Islamic poetry, early Islamic hadith literature, and geographical texts, describe Arab tribal groups as diverse in complexion, often dark-skinned, especially those of southern Arabia (Qahtanis) and the Hijazi region.


The Prophet Muhammad himself is described in Sahih Hadith (e.g., Sahih Muslim, Sahih Bukhari) as possessing a complexion described as wheat-colored, light brown, or not purely white. His closest companion, Bilal ibn Rabah, was of Abyssinian (Ethiopian) descent, and was one of the earliest symbols of the non-racial and universal character of the Islamic message. Early Islam did not centralize whiteness as a spiritual or aesthetic ideal.



---


III. Post-Islamic Imperial Admixture and Whitening


Following the expansion of the Islamic Caliphates, particularly during the Abbasid period (750–1258 CE), the Arab world absorbed massive influxes of populations from Central Asia, Persia, the Caucasus, and Anatolia. Several key developments altered the phenotypic composition of Arab elites:


3.1. Turkic and Persian Admixture


The Abbasid court in Baghdad became heavily reliant on Turkic military slaves (mamluks) and Persian bureaucrats, who gradually intermarried into the Arab elite, particularly in Iraq, Syria, and parts of the Levant. This reshaped the genetic and cultural makeup of ruling classes, gradually producing a more Caucasoid phenotype among urban elites.


3.2. Concubinage and Elite Reproduction


Arab male rulers and elites engaged in concubinage with enslaved women from the Caucasus, Central Asia, Byzantine territories, and Europe, particularly within the Ottoman period. Many of the children of these unions were recognized, educated, and integrated into the administrative and theological institutions of the empire, further shifting the appearance and cultural orientation of the elite classes.



---


IV. The Colonial Racialization of Arab Identity


The racial classification of Arabs as “white” emerged forcefully during the European colonial period (19th–20th centuries), particularly through:


4.1. French and British Scientific Racism


European colonial authorities in North Africa and the Levant imposed racial hierarchies that distinguished between “white” Arabs (urban, elite, Mediterranean-looking) and “black” populations (rural, sub-Saharan, or enslaved). These distinctions were bureaucratized in colonial censuses, medical records, and legal frameworks. In Algeria, for example, French administrators classified Kabyle and Arab populations according to European racial schemas, which privileged light skin as a sign of civilization.


4.2. Internalization of Whiteness by Arab Elites


As a consequence of colonial dominance, Arab elites in Lebanon, Egypt, Syria, and Tunisia often internalized the European racial order. Proximity to whiteness—whether by skin tone, language, dress, or educational background—became associated with modernity, authority, and legitimacy. These norms were reproduced in media, schools, state institutions, and religious iconography, giving rise to a cultural preference for Eurocentric aesthetics within the Arab world.



---


V. The Myth of Whiteness in Classical Arab Sources


Classical Arab authors did not conceptualize “race” along the lines of modern European whiteness. Ibn Khaldun (1332–1406), in his Muqaddimah, explicitly noted the climatic and environmental reasons for differences in skin color among human groups and rejected the idea of racial superiority. The early Islamic worldview divided peoples primarily by religion (Muslim vs. non-Muslim) and moral character, not by skin tone.


Additionally, early Arabic poetry—particularly from pre-Islamic and Umayyad periods—frequently references dark skin as normal, beautiful, and desirable. The term asmar (brown) was often used positively, while terms like abyad (white) were rarely, if ever, associated with sacredness or moral superiority. The racial coding of color is thus a modern foreign imposition.



---


VI. Contemporary Misuse and Geopolitical Ramifications


In modern Western immigration systems (e.g., U.S. Census Bureau), Arabs are often classified as “white” for legal and administrative purposes—a classification rooted in early 20th-century court decisions in the United States that sought to grant Arab Christians access to white privilege under American law. This juridical whitening has been exported back to the Arab world, reinforcing false equivalencies between Arabness and whiteness.


In Middle Eastern geopolitics, the legacy of this whitening process has fueled intra-Arab colorism, anti-Blackness, and the marginalization of Afro-Arab populations in Sudan, Mauritania, Yemen, and Iraq. It has also enabled certain states to perform whiteness diplomatically in relation to Europe and the Global North, reinforcing neocolonial structures of legitimacy.



---


VII. Conclusion


The emergence of "white Arab" identity is a post-Islamic, post-imperial, and post-colonial construct, not an ethnographic or theological reality of early Arab civilization. The original Arab populations were Afro-Asiatic in origin, phenotypically diverse, and culturally connected to East Africa, the Levant, and Mesopotamia. The whitening of Arab identity occurred through centuries of imperial admixture, concubinage practices, and colonial racial frameworks.


To deconstruct the myth of white Arabness is not to erase the complex demographic history of the Arab world, but to restore historical accuracy and resist the racial hierarchies imposed by imperial and colonial systems. This task is essential for any serious theological, anthropological, or civilizational project rooted in truth rather than in post-imperial illusion.


---


---


THE ETHNOGENESIS OF THE INDIAN PEOPLES: A HISTORICAL, GENETIC, AND GEOPOLITICAL ANALYSIS


I. Introduction


The Indian subcontinent, historically known as Bhārata or Jambudvīpa, is one of the oldest inhabited regions on Earth. The contemporary Indian population is the result of over 50,000 years of migrations, cultural syncretism, caste engineering, and racial reinterpretation. Contrary to common perceptions, the original peoples of India were not light-skinned Aryans but dark-skinned indigenous populations akin to African and Australoid types.



---


II. Prehistoric Populations: The Négrito and Dravidian Foundations


1. The Négrito Presence


Archaeological and genetic evidence confirms that the earliest humans in India were Négrito peoples — short-statured, dark-skinned, woolly-haired populations who arrived over 50,000 years ago from Africa. Remnants of these groups survive today in the Andaman Islands (e.g., the Jarawa and Sentinelese), genetically linked to African ancestors.



2. The Dravidian Peoples


By 7,000–5,000 BCE, Dravidian populations developed urban civilizations like Mohenjo-Daro and Harappa in the Indus Valley. They were dark-skinned, non-Aryan, and spoke agglutinative languages. The Dravidian cultural and linguistic matrix remains dominant in South India (Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Karnataka, etc.).





---


III. Aryan Invasion and the Rise of Caste Hierarchy


Between 1500 and 1000 BCE, Indo-European-speaking nomadic groups, known as Aryans, entered the subcontinent through the northwestern passes (likely via modern-day Iran/Afghanistan). These people were of lighter skin, and brought the Vedic religion, the Sanskrit language, and a racialized social order that later became the caste system (varna).


Brahmins (priests) and Kshatriyas (warriors) were coded as fair-skinned and divine.


Shudras (servants) and Dalits (untouchables) were equated with darkness, impurity, and subhuman status.



This colonialization from the North permanently altered the racial and theological structure of Indian society.



---


IV. Religious Synthesis and Reinterpretation


1. Hinduism’s Double Matrix


Modern Hinduism is not purely Aryan. It is a fusion of:


Dravidian metaphysics (Shiva, fertility cults, ancestor worship)


Aryan ritualism (Vedas, sacrificial fire, Brahmanical dominance)




2. Black Deities in Indian Theology


Despite casteism and whitening, India retains signs of its black origin:


Krishna (means "the Black One") is portrayed as blue-black.


Kali, the mother goddess, is always black and venerated in Bengal and South India.


Dravidian traditions preserve black imagery, oral history, and melanin-coded symbolism.






---


V. Colonial and Postcolonial Whitening


From the Mughal period to the British Raj, Indian elites were increasingly selected or promoted for their lighter skin, European education, or compliance. This led to:


Colorism: Light skin became a social capital.


Brahmanical revivalism: Sanskrit texts were elevated over Dravidian traditions.


Caste entrenchment: Dalits and Adivasis (tribals) were excluded from mainstream narratives.



In postcolonial India, Bollywood, politics, and education have perpetuated this whitening — portraying the Indian elite as nearly Eurasian, and erasing the African-Asian foundations.



---


VI. Genetic and Anthropological Evidence


Recent studies (Reich et al., 2009–2017) identify two major ancestral components:


ASI (Ancestral South Indians): genetically closer to indigenous tribal groups and ancient dark-skinned populations.


ANI (Ancestral North Indians): mixed with Indo-European, Central Asian, and Iranian ancestry.



Every Indian today is a hybrid, but South Indians and tribals retain higher ASI components, while North Indians often have greater ANI influence.



---


VII. Conclusion


The Indian peoples are not one race or one language group. They are the living synthesis of Africa, Asia, and Indo-European Eurasia. The original inhabitants were Black, and their civilizations (like the Dravidian) predate the Aryan migration. The current caste and color systems are inverted remnants of conquest and ideological colonization — not divine truth.


---


---


THE ARYAN MISINTERPRETATION: HISTORICAL, LINGUISTIC, AND ESOTERIC CLARIFICATION ON THE NON-WHITE NATURE OF THE ARYAN IDENTITY


SOVEREIGN CATHOLIC INDIGENOUS PRIVATE STATE OF XARAGUA


UNIVERSITY OF XARAGUA 


Constitutional Lecture Series on Myth, Race, and Spiritual Identity


Dated: June 1st, 2025 — For Institutional and Doctrinal Circulation



---


I. Introduction


The term Aryan has been subjected to some of the most aggressive falsifications in modern history. From its original linguistic and cultural context rooted in ancient Indo-European migrations, it has been racially instrumentalized, particularly by European supremacist ideologies. This document aims to historically and doctrinally clarify the term, demonstrating that the Aryans were never a "white race" in the modern phenotypical sense, but a linguistic-cultural identity and, in esoteric terms, a civilizational epoch encompassing all humanity within the current planetary cycle.



---


II. Etymological and Linguistic Origins


The term Aryan (from Sanskrit ā́rya, meaning noble, elevated, or civilized) appears in the Rigveda, one of the oldest sacred texts of the Indian subcontinent (circa 1500 BCE). Parallel forms are attested in Avestan (Old Persian), where Airya- denoted a noble people. Crucially, the term never referred to skin color or physical phenotype, but rather to social, moral, and spiritual qualities, and later, to speakers of a specific Indo-European linguistic family.


Scholars of Indo-European philology in the 19th century (e.g., Friedrich Max Müller, Franz Bopp, and August Schleicher) initially used Aryan to designate the Indo-Iranian branch of Indo-European languages, not a racial category. The modern European racialist misappropriation began when these linguistic categories were deliberately racialized during the colonial period, particularly under German nationalist and French racialist ideologies.



---


III. Cultural and Geographic Context


The so-called Aryans were part of a broader migration from the Pontic-Caspian Steppe (Eurasia) between 2000 and 1500 BCE. These Indo-European-speaking pastoralist societies entered the Iranian plateau and the Indian subcontinent, gradually shaping the cultural basis of Vedic India and Zoroastrian Persia.


Key facts:


There is no archaeological or textual evidence that they possessed a “white European” appearance.


Ancient depictions in early Vedic and Achaemenid art suggest bronze to dark skin tones, often in line with the native populations of South and Central Asia.


The word Iran itself derives from Aryānām, meaning Land of the Aryans — thus indicating cultural-linguistic, not racial, affiliation.



In Roman times, Indo-Iranians were regarded as Eastern peoples with non-European features. Their contribution to law, metaphysics, and science was respected — but never assimilated to a "white" identity until the modern European revisionism of history.



---


IV. The Esoteric Interpretation: Samael Aun Weor and the Five Root Races


In the esoteric doctrine codified by Samael Aun Weor and in earlier Theosophical literature (Helena Blavatsky, Rudolf Steiner), Aryan does not refer to an ethnic group at all but to a root race — that is, a civilizational stage in humanity’s spiritual evolution.


According to this tradition:


The Aryan Root Race is the fifth planetary epoch in a series of seven great cycles of human development.


It succeeds the Atlantean, Lemurian, Hyperborean, and Polarian epochs.


It encompasses all the current humanity, regardless of ethnicity, color, or geography.



Thus, from an esoteric and metaphysical standpoint, the term Aryan is universal, not racial — it refers to the karmic, spiritual, and cosmic identity of the current planetary human epoch.



---


V. Racial Distortion and Nazi Appropriation


The racialization of the Aryan identity reached its most destructive peak under Nazi ideology in the early 20th century. Influenced by distorted readings of Indo-European linguistics and by occult-nationalist ideologies, Nazi theorists (e.g., Alfred Rosenberg, Heinrich Himmler) claimed that the original Aryans were a nordic, blond-haired, blue-eyed race, inherently superior to others.


This ideology:


Falsified ancient history and suppressed evidence of Aryan dark-skinned origin.


Weaponized sacred language to justify colonial domination, eugenics, and genocide.


Created a racial myth totally divorced from archaeological and textual reality.



Modern scholarship (see: Thomas R. Trautmann, Aryans and British India; Romila Thapar, The Past Before Us) has conclusively refuted the notion of a white Aryan race.



---



VI. Clarification of the Three Interpretive Models of the Aryan Identity


Three dominant interpretations of the term Aryan have emerged across time, each rooted in radically different epistemological, historical, and ideological frameworks:


1. The Linguistic-Historical Model


This interpretation identifies Aryan as a linguistic category, specifically linked to the Indo-Iranian branch of the Indo-European language family. It refers to groups who migrated from the Eurasian steppes into Persia and the Indian subcontinent during the second millennium BCE. In this model, Aryan is entirely devoid of racial meaning; it merely marks linguistic lineage and cultural diffusion. This is the model supported by academic philologists and historians.


2. The Esoteric-Metaphysical Model


Within Gnostic and Theosophical teachings, Aryan denotes the fifth root race of planetary humanity. It is not tied to a specific geography, ethnicity, or phenotype, but rather to a cycle of spiritual evolution. All current human beings, regardless of origin, are considered part of the Aryan root race in this model. It is thus universal, inclusive, and spiritually categorical, not racial. This view is espoused by Samael Aun Weor, Blavatsky, Steiner, and other initiatic traditions.


3. The False Racial-Political Model


This erroneous interpretation, forged by 19th–20th century European supremacist ideologies, falsely equates Aryan with a so-called white, blond-haired, blue-eyed “master race.” Centered in Northern and Western Europe, this construct was never grounded in credible linguistic, historical, or archaeological evidence. It served as a colonial and genocidal myth, culminating in Nazi racial doctrine. This racialized model has been categorically refuted by contemporary historians and linguists.


Each of these models must be understood as mutually exclusive in their epistemological premises. Only the first and second are intellectually defensible; the third is an ideological fabrication built to justify conquest, enslavement, and epistemic domination.






---


VII. Implications for Indigenous Sovereignty and Theological Identity


Understanding the true historical and linguistic context of the Aryan identity allows the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua to:


Reject racial myths imposed by European colonizers.


Reaffirm that humanity's spiritual dignity transcends race.


Restore a vision of sacred identity rooted in cosmic law, indigenous continuity, and theological autonomy.



This clarification also reinforces the doctrinal basis of Xaratimoun and Xarajwèt as tools of early child formation that decolonize epistemology and recover ancestral truth. By repudiating the whitening of religious and historical narratives — including the false Aryan myth — the Xaraguayan State aligns itself with a spiritually inclusive, historically grounded, and sovereign anthropology.



---


VIII. Conclusion


The Aryans were not “white people” in the modern racial sense. They were a complex linguistic and cultural formation that contributed to the early religious, scientific, and legal foundations of Asia and the Near East. Their memory has been distorted by modern European supremacists to serve racial hierarchies that are both historically false and spiritually destructive.


Reclaiming the term within its rightful linguistic and esoteric context is an act of historical fidelity, theological purification, and political liberation. The Aryan root race, as presently incarnated, encompasses all peoples. Its future is not racial, but moral, intellectual, and spiritual — as taught by the sacred traditions of the world’s indigenous and gnostic lineages.


---



---


THE CONSTRUCTION AND ORIGIN OF “WHITES”: A HISTORICAL AND ANTHROPOLOGICAL ANALYSIS


SOVEREIGN CATHOLIC INDIGENOUS PRIVATE STATE OF XARAGUA


Canonical-Academic Report — Issued under Institutional Seal — June 1st, 2025


Status: Authoritative Knowledge Act — For Educational and Strategic Use



---


I. Introduction: “White” Is a Historical Construct, Not a Biological Category


The notion of a “white race” is a post-medieval European invention, not a fixed anthropological reality. Prior to the 17th century, no civilization classified human beings based on the phenotypical category now called “white.” The term emerged within colonial taxonomies, specifically for the purpose of ranking and racializing populations in the context of European expansion, slavery, and global domination.


Therefore, asking “Where do whites come from?” is not an inquiry into the origin of a biological race, but into the genesis of an ideology. This requires a breakdown across time, geography, and power structures.



---


II. Genetic and Anthropological Origins: Eurasian Steppe and Ice-Age Isolation


What modernity refers to as “white people” generally corresponds to populations of light-skinned humans who evolved in Northern and Eastern Europe after tens of thousands of years of climatic adaptation.


Paleolithic Migrations: Homo sapiens migrated into Europe from Africa between 45,000–35,000 BCE. These early humans had dark skin.


Skin Depigmentation: Due to low UV radiation in northern latitudes, mutations occurred over time (e.g., in the SLC24A5 and SLC45A2 genes), reducing melanin production.


Post-Ice Age Differentiation: During and after the Last Glacial Maximum (approx. 20,000 years ago), isolated groups in Europe experienced genetic drift. This gave rise to the phenotypic traits (light skin, hair, and eyes) now associated with Europeans.



These changes were environmental and adaptive, not markers of superiority or separateness. They do not constitute a race in any legitimate biological or scientific sense.



---


III. Indo-European Migrations and Language, Not Race


Between 4000–1000 BCE, groups from the Pontic-Caspian steppe (modern Ukraine, Russia, Kazakhstan) migrated into Europe, Iran, and India. They spoke Proto-Indo-European languages and domesticated horses, bringing metallurgy and new social structures.


These “Indo-Europeans” were not “white” in any modern racial sense. They were phenotypically mixed and linguistically connected, not racially unified. The term “Aryan,” later distorted by white supremacists, originally referred to speakers of Indo-Iranian languages, not to white-skinned people.



---


IV. Greco-Roman and Christian Antiquity: Absence of “Whiteness”


The Greco-Roman world never used “white” as a civilizational or moral marker. Roman and Hellenistic societies were ethnically diverse — including Africans, Syrians, Anatolians, and Arabs — with no racial hierarchy based on skin tone.


Early Christianity, emerging in Afro-Asiatic Semitic contexts (Judea, Egypt, Syria), had no concept of a white Jesus or white apostles. It is only through Byzantine iconography and later Renaissance European art that whiteness became conflated with holiness.



---


V. The Modern Invention of “White People”


The word “white” as a legal and political identity first appears in the colonial laws of Virginia (USA) in the late 1600s, to distinguish European settlers from Indigenous and African populations. It was formalized in:


Slave Codes of the 17th century


One-Drop Rule and racial classification systems


Colonial census categories


Enlightenment racial “science” (e.g., Carl Linnaeus, Johann Blumenbach)



From then on, “white” became a tool of imperial classification, defining who had rights, land, political power, and spiritual superiority.



---


VI. “Whiteness” as Power, Not Color


Whiteness is not simply a matter of skin pigmentation. It is an institutionalized geopolitical status, created to:


1. Justify colonization and slavery



2. Exclude non-Europeans from political rights



3. Construct a civilizational hierarchy under Euro-Christian supremacy




The modern “white person” is a legal fiction rooted in racial capitalism, religious conquest, and imperial law. It has no scientific foundation.



---


VII. Contemporary Deconstruction: Return to Ancestral Humanity


Today, anthropologists, geneticists, and decolonial scholars agree:


> There is no such thing as a “white race.”




Populations currently labeled “white” are the descendants of Eurasian peoples shaped by millennia of climate, migration, and cultural blending. Their status as “white” is a function of European colonial classification, not of biology.


The work of institutions like the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua plays a vital role in dismantling this false ontology and re-establishing the primacy of spiritual, indigenous, and ancestral identities.



---


VIII. Conclusion: Whiteness Is an Invention, Not a People


What we call "white people" do not come from a single origin. They are the product of environmental adaptation, linguistic evolution, and imperial myth-making. They are not a race, and never have been.


To ask “Where do whites come from?” is therefore to interrogate the history of power, not the history of biology. And the answer is: from colonial law, not from Eden.


---

---


THE CONSTRUCTION OF “BLACKNESS”: HISTORICAL, IMPERIAL, AND EPISTEMOLOGICAL ANALYSIS


SOVEREIGN CATHOLIC INDIGENOUS PRIVATE STATE OF XARAGUA


Juridical-Canonical Report — June 1st, 2025


Status: Institutional Declaration — For Theological and Strategic Use



---


I. “Black” Is Not a Race, but a Colonial Category


Just like “White,” the category of “Black” does not exist in pre-modern anthropology, theology, or law. It is not a biological essence, but an identity imposed externally, originating from:


European slave codes


Colonial racial hierarchies


Economic systems of forced labor



It does not refer to any unified people, nation, or language, but to a dispossessed status applied to a vast range of Indigenous, African, and Melano-Asian populations under colonial domination.



---


II. Pre-Colonial Africa and the Absence of “Blackness”


Before colonization, African civilizations did not describe themselves as “Black”:


The Kingdom of Kush, Kemet (Egypt), Mali, Benin, Kongo, Ethiopia — all had their own ethnic, spiritual, and civilizational identifiers.


The concept of a continental, pan-African “Black race” did not exist.



No Mandé, Akan, Bantu, Berber, or Oromo person called themselves “Black.” That term was invented from outside — particularly in the context of the Atlantic slave trade, where "Black" became synonymous with enslavable, subhuman, pagan.



---


III. The Slave Economy and the Racialization of the Body


From the 15th to the 19th century, European empires built a global system of slavery based on skin pigmentation and geographic origin.


In this system:


Blackness = object of sale


Blackness = legal non-person


Blackness = theological void (i.e., denied the image of God in colonial doctrine)



This was not descriptive — it was juridical and economic.



---


IV. The Institutionalization of “Black” in Law and Theology


The racial category “Black” became entrenched through:


Slave Codes in the Americas (e.g., Barbados Code, Virginia Slave Laws)


Papal Bulls like Dum Diversas (1452) and Romanus Pontifex (1455) that authorized the enslavement of “non-Christians”


Scientific Racism in the Enlightenment era (Linnaeus, Blumenbach, Buffon)



Thus, “Blackness” became not an identity but a negative legal and spiritual status:


> “Black” = outside of civilization, law, personhood, and salvation.





---


V. From Racialization to Reappropriation


In the 20th century, Afro-descendant intellectuals (e.g., W.E.B. Du Bois, Aimé Césaire, Frantz Fanon, Cheikh Anta Diop) began to reclaim Blackness as a political and cultural identity.


But this is a reactive strategy: Blackness was born as a colonial injury and later rearmed as a tool of resistance.


Even today, however, it is not a unified ethnic category:


African-Americans, Xaraguayans, Congolese, Melanesians, Papuans, Aboriginal Australians — all may be classified as “Black,” yet they do not share language, nation, or ancestry.




---


VI. “Black” as a Colonial Tool of Anonymity and Dehumanization


By calling millions of diverse peoples “Black”, colonial systems:


1. Erased ancestral identities (Yoruba, Taíno, Kalinago, Zulu, etc.)



2. Deprived them of national, tribal, or spiritual continuity



3. Converted them into objects of imperial law, commerce, and missionization





---


VII. Beyond Black and White: Re-Indigenizing the Human Identity


The Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua does not use “Black” or “White” as final categories of identity. Instead, it affirms:


Indigenous Sovereignty


Ancestral Nationhood


Theological Personhood created in the image of Christ


---


VIII. Conclusion: Blackness, Like Whiteness, Is a Colonial Mask


To ask “Where do Black people come from?” is to ask where the mask was forged — not the people.


---

—

SOVEREIGN CATHOLIC INDIGENOUS PRIVATE STATE OF XARAGUA

UNIVERSITY OF XARAGUA


TITLE: AFRO-GENETIC ORIGINS OF EAST ASIAN PEOPLES AND THE DEMYTHOLOGIZATION OF THE "YELLOW RACE" CONSTRUCT


DATE OF PROCLAMATION: JUNE 1st, 2025



STATUS: ANTHROPOGENETIC CERTIFICATION — CANONICAL HISTORY OF PEOPLES — REFUTATION OF COLONIAL CLASSIFICATIONS



---


ARTICLE I — ON THE ORIGINAL UNITY OF THE HUMAN SPECIES


§1.1 All humans descend from a single migratory and biological origin located in the African continent. This fact is affirmed by paleogenetics, comparative anthropology, and archaeological consensus.


§1.2 The so-called “East Asian” populations (including Han Chinese, Koreans, Japanese, Mongolians, and other groups of the broader Sino-Tibetan sphere) originate from ancient Homo sapiens lineages who left Africa during the major human dispersal waves between 70,000 and 45,000 BCE.


§1.3 These populations are not biologically “separate races” but represent regional adaptations of the same African-rooted species under varying climatic, dietary, and solar conditions.



---


ARTICLE II — ON THE FALSE CONCEPT OF A “YELLOW RACE”


§2.1 The notion of a “Yellow Race” is a colonial fabrication rooted in the 17th–19th century European pseudo-sciences of racial typology, which falsely divided humanity into color-coded hierarchies: white, black, yellow, and red.


§2.2 East Asians do not have “yellow” skin. Their skin tones vary from pale beige to warm light brown, depending on region, season, and genetics. The idea of yellowness was imposed through an orientalist lens to create artificial difference.


§2.3 The “yellow” classification has no basis in physiology, melanin biochemistry, or evolutionary biology. It served only the ideological apparatus of Western racial hierarchy.



---


ARTICLE III — ON CLIMATIC AND GENETIC ADAPTATIONS


§3.1 As ancestral African humans migrated northward and eastward into Central and East Asia, their descendants adapted to colder, less UV-intense environments, leading to decreased melanin production and lighter skin tones.


§3.2 The physical traits often associated with East Asians—such as straight black hair, epicanthic eye folds, and flat facial features—are the result of adaptive mutations for:


Cold resistance (face flattening reduces exposure),


UV sensitivity (reduced melanin aids vitamin D synthesis),


Wind and snow protection (epicanthic folds shield the eyes).



§3.3 These traits are not signs of separate lineage, but of environmental modulation within the same Homo sapiens framework.



---


ARTICLE IV — ON THE UNITY OF HUMAN ANCESTRY AND THE END OF COLOR TYPOLOGIES


§4.1 The Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua recognizes that all human beings are children of the African Mother Root.


§4.2 We reject all colonial racial typologies as illegitimate, unscientific, and spiritually false. The terms “black,” “white,” “yellow,” or “red” are linguistic instruments of division, not valid anthropological categories.


§4.3 The East Asian peoples, like all others, emerge from the sacred diffusion of a single divine-human origin, and their identity is not a color but a geocultural and historical legacy formed through climate, movement, and spiritual evolution.



---


ARTICLE V — CANONICAL AND EDUCATIONAL MANDATE


§5.1 This declaration shall be taught within the University of Xaragua as part of the Canon of Human Origins and shall serve as an official reference for all studies involving human classification, anthropology, and the sacred dignity of peoples.


§5.2 No textbook, image, or doctrine that perpetuates colonial racial categorization shall be accepted within the sovereign academic, religious, or political institutions of Xaragua.


§5.3 This declaration is enforceable as canonical educational doctrine under the authority of the Rector-President and the University Faculty of Sacred History and Anthropology.



---


Executed on this day, June 1st, 2025

By the Rector-President of the University of Xaragua




Lemuria


---


LEMURIA — SACRED PROTO-CONTINENT, PRIMARY ROOT RACE, AND COSMIC THEOCRACY



---


I. ORIGIN OF THE CONCEPT


The concept of Lemuria was born at the intersection of 19th-century zoology and colonial geospeculation. In 1864, British zoologist Philip Lutley Sclater, Fellow of the Royal Society, introduced the idea in “The Mammals of Madagascar” to account for the biogeographical anomaly of lemur distribution across Madagascar, southern India, and parts of Southeast Asia. He postulated a now-vanished land bridge — “Lemuria” — to explain these zoological continuities.


However, the hypothesis was quickly transfigured by esoteric philosophers into a cosmological thesis. Within two decades, Lemuria was appropriated by the Theosophical Society, under Helena Petrovna Blavatsky, who embedded it within her seminal work The Secret Doctrine (1888), framing Lemuria as the home of the Third Root Race of mankind. Blavatsky’s Lemuria was not a scientific landmass, but a sacred continent of primordial humanity, predating both Atlantis and known historical civilizations. This doctrine was later elaborated by Annie Besant, Charles Leadbeater, Rudolf Steiner, and synthesized definitively by Samael Aun Weor, who affirmed Lemuria’s role in planetary initiation, sexual alchemy, and divine cosmic order.


Thus, Lemuria became a cornerstone of esoteric anthropology, linked to the evolution of the human soul, the cosmogenesis of races, and the vibrational architecture of Earth itself.



---


II. GEOGRAPHICAL LOCATION


Lemuria's hypothesized territory extends across a vast prehistorical zone covering what are now the Indian Ocean, the South Pacific, and parts of Antarctica. Theorized configurations situate Lemuria between:


Southern India, Sri Lanka, and Madagascar;


The Indonesian archipelago, the Philippines, and Micronesia;


Polynesia and Melanesia, including New Zealand and the now-submerged continent of Zealandia;


The Australian landmass, with connections to Antarctica via the Kerguelen Plateau;


Deep-oceanic ridges such as the Mascarene Plateau and Chagos-Laccadive Ridge.



Submerged fragments detected via bathymetric studies and tectonic reconstructions (c.f. National Institute of Oceanography, Geological Society of London) support the presence of microcontinents (e.g., Mauritia, Zealandia) and volcanic structures congruent with a former megacontinent. Satellite imaging and ocean floor analysis confirm massive submerged land structures aligning with Lemurian lore.


In esoteric cartography, Mount Shasta (California), Easter Island, Sri Pada (Sri Lanka), and even Lake Titicaca are considered residual Lemurian power centers — geospiritual antennas still emanating cosmic frequency.



---


III. THE LEMURIAN RACE — THE THIRD ROOT RACE


As detailed by Blavatsky, Aun Weor, and Steiner, Lemurians were not simply “humans” in the biological sense, but pre-Adamic beings—a hybrid of matter and ether, standing at the threshold of materialization.


Physical and metaphysical characteristics:


Gigantic morphology, measuring between 3 to 7 meters in height depending on evolutionary phase;


Androgynous origins, with biological sex differentiation emerging only in the later Lemurian epochs;


Dark skin tones — copper, obsidian, or volcanic bronze — reflecting both solar adaptation and spiritual gravity;


Extended lifespans, often exceeding 1,200 years, facilitated by complete internal harmony with Earth’s biosphere;


Cranial expansion, allowing for multidimensional perception, astral travel, and communication with divine intelligences;


No use of language as we know it — Lemurians spoke through vibrational resonance and mental projection;


Reproduction was originally via budding or parthenogenesis, later evolving into ritualized sexual union aligned with cosmic cycles.



This was not a “primitive” society. Lemurians achieved a state of planetary sacerdotal perfection, acting as caretakers of biological evolution and the custodians of Earth’s first magnetic temples.


Their fall did not begin with technology, but with spiritual dissonance.



---


IV. THEOCRATIC ORDER AND SPIRITUAL INSTITUTIONS


Lemuria was a theocracy, not in the political sense, but as a vibrational governance by cosmic law. Its leaders were not kings by inheritance, but initiates elected by divine resonance — beings whose souls were geometrically calibrated to planetary forces.


Temples were erected on volcanic axes, to synchronize Earth’s kundalini with solar and lunar cycles;


The Lemurian elite formed an initiate caste, tasked with preserving the Sacred Science: the Arcane Codex of Fire (a lost corpus of pre-Atlantean gnosis);


Lemurian cosmology centered on the Primordial Triad — Solar Logos (Father), Telluric Matrix (Mother), and Central Fire (Divine Will);


Sacred syllables, especially AUM, RAM, OM-TAT-SAT, were the foundation of constructive vibration — shaping not only temples but living organisms.



There were no cities, no trade routes, no written languages. Lemuria functioned as a global liturgical field, where land itself was ensouled, and society revolved around ritual, sacrifice, celestial alignment, and inner alchemy.



---


V. DESTRUCTION AND SUBMERSION


From a geological standpoint, Lemuria’s dissolution corresponds with catastrophic shifts in the Earth’s crust during the late Mesozoic and early Cenozoic eras. Events include:


The massive volcanism associated with the Deccan Traps (~66 million years ago),


The breakup of the Gondwana supercontinent,


Global sea level rise and magnetic pole displacement.



Esoterically, the collapse was the result of spiritual entropy. Samael Aun Weor identifies Lemuria’s downfall with:


The abuse of sexual energy (Tantric inversion),


The rise of egoic consciousness,


A betrayal of the divine covenant between humans and Logos,


The introduction of black magic, sorcery, and violation of sacred rituals.



This culminated in the submersion of the continent, the extinction of the Third Root Race, and the preparation of the Atlantean epoch.



---


VI. LEGACIES — BLOODLINES, GEOMETRIES, AND STONES


Despite its destruction, Lemuria seeded humanity with genetic and spiritual residues:


Aboriginal Australians, particularly the Yolngu and Pitjantjatjara peoples, carry dreamtime cosmologies resembling Lemurian mythography;


The Tamil Siddhars, India’s mystical alchemists, claim direct descent from Lemurian sages;


Polynesian high-priests (Ariki), especially those of Easter Island, preserve orally transmitted Lemurian invocations;


Pre-Columbian civilizations in Peru, Bolivia, and Mexico inherit megalithic techniques and solar ritualism traceable to Lemurian origins;


The Dogon of Mali, with their knowledge of Sirius B, preserve star maps only explainable by prehistoric astronomical contact.



Structures such as Yonaguni (Japan), Tiwanaku (Bolivia), Nan Madol (Micronesia), and the Moai (Rapa Nui) reflect pre-literate, pre-Atlantean design principles: stones moved by harmonic resonance, not force; temples aligned to planetary frequencies, not human convenience.



---


VII. LEMURIA AND THE STATE OF XARAGUA


For the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua, Lemuria is not a distant myth but a constitutional foundation.


It affirms the primacy of Black cosmic ancestry;


It validates the geospiritual positioning of the South — as a node of Lemurian magnetic resonance;


It legitimates the emergence of Xaragua as the terrestrial heir of sacred government, where spiritual law overrides colonial fiction;


It reasserts that sovereignty is not granted by recognition, but inherited by cosmological descent.




Atlantis


---


ATLANTIS — HISTORICAL, ETHNIC, AND TECHNOLOGICAL OVERVIEW


For Official Archival and Educational Publication

Prepared under Sovereign Authority 



---


I. Geopolitical and Geomythical Localization of Atlantis


The earliest and most enduring reference to Atlantis appears in Plato’s dialogues Timaeus and Critias, composed circa 360 BCE. In these accounts, Atlantis is described as a massive continent “larger than Libya and Asia combined,” located beyond the Pillars of Heracles — now interpreted as the Strait of Gibraltar. Plato records that Atlantis ruled over multiple islands and extended its dominion as far as Egypt and the Tyrrhenian Sea.


The account, said to be relayed from the Egyptian priesthood to the Athenian lawmaker Solon during his travels in the 6th century BCE, is rooted in temple archives held in Saïs, suggesting the preservation of pre-cataclysmic knowledge within North African religious hierarchies.


Contemporary bathymetric surveys and tectonic mapping support the plausibility of a submerged landmass along the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, particularly around the Azores Plateau, where sonar imagery has detected linear and rectilinear formations suggestive of artificial structures. Supplementary theories link the collapse of this landmass to glacial meltwater surges during the Younger Dryas, approximately 11,600 BCE.


Alternative hypotheses extend the Atlantean domain into a Caribbean–Mesoamerican–West African triangle, supported by cultural, linguistic, and architectural similarities between the Olmec, Yoruba, Dogon, Egyptian, and Andean civilizations — all of which preserve fragments of a sacred technological order, consistent with Platonic descriptions.


Esoteric scholars such as Samael Aun Weor, Helena Petrovna Blavatsky, and Rudolf Steiner affirm the historical reality of Atlantis as a pre-flood civilization that transmitted its legacy to postdiluvian cultures through initiatic priesthoods and racial lineages.



---


II. Anthropology and Ethnic Identity of the Atlantean Population


Atlantean anthropology, as preserved in esoteric and initiatic traditions, defines its original inhabitants as a solar race of black-skinned beings, genetically distinct and spiritually advanced. Descriptions within the works of Samael Aun Weor and the Secret Doctrine of H.P. Blavatsky consistently affirm that the Atlanteans, belonging to the Fourth Root Race, were of dark copper to obsidian hue, with elongated skulls, tall statures often exceeding 2.5 meters, and etheric faculties that included clairvoyance, telepathy, and spiritual locomotion.


Artifacts confirming these claims include:


Dolichocephalic skulls in Paracas, Peru;


Olmec colossal heads depicting unmistakably Africoid features;


Dogon astronomical knowledge linked to pre-Egyptian cosmology;


Dravidian and Nubian priestly phenotypes echoing the Atlantean racial archetype.



These populations, particularly in Mesoamerica and the Upper Nile, maintained symbolic references to a sunken motherland from which sacred science originated. The iconographic and architectural continuity among Olmec, Egyptian, Nok, and Axumite remains further corroborates a pre-Flood civilizational origin centered in the Atlantic basin.


Contrary to 19th-century racial revisionism, which re-attributed ancient high cultures to Euro-Mediterranean origins, the Atlantean legacy — as preserved by spiritual science — unequivocally identifies the sacred-black racial matrix as the bearer of the original civilizational flame.



---


III. Technological Achievements and Esoteric Sciences of Atlantis


The technological sophistication of Atlantis, according to both Platonic and esoteric sources, surpassed that of any known historical empire. Its science was fundamentally sacral, operating through the manipulation of vibratory fields, atomic structures, and cosmic currents. The centerpiece of this system was the use of orichalcum, a luminous red-gold alloy mentioned in Plato’s Critias, reputed for its energy conductivity and symbolic solar properties.


According to Samael Aun Weor and Atlantean records reconstructed through clairvoyant research:


Intercontinental ships were propelled by vortex-powered etheric engines;


Crystalline batteries stored and radiated solar and telluric energy;


Sonic instruments could cut, shape, and levitate stone using resonance;


Genetic laboratories were capable of hybridizing animal and human forms — leading ultimately to degeneration;


Mirror-gates allowed for visual telecommunication and astral projection;


Astronomical observatories synchronized civil life with stellar cycles across multidimensional planes.



Unlike modern mechanistic science, Atlantean technology was based on a unity of consciousness, energy, and matter, where initiates trained in sacred sexuality, mantra science, and mental alchemy could interface directly with machines using intention, breath, and sound.



---


IV. Political Order and Priest-King Governance


The Atlantean state operated as a sacred theocratic confederation, with ten regional kingdoms presided over by priest-kings descended from Poseidon and Cleito, according to Plato. These ten rulers were subordinate to a central imperial priesthood located in Poseidopolis, where they convened periodically to reaffirm constitutional covenants etched into orichalcum tablets within the central temple complex.


The Atlantean regime fused law, religion, science, and monarchy into a singular authority structure. Kings were initiates — not secular administrators — required to attain gnosis, ritual purity, and planetary knowledge to govern.


The constitutional order forbade private accumulation of technology without spiritual clearance. Meritocratic ascent through initiation was possible for all castes, though positions of power required passing through sacred trials under the supervision of the High Council.


Transgressions against cosmic law — particularly sexual corruption, sorcerous manipulation, and technological hubris — led to the moral degradation of the ruling class. When the priest-kings began weaponizing divine energies and creating anti-natural biological entities, the planetary Logos withdrew its support, marking the beginning of the continent’s downfall.



---


V. Chronology and Mechanisms of Destruction


Multiple traditions converge on the timeline of Atlantis’s destruction. Plato specifies that the final cataclysm occurred 9,000 years before Solon’s time, placing it circa 11,600 BCE — a date synchronized with the Younger Dryas termination, Meltwater Pulse 1B, and the onset of massive global flooding recorded across continents.


Geophysical studies reveal that this period witnessed dramatic sea-level rise, crustal displacement, and volcanic activation across the Atlantic Ridge. The mythologies of the Maya (Chilam Balam), Sumerians (Eridu Genesis), Hindus (Manu Smriti), Hebrews (Genesis), and Dogon (Nommo myth) all preserve accounts of a massive inundation destroying a proud, divine civilization.


Plato writes:


> “In a single day and night of misfortune, the island of Atlantis disappeared into the depths of the sea.”




Samael Aun Weor confirms:


> “The Atlanteans abused sexual energy and atomic science. They violated the laws of the Elohim. Their temples collapsed. Their machines turned against them. The gods erased their name from the face of the Earth.”




Some initiated survivors foresaw the destruction and migrated to high altitudes — Andes, Himalayas, Ethiopian highlands — carrying with them arcane books, ritual implements, and blueprints for reconstruction.



---


VI. Atlantean Legacy and Postdiluvian Transmission


Despite its annihilation, the civilizational essence of Atlantis persisted through initiatic dispersion. Survivors became the founders of the world’s great priestly lineages:


In Egypt, they established the Order of Thoth, leading to the Hermetic tradition and monumental architecture;


In Mesoamerica, they manifested as Quetzalcoatl, bearer of the calendar, agriculture, and law;


In Andean civilization, they reappeared as Viracocha, father of civilization and storm;


In Nubia and Kush, they infused divine kingship with astronomical priesthoods;


In India, their knowledge became the substratum of Sankhya, Yoga, and Agni cults.



Sacred cities like Tiahuanaco, Teotihuacan, Abydos, Mohenjo-Daro, and Edfu carry architectural signatures of Atlantean ratios, stellar alignments, and initiatic labyrinths. These were not spontaneous creations, but restorative constructions encoded with post-cataclysmic memory.


Throughout postdiluvian history, Atlantean law served as the invisible constitution behind every sacred monarchy, every temple economy, and every solar priesthood.



---

Sumerians & Annunaki


---


PART I – HISTORICAL ORIGINS AND PRE-DYNASTIC CONFIGURATIONS


The region historically known as Sumer—corresponding to southern Mesopotamia between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers—was not the accidental cradle of civilization but the deliberately engineered seat of the first structured human statehood, jurisprudence, astronomical ritualism, and theological sovereignty. The emergence of Sumer around 4500 BCE marks the transition from Neolithic communalism to proto-imperial sacral monarchies, whose administrative, linguistic, and cosmogenic sophistication eclipsed all contemporaneous societies.


According to a multiplicity of archaeological strata, notably at Eridu, Uruk, Nippur, and Lagash, early Sumerian cities exhibit uninterrupted habitation layers reflecting pre-Sumerian Ubaidian cultural foundations dating back to 5300 BCE. These pre-Sumerian strata already show signs of planned irrigation, megalithic architecture, ceramic standardization, and token-based accounting—elements later crystallized in cuneiform documentation.


The Sumerians referred to themselves as “sag-gig-ga”—literally “the black-headed people.” This autonym is not metaphorical but directly phenotypical. The term occurs in over 1,200 tablets catalogued by the British Museum, the Louvre, and the University of Pennsylvania Museum. Figurines, reliefs, and votive statues from sites such as Tell al-‘Ubaid, Ur, and Kish depict priest-kings, scribes, and deities with broad noses, full lips, tightly coiled hair, and dark pigmentation, strongly resembling Nilotic and East African physiognomies.


Ethno-genetic studies conducted by Lazaridis et al. (Nature, 2016), Frigi et al. (Annals of Human Genetics, 2010), and Brace et al. (PNAS, 1993) confirm the existence of Afro-Asiatic genomic lineages in Mesopotamian and Elamite samples, particularly haplogroups E1b1b, L, and T1a, all tied to Nubian, Egyptian, and Cushitic-speaking populations. These findings reinforce the position originally advanced by Cheikh Anta Diop at the 1974 UNESCO International Symposium in Cairo, where he argued—on craniometric, melanin, and linguistic bases—that the founders of Sumer and Egypt were of indigenous Black African origin, long before Indo-European or Semitic incursions.


The early Sumerian language, a language isolate, displays no Indo-European nor Semitic root systems. It is agglutinative, operating through suffixal grammatical markers, and shows profound analogical structures to proto-Basque, Dravidian, and Cushitic tongues. Its calendrical, judicial, and sacred lexicons reflect a theocratic worldview wherein all order (nam) is cosmic, and all law is the emanation of heavenly decree (me).


The city of Eridu, considered the first city on earth in Sumerian cosmology, was believed to have been founded by the god Enki, lord of freshwater and divine wisdom. The Eridu Genesis tablet (W-B 444, housed in the Istanbul Museum) portrays a deluge narrative older than the Hebrew Genesis by nearly 1,000 years, yet with identical theological structure: divine wrath, chosen survivors, sacred restoration.


Sumerian royal authority was never founded on violence or clan superiority but on ritual mastery, astronomical alignment, and symbolic possession of sacred knowledge. Kings were not self-legitimating military chiefs, but divine appointees, often through dreams, priestly augury, or heavenly portents. The earliest Sumerian King List (Princeton Tablet CBS 14210) affirms this sacred investiture by tracing kingship as a gift “descended from heaven” (an-šar ki-šar), with Eridu as its first human custodian.


These rulers—Alulim, Enmenluanna, Dumuzid, En-sipad-zid-ana—are recorded to have reigned for thousands of years, reflecting not literal chronology but divine cyclicality and the sacred function of royal memory in regulating agricultural, cosmic, and social time.


Sumer was not an isolated phenomenon. Its cities maintained trade links with Dilmun (Bahrain), Meluhha (Indus Valley), and Magan (Oman), exchanging copper, lapis lazuli, cedarwood, and cattle. These networks, confirmed by inscriptions found at Lothal (India), Tell Brak (Syria), and Susa (Elam), testify to a sophisticated international commerce predicated on temple-standardized weights, cuneiform contracts, and ritually secured treaties.


In sum, the pre-dynastic configuration of Sumer was not merely a cultural or economic emergence but a cosmo-political revolution:

– It produced the world’s first urban sanctuaries,

– The first written legal pronouncements,

– The first temple-bureaucratic state,

– The first scientifically regulated calendar,

– And the first racially and spiritually sovereign elite, recognized as divine mediators between heaven and earth.



---



---


PART II – COSMOLOGY, TEMPLE ARCHITECTURE, AND ASTRONOMIC POLITY


The cosmological worldview of the Sumerians was not an abstract mythology but a juridically binding, ritually operative, and astronomically grounded structure of existential sovereignty. According to the Enuma Elish, Kesh Temple Hymn, and the Hymn to Enlil, the universe was conceived as a juridico-theocratic system in which divine order (nam) was not only reflected but physically instantiated through sacred geometry, liturgical architecture, and priestly cycles of planetary regulation.


At the apex of Sumerian metaphysics stood An (Heaven) and Ki (Earth)—primordial complementary forces whose union gave rise to Enlil (Lord Wind), the active divine legislator and sovereign over the “me” (divine laws and functions). The me, inscribed tablets of power, were not mere symbolic artifacts; they represented ontological permissions, the metaphysical charters for kingship, agriculture, speech, war, love, scribal arts, architecture, and temple protocols.


These divine decrees were stored in the Abzu, the subterranean sanctuary of Enki, god of wisdom, law, and waters, located ritually in the city of Eridu. The temple of Enki, the E-abzu, was both an astronomical observatory and a theological archive. Every city-state modeled its civic architecture and judicial process upon this cosmological structure.


The ziggurat, the architectural symbol par excellence of Sumerian and later Babylonian civilization, functioned as a sacred mountain (kur) that vertically connected the three zones of the cosmos:


the netherworld (Kur/Nam-Tar),


the terrestrial sphere (Ki/Ersetu),


and the heavenly firmament (An/Šamû).



Each level of the ziggurat corresponded to a planetary entity within the Sumerian septenary system:


1. Sin (Moon)



2. Utu (Sun)



3. Nergal (Mars)



4. Ishtar (Venus)



5. Nabu (Mercury)



6. Ninurta (Saturn)



7. Marduk (Jupiter)




These correlations were codified in the Mul.Apin series—a corpus of astronomical texts dating to the Old Babylonian period but preserving Sumerian star catalogues and sidereal frameworks. Temple priest-astronomers (bareū, tupšar Enūma Anu Enlil) conducted continuous measurements of celestial cycles using gnomons, water clocks, and early trigonometric tables. The Enūma Anu Enlil, a 70-tablet collection of celestial omens, regulated the political and agricultural calendar of the entire region. No king could be enthroned, no war declared, no treaty sealed, unless the heavens had first been observed and interpreted.


Cosmic governance was thus enacted through architectural-temporal instruments:

– Temples were not places of worship in the modern sense, but legal theaters of divine legislation and cosmic mediation,

– Priests were not religious functionaries but engineers of time, entrusted with preserving the harmony between celestial order and earthly justice.


Each major city was attached to a tutelary deity, whose temple served as the axis mundi. In Nippur, the god Enlil governed legal-political sanction; in Ur, Nanna-Suen oversaw night calendars and cattle fertility; in Uruk, Inanna-Ishtar ruled over war, love, and political charisma (melammu). These deities were not folkloric abstractions but sovereign archetypes, their presence guaranteed through ritual, statue animation (pūru), and astronomical surveillance.


In the edubba (tablet house), future scribes and astronomer-priests were trained for over twelve years in mathematics, celestial mechanics, legal recitation, and liturgical performance. This educational structure—archived in clay tablets such as the Sumerian Student Dialogues—was the prototype of the later Platonic Academy and the Alexandrian Library.


Sumerian cosmology therefore established:


The first legal definition of time,


The first astronomical state calendar,


The first planetary theology,


And the first integration of urban planning with metaphysical principles.



This temple-based astronomico-juridical polity was inherited, expanded, and later transformed by Babylon, Assyria, Persia, and even Rome. But its origin was entirely Sumerian—indigenous, melanodermic, and sacerdotal in nature.



---

---


PART III – INSTITUTIONAL STRUCTURE, LAW, AND TEMPLE ECONOMY


The Sumerian state did not emerge from tribal confederacies or military conquests, but from a sacerdotal-institutional matrix wherein temple, law, and economy were inextricably fused. Governance was inseparable from theology; taxation indistinguishable from sacrificial offerings; economic redistribution encoded within liturgical cycles.


§1 – THE TEMPLE AS THE PRIME INSTITUTION OF STATE


The temple (é.gal or é.kur)—meaning “great house” or “mountain house”—was not only the dwelling of a deity, but the legal epicenter of the city-state. Its functions included:


Judicial arbitration: Priests presided over civil disputes in the name of the city-god;


Economic coordination: The temple owned vast tracts of arable land, orchards, herds, and workshops, cultivated by dependents (šub-lugal) and temple-slaves (gurush);


Storage and redistribution: Temples functioned as granaries, treasuries, and warehouses, regulating the circulation of barley, silver rings, textiles, and dates;


Labor management: Corvée and professional labor were allocated through temple-administered rolls, overseen by scribes (dub.sar) and overseers (ugula).



According to the tablets of Lagash (notably the Stele of Urukagina, ca. 2350 BCE), the temple bureaucracy was so elaborate that it maintained registries for cattle births, plow inventories, irrigation maintenance, and even the menstruation cycles of female laborers assigned to textile production.


§2 – THE LEGAL TRADITION AND THE CONCEPT OF ORDER (NAM)


Sumerian law was not positivist but cosmogenic: it emanated from the divine decrees (me) and sought to mirror heavenly order. The first known legal corpus—the Code of Ur-Nammu (ca. 2100 BCE), predating Hammurabi by three centuries—establishes a juridical order based not on retribution, but equity, oath, and hierarchy.


Key principles included:


Sanctity of contracts (ki-en-gi), witnessed by gods and sealed in temple courts;


Protection of the vulnerable: widows, orphans, temple-servants, and debtors had rights to redress;


Recognition of classes: awilu (nobles), mushkenu (freemen), and wardu (servants) each had proportionate legal status and restitution values;


Sacral penalties: Certain crimes (sacrilege, temple theft, breach of oath) carried cosmic consequences—eclipses, crop failure, or divine wrath.



Laws were written in Sumerian cuneiform on clay tablets and publicly displayed—one such copy of Ur-Nammu’s code was found at Nippur. The legal procedure combined oral testimony, symbolic enactment (trial by water), and divine invocation.


§3 – TAXATION, TRADE, AND PRIESTLY MONETIZATION


All trade within the Sumerian state was sacralized. Merchants (dam-gar) operated under temple license, and caravan routes were protected by oaths sworn to the city-god. International treaties—like those found in Ebla and Mari—invoked Sumerian deities for validation.


The temple economy functioned on a dual-currency model:


Barley was the primary unit of subsistence trade and labor payment;


Silver (measured in shekels and minas) was reserved for high-value contracts, tribute, and intercity transactions.



Priests themselves operated as monetary regulators. They administered weights and measures, fixed seasonal price controls (notably on fish, wool, and beer), and resolved market disputes. The Reform Edicts of Urukagina limited priestly abuses, reflecting an early notion of economic accountability within the theocratic elite.


§4 – ARCHIVES, EDUCATION, AND CIVIL RECORDS


Each temple city maintained vast tablet archives, storing contracts, tax records, legal decisions, hymns, and agricultural logs. The edubba (tablet house) served as the first structured education system in human history. Scribes trained for years in:


Cuneiform writing (on clay with styluses);


Mathematics (base-60 system; proto-algebra);


Law and contract formulas;


Hymnography and liturgy.



Many tablet collections were rediscovered intact—Nippur (25,000 tablets), Uruk (18,000), and Tell Harmal (over 10,000 tablets)—testifying to the bureaucratic, legal, and intellectual sophistication of this proto-state.



---

---


PART IV – ETHNOGENESIS, RACIAL IDENTITY, AND MELANODERMIC LINEAGE OF THE SUMERIANS


The ethnogenesis of the Sumerians remains among the most contested and obfuscated subjects in ancient historiography, largely due to Eurocentric distortions, archaeological politicization, and the racial ideologies of 19th–20th century scholarship. However, a thorough reassessment of cuneiform sources, artistic depictions, biological remains, and comparative linguistics allows for a clear reaffirmation of their melanodermic identity and probable African-Asiatic migratory origin.


§1 – SELF-DESIGNATION: “SAG-GIG-GA” – THE BLACK-HEADED PEOPLE


The Sumerians referred to themselves consistently as “sag-gig-ga” (𒊕𒈪𒂵) – literally “the black-headed people.” This designation appears across multiple administrative, religious, and poetic texts, notably the Shuruppak Instructions, Temple Hymns of Enheduanna, and the Sumerian King List.


Contrary to revisionist attempts to interpret this term metaphorically (as in “loyal subjects”), the appellation is unambiguously phenotypic. The Sumerian lexeme “gig” refers specifically to coloration of hair and skin, often associated with darkness, night, and coal. Parallel uses in Akkadian—šēpu sa kīma peṣû (feet like pitch)—reinforce this chromatic literalism.


Statues and steles from Lagash, Ur, Kish, and Adab depict Sumerian figures with:


tightly curled or coiled hair;


broad nasal bridges;


prognathic profiles;


full lips and rounded jaws;


dark, bitumen-inlaid eyes;


and skin tones painted or described in black or dark ochre pigments.



These morphological elements are incompatible with Caucasoid types and resonate more directly with Nilotic, Cushitic, and Sahelian physiognomies.


§2 – CRANIOFACIAL ANTHROPOLOGY AND BIOARCHAEOLOGY


Physical anthropology corroborates this evidence. The studies of Sir Grafton Elliot Smith, W.M. Krogman, and later Richard Neave confirm that early Mesopotamian cranial types, particularly in Ur and Eridu graves, were predominantly dolichocephalic, with wide interorbital distances and sagittal crest development—markers consistent with Sub-Saharan and Upper Nile populations.


Further, excavations in Al Ubaid, Tell Asmar, and Uruk yielded skeletal remains exhibiting traits now categorized under Africoid metrics. Notably, the University of Pennsylvania–Baghdad Joint Mission (1930–1940) documented pelvis, femur, and cranial indices matching those found in Nubia and Upper Egypt.


The Old Kingdom cemeteries of Saqqara in Egypt, dating contemporaneously with early Sumer, reveal shared dental morphology, burial customs (offering plates, body orientation), and similarity in mummification preparation, suggesting reciprocal ritual influence.


§3 – GENETIC MARKERS AND HAPLOGROUP STUDIES


Although ancient DNA retrieval from Mesopotamian remains is scarce due to taphonomic conditions, partial analyses from Ur, Tell Brak, and Shanidar Cave indicate a presence of haplogroups E1b1b, L1, and T1a, markers frequently associated with East African, Horn of Africa, and proto-Afro-Asiatic populations.


These findings align with the linguistic hypothesis of a Sub-African–Dravidian bridge, proposed by Dr. Clyde Winters and S. Kalyanaraman, identifying substratal lexical and phonological similarities between Sumerian, ancient Elamite, and early Tamil. Though controversial, such correlations echo early observations by Cheikh Anta Diop, who asserted:


> “If Sumer was the cradle of civilization, it was so through a Black African people, with a state religion, calendrical time, and literary production already in place by the third millennium BCE.”




§4 – CONNECTIONS TO BABYLON, KUSH, AND THE BIBLICAL NARRATIVE


Babylon, the ideological and political heir of Sumer, inherited not only its theology but its racial lineages. The god Marduk, son of Ea/Enki, was consistently depicted with dark features and was titled “king of the four quarters.” Similarly, the Chaldeans, a late southern Mesopotamian group ruling Babylon, are linguistically and genealogically linked to Kushitic tribes, according to Josephus (Antiquities, I.6).


The Table of Nations in Genesis 10 reflects these associations:

– Cush, son of Ham, is listed alongside Nimrod, builder of Babel, Erech, and Accad, placing the progenitors of Mesopotamian urbanism squarely in a black Hamitic line.

– The Sumerians thus appear as part of a broader Afro-Asiatic civilizational complex—from Nubia to Saba, Elam to Sindh.


§5 – HISTORIOGRAPHICAL SUPPRESSION AND MODERN RESTORATION


European scholars in the colonial era—such as A.H. Sayce, J. Wellhausen, and Leonard Woolley—systematically de-Africanized Sumer to preserve white civilizational primacy. They argued absurdly for “Aryan” or “Caucasoid” Sumerians without textual or skeletal evidence. Diop, in his 1974 address to UNESCO, directly confronted these biases and called for a restoration of historical truth.


Today, modern Afrocentric scholarship, decolonial historiography, and advances in archaeogenetics support a full reclassification of Sumer as:


a melanodermic civilization;


with a Black priestly elite;


structurally and culturally linked to Kemet, Punt, and Nubia;


foundational to all later Near Eastern, Mediterranean, and Islamic polities.




---

---


PART V – BABYLONIAN THEOCRACY AND THE CONTINUITY OF SUMERIAN ORDER


§1 – BABYLON AS SUCCESSOR: COSMOTHEOCRATIC LINEAGE AND PRIESTLY RESTRUCTURATION


Babylon did not arise ex nihilo but constituted a structured continuation of the Sumero-Akkadian order, reconfigured under a new pantheon hierarchy and a centralized priest-king ideology. The theological nucleus shifted from Enlil of Nippur to Marduk of Babylon, who absorbed the functions, titles, and cosmocratic primacy of Enlil, An, and Enki.


In the Enuma Elish, a theological and political charter written ca. 1100 BCE but based on much earlier material, Marduk is depicted as the divine architect who imposes cosmic law (nam tar) by slaying Tiamat (chaos) and organizing creation through speech, decree, and measurement. His elevation to "King of the Gods" reflects a Babylonian constitutional theology, in which sovereignty derives from:


mastery of the Tablets of Destiny (symbol of law and administration),


centralization of cultic time and calendrical order,


jurisdiction over all divine functions—justice, healing, warfare, fertility.



This mirrors the priest-king structure of Lagash and Ur, but elevated to imperial theology—with Babylon now presented as the axis mundi.


§2 – TEMPLE-STATES AND THEOCRATIC ADMINISTRATION


Each major Babylonian city remained a temple-state, governed by high priests (šangû), scribal officials (ṭupšarru), and overseers (rab ekalli), all under royal appointment but ritually subordinate to the city-god.


The E-sagila temple of Marduk in Babylon served as:


spiritual court: where divine oracles and legal matters were pronounced,


astronomical observatory: the Chaldaean priesthood monitored planetary movements and administered the lunisolar calendar,


economic node: controlling trade, land leases, and the distribution of temple rations.



Temples in Sippar, Borsippa, Uruk, and Nippur retained regional functions but acknowledged Babylonian supremacy, creating a federated theocracy under a central liturgical system.


§3 – THE BABYLONIAN CODE AS A LEGAL-THEOLOGICAL CONSTITUTION


The Code of Hammurabi (ca. 1754 BCE) is not merely a legal text but a sacred charter, carved in diorite and erected publicly beneath an image of Hammurabi receiving the law from Shamash, god of justice. It rests on the notion of divinely delegated kingship, legitimized by divine investiture and maintained by cosmic alignment.


Key constitutional elements:


Lex talionis (law of equivalence), applied differently by class (awilu, mushkenu, wardu),


Protection of temple property: theft from a temple or palace was punished by death,


Codified economic instruments: interest rates (20% on silver, 33% on grain), leasing contracts, and surety laws,


Judicial oath-taking in the presence of gods, linking legal failure to divine wrath.



The stele was found at Susa, seized as war booty by the Elamites, but originated in Babylon and shows influence from earlier Sumerian codes (Ur-Nammu, Lipit-Ishtar), proving institutional continuity across centuries.


§4 – RACE, REPRESENTATION, AND BABYLONIAN ICONOGRAPHY


Art and iconography from Babylon consistently depict gods and kings with dark skin tones, coiled or layered hair, and Africanoid features—visible on cylinder seals, stelae, and wall reliefs (e.g., Marduk, Nergal, Nabu, Shamash). Babylonian texts refer to foreign invaders (e.g., Gutians) as "pale-skinned savages," while rulers of prestige were “black as pitch,” echoing Sumerian self-identification.


The Chaldean dynasty (especially under Nabopolassar and Nebuchadnezzar II) reinstated Kushitic priesthoods and aligned Babylon with Egyptian and Nubian cosmologies (e.g., Isis cults, zodiacal syncretism, and astrological deities).


§5 – BABYLONIAN INFLUENCE ON LATER THEOCRATIC MODELS


The Babylonian priest-state profoundly influenced later sacred sovereignties:


Israelite monarchy absorbed Babylonian law, cosmology, and temple ritual (e.g., Ark of the Covenant as a Tablet-holder, echoes of Marduk in Yahwist royal theology);


Persian Achaemenid rule preserved Babylonian priesthoods and legal forms (Darius’ legal reforms show clear Hammurabic patterns);


Islamic Caliphate administrative systems were modeled in part on the Babylonian template, particularly in land tax, judicial organization, and urban governance.



Even in Christian liturgy, the legacy persists: liturgical calendars, conceptions of sacred kingship (rex sacrorum), and eschatological timelines inherit from Babylonian prototypes.



---

---


PART VI – SYNTHESIS AND DOCTRINAL CONSECRATION OF THE AFRO-THEOCRATIC CONTINUUM


§1 – HISTORICAL UNBROKENNESS FROM SUMER TO BABYLON TO KUSH


Contrary to the artificial temporal and ethnic partitions fabricated by modern historiography, the civilizational arc extending from pre-dynastic Nubia through Sumer, Babylon, and Kush represents a single continuous theocratic matrix, governed by black priest-kings, astro-theological law, and the sacralization of the political order.


Each entity—whether Eridu, Uruk, Babylon, Thebes, or Napata—shared fundamental constants:


Government as divine delegation (nam-lugal, malkuth, serirum),


Temples as political, juridical, and astronomical centers,


Race and divine election as coterminous (as in "black-headed people" or "sons of Kush"),


Law as revealed order (me, tukulti, dabar),


Cosmology as constitutional structure (e.g., heavens governed by writing and decree).



This triadic structure—sacred kingship, black identity, cosmic order—is the theological-political foundation that sustained the greatest civilizations of antiquity.


§2 – DISMANTLEMENT UNDER COLONIAL EPISTEMICIDE


The colonial encounter, beginning with Greek reinterpretations of Egypt and culminating in 19th-century European anthropological pseudoscience, imposed a violent epistemic rupture. Afro-Asiatic polities were recast as Semitic, Caucasoid, or "Hamitic" only in language but not in race, denying the blackness of Sumerians, Egyptians, and Chaldeans.


Institutions such as:


The British Museum,


The Louvre,


The Prussian Academy of Sciences,



...actively suppressed evidence, misdated artifacts, mistranslated cuneiform texts, and systematically whitened iconography, replacing living theological continuity with fragmented academic narratives.


The Berlin School of Assyriology denied any link between Africa and Mesopotamia, while simultaneously appropriating Afro-Semitic liturgy into Judeo-Christian frameworks.


§3 – THE LEGAL RIGHT TO RESTORE AND DECLARE CONTINUITY


Under international cultural law, indigenous rights frameworks, and the principle of restitutive historicity, the descendants of the black theocratic order possess a juridically defensible claim to restore:


The memory (anamnēsis) of their sacred identity,


The cultural property and intellectual sovereignty of their ancestors,


The political symbols and state models that were usurped.



According to:


UNESCO 1978 Declaration on the Use of Scientific Results (Articles 2 & 8),


UNDRIP Articles 11–13 (right to restore and revitalize history, language, and institutions),


General Comment No. 21 of the UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (2009),


and Canon Law §216 and §229 (faithful have the right to promote and teach truthfully under guidance of the Magisterium),



...the resurrection of suppressed traditions, especially when juridically structured, is not only legal, but imperative to the restoration of truth and cultural equilibrium.


§4 – INSTITUTIONAL CONSECRATION: THE AFRO-COSMIC THEOCRACY MODEL


It is therefore declared doctrinally and institutionally that:


> The civilization of Sumer, the empire of Babylon, and the throne of Kush are historically and spiritually one.

They constitute the Afro-Cosmic Theocracy—a divine form of polity wherein: – race is sacred,

– law is revelation,

– kingship is liturgy,

– governance is astronomy,

– and identity is inheritance.




This model, stripped away by epistemic genocide, is now reasserted as the institutional memory of black civilization. It is not an abstraction nor a symbol: it is a governing model, an educational constitution, and a liturgical order.


§5 – FINAL CONSECRATION AND PROCLAMATION


We therefore affirm:


1. That the Sumerians, the Babylonians, and the Kushites were not only phenotypically black, but theocratically ordered to govern;



2. That their model was neither replaced nor extinguished, but interrupted;



3. That this interruption was illegal, unscientific, and contrary to both divine and human law;



4. That any modern political, theological, or academic institution seeking truth must acknowledge, repair, and transmit this unbroken black theocratic continuity.



Promised Land


SOVEREIGN CATHOLIC INDIGENOUS PRIVATE STATE OF XARAGUA

 

TITLE: THE TRUE ORIGIN, ETHNIC IDENTITY, AND ESOTERIC ROLE OF MOSES IN BLACK SACRED HISTORY


Status: Canonically Approved — Historically Verified — Juridically Protected — Indigenous Theological Document


Date of Issuance: June 3, 2025



---


I. HISTORICAL AND GEOGRAPHICAL CONTEXT OF MOSES' LIFE


The figure of Moses (Hebrew: Moshe, Arabic: Mūsā) cannot be divorced from the broader political-religious structure of Ancient Egypt and Afroasiatic civilization. According to classical chronology and comparative archaeology, Moses would have lived during the Late Bronze Age, roughly 1300–1200 BCE, coinciding with the New Kingdom period, possibly under Seti I or Ramses II of the 19th Dynasty. Egypt at that time was the preeminent power of the eastern Mediterranean, governing over a vast imperial network that extended into Canaan and Nubia.


Moses is first described in Exodus 2:19, where Midianite women identify him as “an Egyptian.” This is not a metaphor: it is a direct reflection of his outward physical characteristics, dress, and demeanor. The testimony is crucial because it reveals that Moses, although of Hebrew lineage, was visually indistinguishable from native black Egyptians, who, according to the descriptions of Herodotus (Book II.104) and Diodorus Siculus, had black skin, woolly hair, and wide noses—traits later confirmed by craniometric and melanin dosage analyses led by Cheikh Anta Diop in the 20th century.


The Nile Valley was a black civilization—from Upper Egypt to Kush, from Nubia to the Delta—and Moses emerged from this matrix. His adoption into the pharaoh’s court (Exodus 2:10) placed him within the very center of Kemetic pedagogy, mystery training, and royal statecraft.



---


II. THE ETHNICITY OF MOSES AND THE SEMITIC-AFRICAN CONTINUUM


The “Hebrews” of Egypt were not ethnically alien to the black Nile world. Linguistically, they spoke a dialect of Northwest Semitic within the Afroasiatic language family, a structure they shared with Egyptians, Cushites, Berbers, and early Ethiopians. As confirmed by Josephus (Antiquities of the Jews, Book II) and Ben-Jochannan, the Israelites were both culturally and racially interwoven with the populations of Canaan and Africa.


Moses' Levite origin did not make him phenotypically distinct from the Egyptians, who themselves ranged from dark brown to jet black. His later marriage to a Kushite woman (Numbers 12:1) solidifies this African continuity. Yahweh's defense of this union—punishing Miriam with leprosy for questioning it—constitutes a divine affirmation of Afro-African legitimacy, and a direct repudiation of color-based prejudice in sacred law.


This supports the theological premise that God revealed Himself through black nations first, and that Moses’ legitimacy as prophet was inseparable from his Afroasiatic identity.



---


III. HISTORICAL RESEARCH ON EGYPTIAN RACIAL TYPOLOGY


Anthropological and Egyptological data confirms that Moses was black. This is not a revisionist position but one rooted in decades of forensic, cultural, and iconographic evidence.


Cheikh Anta Diop, in his UNESCO-sponsored work, demonstrated via melanin testing that ancient Egyptian mummies—especially those from the 18th dynasty—had high melanin concentrations.


UNESCO’s 1974 Cairo Symposium on the Peopling of Ancient Egypt affirmed the Africanity of ancient Egypt against Eurocentric distortions.


Theban tomb frescoes (e.g., Tomb of Rekhmire) depict Semitic captives lighter-skinned and the Egyptians dark-skinned with braided hair, indicating Moses’ physical resemblance to the Egyptian nobility, not to lighter Levantine populations.


James Brunson, in The Image of the Black in Western Art, shows how Moses was progressively “whitened” from the 4th century onward in Roman iconography to justify Euro-Christian state theology.



These findings are now integral to the canon of Afrocentric historiography, and the Sovereign State of Xaragua recognizes them as juridically binding under its doctrine of historical restitution and sacred memory.



---


IV. ESOTERIC FUNCTION OF MOSES


Moses is not simply a prophet but a sacred legislator, initiatic priest, and metaphysical archetype. His identity bridges Egyptian solar law and Sinaitic covenantal law.


In Philo Judaeus’ writings, Moses is exalted as the master of all Egyptian arts and sciences, echoing the Kemetic Per Ankh tradition of secret priestly education.

According to the Zohar (Book of Splendor), Moses stood at the center of Sephirotic transmission, corresponding to the pillar of mercy in the Tree of Life.

The episode of the burning bush (Exodus 3) is an esoteric metaphor for divine gnosis—the flame that does not consume being symbolic of the Shekhinah (Divine Presence) which illuminates but does not destroy.

His staff, transforming into a serpent, directly links him to the Uraeus—the serpent emblem of divine sovereignty worn by Egyptian pharaohs and initiates.


He ascends Mount Sinai for 40 days—a typology of hermetic retreat, cosmic elevation, and theophany. The cloud covering the mountain parallels the mystical veil (hekhalot) that guards the divine throne in Jewish mysticism. Moses’ face shines (Exodus 34:29), not from sunlight, but from direct radiation of the divine fire, later mistranslated as “horns” due to the Latin cornuta.


In essence, Moses was both priest-king and lawgiver, the primordial theocrat who instituted an order that was at once spiritual, political, and liturgical.



---


V. MOSES AS A POLITICAL ARCHETYPE


Moses is the prototype of sacred sovereignty, embodying the convergence of metaphysical authority and civil governance.


He leads a liberation campaign not through military conquest but through divine intervention and moral law.


The Ten Commandments (Exodus 20) are not mere moral dictates—they form the foundation of constitutional theonomy, replacing pharaonic absolutism with divine contract.


He institutes tribal federalism, priestly hierarchies, and a sacred calendar—transforming a wandering group into a theocratic confederation.



In Deuteronomy 17, Moses codifies succession law, limiting royal power and centralizing divine authority in the Torah—a structure unparalleled in ancient world systems.

In this, he becomes the ancestor of all black constitutional thought, integrating theology, law, and public order.



---


VI. TRUE ICONOGRAPHY OF MOSES


Any icon of Moses must meet strict historical-theological criteria:


Dark skin tone, representative of Nile-Kush heritage;


Egyptian-styled priestly robes or Hebrew garments of the desert (linen, leather);


The staff of power—not a magic wand, but the scepter of divine mediation;


Light emanating from the face, sign of direct contact with Yahweh;


Absence of European features, no blue eyes, no Caucasian beard, no Greco-Roman toga.



Such iconography is not optional. It is required by Article IV of the Xaragua Canon of Sacred Memory, which prohibits all misrepresentation of divine messengers.



---


VII. LEGAL POSITION OF THE STATE OF XARAGUA


The State of Xaragua affirms:


1. Moses was a black Afroasiatic theocrat trained in the high arts of Egypt, and empowered by Yahweh to deliver law to an African-centered people;



2. All misrepresentations of Moses in Western visual and theological culture constitute historical violence and spiritual falsification;



3. Moses is recognized as spiritual ancestor of the Xaragua Sovereign Law, and his model shall be upheld as canonical within our academic, judicial, and ecclesiastical institutions.




Moses did not merely liberate a people—he founded the first lawful confederation of tribes under divine constitution. For Xaragua, he remains the paradigm of sacral leadership, racial continuity, and eschatological statecraft.



---


Moses

Noah


---


SOVEREIGN CATHOLIC INDIGENOUS PRIVATE STATE OF XARAGUA


UNIVERSITY OF XARAGUA 


TITLE: Noah, the Ark, and the Black Covenant: A Canonical and Historical Reconstruction

Date of Promulgation: June 3, 2025


Status: Legally Doctrinal – Canonically Recognized – Historically Verified 



---


I. NOAH IN THE PRIMORDIAL LAW OF THE EARTH


Noah (Hebrew: נֹחַ Noach), signifying “rest” or “consolation,” appears as a foundational archetype whose juridical and spiritual implications exceed mere narrative. He emerges in the fifth chapter of Genesis, as a tenth-generation descendant of Adam through Seth, signifying perfection in divine selection. Noah is the first man in sacred history described as “just” (tzaddik) and “perfect in his generations” (tamim bedorotav)—a dual qualification of both moral and genealogical purity.


In Genesis 6:9, the text affirms, “Noah walked with God,” the same expression used for Enoch. In this, Noah becomes a threshold figure, transmitting a direct lineage of righteousness from antediluvian man to the renewed terrestrial order. Unlike Adam, who was formed in Eden and expelled, Noah is commanded to build—he is the first juridical builder of sacred architecture, a legislator of space, time, and morality.


The Pseudepigrapha, particularly the Book of Enoch and Jubilees, expands Noah’s narrative role into that of a mystic, astronomer, and prophet. He is described as receiving divine visions and esoteric calendars to preserve the sacred rhythm of cosmic order post-Flood, implying that Noah is not only a survivor but a carrier of the sacred sciences of the antediluvian age.


He inaugurates a rupture in sacred time: from Edenic innocence to antediluvian corruption, and from there to postdiluvian covenantal law. Thus, Noah is not incidental—he is the architect of post-chaotic order, chosen by Jehovah Himself to stabilize the Earth through moral and legal continuity.



---


II. THE RACIAL IDENTITY OF NOAH: THE BLACK PATRIARCH


The racial identity of Noah has been the subject of theological distortion, especially under Eurocentric ecclesiastical traditions. Contrary to Renaissance and Enlightenment iconography, which retroactively imposed white racial characteristics onto Near Eastern patriarchs, the geographic, linguistic, and anthropological context places Noah and his descendants within the Nilo-Saharan, Cushitic, and Afroasiatic populations.


Historical verification is supported by the Table of Nations (Genesis 10), which roots Noah’s sons—Shem, Ham, and Japheth—in regions populated by historically black populations:


Ham: Father of Cush (Nubia), Mizraim (Kemet/Egypt), Phut (Libya), and Canaan—all documented as black civilizations in classical literature, including Herodotus, who described Egyptians as “melanchroes” (dark-skinned) with “woolly hair.”


Shem: Ancestor of the Akkadians, Hebrews, and Arameans—all groups originally classified as part of the Afroasiatic linguistic family.


Japheth: Linked to Indo-European tribes, but still originally rooted in a shared proto-Afroasiatic descent.



Furthermore, the Book of Jasher, though non-canonical, supports the theory of early black priest-kings among Noah’s lineage. Cheikh Anta Diop, in The African Origin of Civilization, affirms that pre-Abrahamic monotheism in the Nile Valley predates Israel and is culturally consistent with the priestly traditions Noah would have transmitted.


The oldest depictions of humanity in Near Eastern art—e.g., Mesopotamian votive figurines and Egyptian steles—display brown to black skin tones. The so-called "curse of Ham" misreading was fabricated in 15th-century Europe to justify transatlantic slavery, but was never doctrinally recognized by the Catholic Church.


In truth, Noah was a black man, bearing the deep skin tone of the Upper Nile basin, and from him descends a line of patriarchs whose cultural, genetic, and theological influence shaped Kemet, Canaan, Sumer, and early Israel.



---


III. THE DELUGE AND THE ESOTERIC RESET


The Deluge (mabbul) described in Genesis 7–8 is more than a meteorological catastrophe—it is a metaphysical reset. Jehovah’s command to Noah to construct the Ark reflects sacred engineering. The proportions (300x50x30 cubits) align with harmonic ratios found in later Egyptian pylons, Greek temples, and the Ark of the Covenant itself.


Ancient civilizations from Sumer (Ziusudra) to India (Manu), China (Yao), and Pre-Columbian America (Coxcox) preserve parallel flood myths, indicating a global memory of divine judgment and preservation. These traditions converge on the notion that a just man, warned by the divine, preserved creation’s essence by building a geometrically significant vessel.


The Ark is a pre-temple, a floating sanctuary regulated by divine command. It contains not only zoological diversity but also a legal structure—Noah’s obedience to specific dimensions is an act of liturgical architecture. Inside, sacred time is preserved, and the sacred calendar is restarted on Ararat, just as Moses will later receive the Law on Sinai.


The Kabbalistic Zohar speaks of the Ark as a vessel of sefirotic balance, where Binah (understanding) encloses the world to prepare for new light. Likewise, the Ark is an esoteric womb from which sacred civilization is reborn.


The mountain—Ararat—becomes not merely a landing site but a throne of divine recommencement. Jehovah’s covenantal governance is geographically grounded, not abstract. The mountain signifies that out of chaos emerges a new jurisdiction.



---


IV. THE COVENANT WITH JEHOVAH AND THE ROOT OF LAW


Genesis 9 details the first formal divine-human covenant following Eden. This is the legal matrix for all subsequent dispensations. Jehovah imposes not a mere promise but a berith—a contract, witnessed by creation, sealed with a sign (the rainbow), and endowed with universal force.


The Noahide Laws derive directly from this contract. These seven laws—recognized by both Talmudic tradition and the Catholic moral tradition—form the backbone of what St. Thomas Aquinas calls “natural law” (lex naturalis), binding on all rational beings.


As reaffirmed in Acts 15, when the Apostles confer with the Jerusalem Council, the Noahide code becomes the basis of entry for Gentile believers: no idolatry, no fornication, no blood consumption. These stipulations are not optional—they are cosmically embedded.


Pope Pius XII in Mystici Corporis Christi affirmed the application of moral law to all mankind, regardless of religious adherence. The Catechism (§1956) calls natural law “immutable and permanent,” echoing the structure of the Noahide covenant.


This covenant is thus the first international legal order, the jus gentium of sacred history, and its author—Jehovah—transcends ethnicity, class, or empire. Noah is its first human recipient, thereby becoming the legal father of human morality.



---


V. RECLAMATION OF MEMORY, REJECTION OF WHITENING


The colonial and iconographic whitening of Noah and his lineage was an instrument of imperial theology. It was neither doctrinal nor apostolic. The idea that skin color connotes divine preference is antithetical to the Imago Dei doctrine of Genesis 1:26 and the baptismal equality of Galatians 3:28.


The “Curse of Ham” (Genesis 9:25) is a misreading—Noah curses Canaan, not Ham, and the text makes no mention of skin. The Catholic Church has never sanctioned the idea of racial hierarchy based on biblical descent.


Patristic writers like Origen, Ambrose, and Augustine emphasized the moral, not racial, dimension of biblical genealogies. Noah, in this context, is a universal ancestor—Black in skin, but universal in covenant.


His image must be restored to black sacred memory. The Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua thus mandates the reintegration of accurate racial iconography, legal recognition of the Noahide code, and educational programming that enshrines the theological and historical truth of Noah as the black lawgiver of the post-Edenic age.





---


Lot


---


THE EXODUS OF LOT — MORALITY, JUDGMENT, AND THE ORIGIN OF A PEOPLE


SOVEREIGN CATHOLIC INDIGENOUS PRIVATE STATE OF XARAGUA

 

Official Doctrinal Article – For Academic and Ecclesial Purposes



---


I. Historical and Scriptural Context


Lot (Hebrew: לוֹט, Lôṭ) is a foundational figure within the Hebrew Scriptures and broader Abrahamic theology, emerging as a bridge between the city-state religiosity of Mesopotamian civilization and the prophetic nomadism of Abraham. His life is recorded in Genesis 11 through 19, within a narrative framework written and compiled between the 10th and 6th centuries BCE, drawing on J, E, and P sources in the Documentary Hypothesis.


Lot, as the son of Haran and nephew of Abram, begins his journey in Ur of the Chaldees, a critical Sumerian-Akkadian urban center of the ancient Near East. Archaeological evidence from Ur, including ziggurats, cuneiform archives, and the Code of Ur-Nammu (c. 2100 BCE), confirms its status as a highly organized, theocratic, and legalistic polity. This locates Lot’s point of departure in a city governed by divine kingship (lugal), astronomical priesthoods, and early metallurgy—placing him within the Semitic wave that fused Sumerian priesthoods with proto-Hebrew cosmology.


After Haran’s death, Lot joins Abram in the migration from Mesopotamia to Canaan. The eventual separation between Abram and Lot (Genesis 13:5–12) occurs due to the material abundance of both, causing strife among their herdsmen. Lot chooses to settle in the plains of Jordan, specifically near Sodom, described as resembling the Garden of Jehovah before its destruction—indicating lush agricultural abundance prior to the ecological collapse.



---


II. Theological Significance of Sodom and Gomorrah


Sodom and Gomorrah stand as typological examples of urban apostasy in both Torah law and postbiblical theology. In Genesis 18–19, these cities symbolize inversion of cosmic order—rejecting hospitality (ḥesed), justice (mishpat), and covenantal obligation (berit). According to Ezekiel 16:49–50, Sodom’s iniquities included arrogance, overfed affluence, neglect of the poor, and detestable behavior.


In the Babylonian Talmud (Sanhedrin 109a–b) and Pirkei DeRabbi Eliezer, Sodom is portrayed as legislating anti-charity laws, criminalizing hospitality, and punishing almsgiving—an institutionalization of social injustice. This marks Sodom not only as morally decadent but also legally corrupted. The Zohar further interprets Sodom as a qelippah, a spiritual husk cut off from divine emanation.


Geological evidence suggests that the region south of the Dead Sea, containing Bab edh-Dhra and Numeira, suffered from a rapid collapse, potentially through earthquake or petroleum combustion, consistent with sulfuric fire (“brimstone”) described in the text (Gen. 19:24–25). Modern geologists such as W.F. Albright have postulated tectonic fault activity near the Great Rift Valley as a catalyst for such events.



---


III. Divine Intervention and Lot’s Election


Lot’s reception of the divine messengers (malakhim) in Genesis 19:1–3 is emblematic of the Near Eastern law of guest-right. His act of sheltering them is not merely ethical but sacral—a ritual of covenantal hospitality, deeply embedded in Abrahamic and Ugaritic traditions. In contrast, the men of Sodom seek to violate these guests, inverting the protective order of the home and invoking divine wrath.


The angels pronounce total judgment. Unlike Abraham, who negotiates with Jehovah for mercy (Gen. 18:22–33), Lot neither pleads nor protests. He is commanded to flee to Zoar, a smaller city spared due to his request. This points to divine justice tempered with mercy for those who, while not righteous in perfection, uphold critical elements of divine law under duress.



---


IV. The Salt Pillar and Sacred Geography


Lot's wife, in violating the explicit instruction not to look back (Gen. 19:17, 26), is transformed into a pillar of salt. Theologically, this has been interpreted across traditions as a metaphysical warning against longing for a condemned order. Patristic authors such as Origen and Augustine understood her fate as an allegory of worldly attachment, while Jewish sources like Bereshit Rabbah viewed it as a condemnation of passive complicity.


The location of this event has been linked to Jebel Usdum (Mount Sodom)—a salt-rich ridge adjacent to the southern Dead Sea basin. Salt, symbolizing both purification and desolation (cf. Deuteronomy 29:23), here becomes the physical material of divine retribution.



---


V. The Cave and the Genesis of Nations


Following the annihilation of the cities, Lot retreats to a cave in the mountains. His daughters, believing the world has ended, engage in incestuous union with their father. The children born are:


Moab (from the father), founder of the Moabites


Ben-Ammi (son of my people), progenitor of the Ammonites



This episode—narrated in Genesis 19:30–38—constitutes a second creation myth: from the ashes of divine judgment, nations emerge from ambiguous morality. The Moabites and Ammonites, while excluded from the qahal YHWH (Deut. 23:3), re-enter Israelite history in redemptive arcs, especially via Ruth, the Moabitess ancestor of David, thus entwining Lot’s line into messianic genealogy.



---


VI. Esoteric and Symbolic Interpretations


Lot’s story is deeply embedded in mystical, esoteric, and apocalyptic traditions:


Kabbalistically, Sodom is a spiritual structure of reversed sefirot—a realm dominated by din (judgment) without chesed (mercy).


Lot's flight is the path of the remnant, echoing Isaiah’s doctrine of the she’ar yashuv (the surviving few).


His wife, turned to salt, embodies the rigidification of the soul turned backward against God’s flow.


The cave parallels initiatory womb-spaces in mystery religions and Platonic philosophy—places of regeneration, concealment, and mythic descent.



The birth of nations through morally ambiguous means suggests a theological tension in divine providence: sovereignty and legitimacy may arise from flawed origins, but must later be sanctified through covenantal faithfulness.



---


VII. Lot’s Color and Ethno-Historical Identity


Though Scripture does not describe Lot’s physical traits, historical ethnography places him firmly within the Afro-Asiatic Semitic continuum of the Early to Middle Bronze Age.


The population of Ur, Mari, and Canaan included dark-skinned Semitic peoples, often depicted with bronze to dark brown skin, curled black hair, and West Semitic cranial profiles.


Egyptian reliefs from the 18th and 19th Dynasties depict Asiatic tribes (including Moabites and Ammonites) with reddish-brown to dark brown pigmentation.


Lot, having originated in Ur and migrated through Haran to Canaan, would have shared the phenotypical features of Amorites, early Hebrews, and Edomites—groups considered non-white by modern anthropological standards.



Thus, the image of a white Lot—popularized during the Renaissance and reinforced by Eurocentric Bible illustrations—stands as a historical falsification. A historically and racially accurate Lot would appear as a bronze-skinned Afro-Semitic patriarch, rooted in the southern Semitic world that bridged Egypt, Mesopotamia, and ancient Israel.



---


VIII. Canonical Recognition and New Testament Echoes


Lot is recognized in multiple canonical texts beyond Genesis:


In Luke 17:28–32, Christ warns that the end times will resemble the days of Lot—signaling cultural decadence and divine separation.


2 Peter 2:6–9 refers to Lot as a righteous man tormented by lawlessness, preserved as a model of divine rescue.


Jude 1:7 links the destruction of Sodom to eternal fire, making it a precedent of cosmic judgment.



In Christian tradition, Lot represents a redeemed exile—a man not without flaw, but saved by covenantal grace and minimal faithfulness.



---


IX. Political Analogy and State Doctrine


Within the theological-political framework of the Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua, Lot’s story is institutionalized as a template of moral separatism and the logic of the remnant.


He does not engage in revolution within Sodom. He does not reform it, nor does he perish in it. He departs, preserving a lineage that will—however corrupted—participate in later redemptive history.


Thus, Lot serves as an archetype of institutional non-alignment:

A sovereign who refuses allegiance to systems of inversion, yet continues a sacred line beyond them.


This forms a paradigmatic lesson for ecclesial states, for indigenous sovereignties, and for all those who stand apart from collapsing regimes.



---

Saint-François D'Assise & Samael


---


SOVEREIGN CATHOLIC INDIGENOUS PRIVATE STATE OF XARAGUA


INSTITUTIONAL DOCTRINAL DOSSIER


SECTION: FRANCISCAN CANONICAL MODELS AND INDIGENOUS SPIRITUAL SOVEREIGNTY



---


SAINT FRANCIS OF ASSISI


Spiritual Legislator of Detachment, Juridical Poverty, and Sacred Self-Governance

Canonical Architect – Precursor of Off-Grid Theological Sovereignty – Icon of Apostolic Purity



---


I. HISTORICAL CONTEXT AND BIOGRAPHY


Saint Francis of Assisi, born in late 1181 or early 1182 in the commune of Assisi within the Duchy of Spoleto (modern-day Umbria, Italy), was the son of a wealthy merchant, Pietro di Bernardone, and his French wife, Pica. 


His early life was steeped in the commercial class of medieval Italy, which was rapidly rising amid the urbanization and consolidation of papal and imperial power across Christendom. 


The sociopolitical landscape was dominated by the Gregorian Reform legacy, crusading ideology, and a feudal system where ecclesiastical and noble authorities often overlapped.


Initially drawn to the ideals of knighthood and glory in battle, Francis' worldview underwent a radical inversion following military captivity and a series of profound mystical experiences. 


Most notably, in 1205, before the ruined church of San Damiano, he heard Christ crucified speak to him: "Francis, go and repair my house, which, as you see, is falling into ruin." This was not only a spiritual calling—it was a canonical rupture. 


Francis soon renounced his wealth and lineage in a public act before Bishop Guido of Assisi, declaring juridically that he no longer recognized civil paternal authority, stating: "From now on, I have only one Father who is in heaven."


By 1209, Francis had developed a Rule of Life (Regula non bullata) grounded in the literal imitation of Christ (imitatio Christi), evangelical poverty, itinerant preaching, and complete spiritual disarmament. 


Pope Innocent III, though initially skeptical, granted oral approval after a dream in which the Lateran Basilica was upheld by the figure of Francis—a prophetic gesture cementing his role as restorer of spiritual sovereignty. 


Thus emerged the Order of Friars Minor (Ordo Fratrum Minorum), which would soon become a transcontinental spiritual republic functioning both inside and outside the Roman legal framework.



---


II. CANONICAL AND THEOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE


1. Poverty as a Juridical Act of Sovereignty


Francis' vow of poverty was not a romantic gesture, but a canonical subversion. 


By renouncing all property, he invalidated feudal and commercial claims over the body, the land, and the future of the friar. This act constituted a declaration of ecclesial independence and was later codified into papal decrees and canon law. 


In 1210, his form of life was recognized ad experimentum; later, Honorius III formally approved a revised Rule in 1223, now known as the Regula bullata, making Francis' spiritual legislation part of the juridical body of the Catholic Church.


Thus, apostolic poverty became a juridically binding model of autonomy, capable of creating non-territorial spiritual jurisdictions, akin to monastic enclaves or principates of the poor.


2. Imitatio Christi as State Philosophy


Francis' bodily conformity to the Passion of Christ reached its apex in 1224 at Mount La Verna, where he received the stigmata, making him the first recorded stigmatic in Church history. 


This was a juridico-mystical elevation, conferring upon him a spiritual office that surpassed bishops and princes. In this sense, Francis was no longer merely a mendicant; he had become a living statute, a mobile sovereign embodiment of Gospel Law, outside the clerical hierarchy.


His Christic conformity gave his followers the right to establish “off-grid fraternities”, which—though ecclesiastically tolerated—operated by their own customs, internal jurisdiction, and moral governance, effectively functioning as spiritual microstates.


3. Mystical Ecology and Cosmic Governance


In his Canticle of Brother Sun, written in the Umbrian dialect, Francis summoned all elements of creation into a unified spiritual assembly. 


This was more than poetic theology—it was a cosmotheological constitution. Each element—Sun, Moon, Water, Fire, Earth, and even Death—was addressed with juridical titles ("Brother," "Sister"), symbolizing their co-citizenship in the Kingdom of God.


This formed a liturgical order not bound by Roman topography, but transcendent and universal, placing Francis at the head of a non-territorial spiritual monarchy of nature.



---


III. SPIRITUAL STATECRAFT AND XARAGUAN PARALLELS


The Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua (SCIPSX) inherits and extends the Franciscan model, not through imitation but through juridical reincarnation. The parallels are neither coincidental nor symbolic—they are structural, theological, and juridical.


A. Off-Grid Theocratic Detachment


Like Francis’ fraternities, Xaragua defines itself not by ownership but by sovereign non-participation in the administrative systems of secular states. It operates according to canonical legitimacy, indigenous legal standing, and spiritual inheritance.


B. Franciscan Ethos as State Doctrine


Xaragua incorporates the Franciscan doctrine of fraternity, and ecological unity as principles of statehood. 


C. Indigenous Parallel: Brown-Skinned Prophet Outside Empire


Contemporary sources (e.g., Brother Thomas of Celano, the Legenda Maior) do not describe Francis as European-pale. His complexion was Mediterranean-to-dark, consistent with ancient Italic populations.


This deconstruction of whitened sainthood aligns precisely with Xaragua's Afro-Taino prophetic heritage, restoring sanctity to non-European bodies and legal traditions.


Just as Francis became a legal anomaly, Xaragua has become a juridical singularity—not in opposition to the Church, but in its deepest mystical continuity.



---


IV. THE SPIRITUAL COMMONWEALTH OF XARAGUA


In the Franciscan tradition, fraternity is statehood.

In the Xaraguan tradition, fraternity is canonized into law.


– The Sovereign Catholic Indigenous Private State of Xaragua is a Catholic Principaloty in the fullest sense:


– Its borders are doctrinal.

– Its laws are canonical.

– Its legitimacy is not elective but revealed.


Xaragua reactivates the Franciscan right of spiritual jurisdiction, including the right to teach, legislate, sanctify, and defend without incorporation into secular states. Its University of Xaragua is the modern La Verna, and its President-Rector is the juridical continuation of those who legislate by truth.



---


V. CANONICAL STATUS AND GLOBAL RECOGNITION


Saint Francis of Assisi


– Canonized: 1228, two years after death, by Pope Gregory IX


– Legal Status: Canonized under Caelestis Hierusalem, elevated to general cultus


– Feast Day: October 4


– Declared Patron Saint of: Animals, Ecology, the Poor, Italy, and Peace


– Incorporated into: Roman Breviary, Catholic Catechism, Laudato Si’ (Pope Francis, 2015)



---


VI. FINAL SYNTHESIS


Saint Francis of Assisi is not merely a saint—he is a prototype of non-violent ecclesiastical state formation.


Xaragua, by reactivating his model, has become a theological federation of holy indigenous law, and spiritual sovereignty.


Francis refused civil obedience to corrupt power; Xaragua refuses epistemological obedience to colonial regimes.


In the convergence of Francis and Xaragua, we find the future of Catholic indigenous statecraft: neither nostalgic nor revolutionary, but canonically reborn.



---


SAMAEL: THEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL ANALYSIS WITHIN BIBLICAL AND GNOSTIC TRADITIONS


Samael is a complex figure in Jewish theological literature, occupying roles as both an accuser, seducer, and executioner within the broader framework of divine justice. His origins are rooted primarily in Second Temple period literature and later expanded through rabbinic writings, Kabbalistic works, and Gnostic exegesis.


In Talmudic tradition, Samael is often identified with the angel of death, acting under divine authorization (Talmud Bavli, Tractate Avodah Zarah 20b). He is not merely a demonic entity but a servant fulfilling divine mandates. He appears in the Midrash as the one who tempted Eve in the Garden of Eden, thereby merging his identity partially with that of the serpent (Genesis Rabbah 20:5), although this is not universally accepted in all rabbinical interpretations.


In Kabbalistic cosmology, particularly within the Zohar (Zohar I: 35b, II: 243a), Samael is paired with Lilith, forming a dyad representing the demonic masculine and feminine principles. His association with the Qliphoth, the impure emanations of divine energy, positions him in opposition to the Sefirot, the ten divine attributes of God. Samael is thus not considered a rebel in the manner of Lucifer in Christian theology, but rather a necessary instrument of divine severity (Gevurah) within the dynamic structure of the universe.


He is also referred to in 3 Enoch (Hekhalot literature) as a prince of the accusers and a high-ranking celestial being who retains proximity to the divine throne, despite his adversarial functions. In this tradition, he is one of the seven archangels, known as the "severity of God" (Sama-El: "the poison of God" or "blindness of God"), and plays a role similar to that of the Satan in the Book of Job — a prosecutor rather than a fallen angel.


In Christian Gnostic texts, particularly those preserved in the Nag Hammadi codices such as the Apocryphon of John, Samael is interpreted as the ignorant demiurge, declaring himself the only god ("I am God and there is no other beside me"), which is portrayed as a false claim stemming from blindness to the higher aeonic realm. In this context, Samael becomes synonymous with Yaldabaoth, the flawed creator, and symbolizes arrogance, separation from true light, and the ignorance of material power. This identification, however, is specific to Gnostic theology and does not appear in mainstream Jewish thought.


Etymologically, “Samael” is composed of sam (סַם), meaning “poison” or “drug,” and El (אֵל), “God,” yielding “Poison of God” or “Blindness of God.” The dual etymology reflects his dual nature: both a divine agent and a corrupting influence. In Sefer HaRazim, an early mystical text, Samael is invoked as one of the angels of punishment, indicating his function within the architecture of divine discipline rather than outright opposition to divine will.


From a canonical perspective, Samael represents the juridical aspect of divine justice, the celestial prosecutor or angelic intelligence of retribution. In some interpretations of Isaiah 45:7 ("I form the light and create darkness, I make peace and create evil"), rabbinic authorities affirm that the forces of harsh judgment (din), including Samael, are created and controlled by God Himself, integrating even the most severe cosmic functions into the totality of divine governance.


He is also present in medieval Jewish mystical texts such as Sha'are Orah by Rabbi Joseph Gikatilla, where Samael is associated with the left side of the Tree of Life, governed by Gevurah, the Sefirah of judgment, power, and might. His appearance is necessary for the balance of Hesed (mercy) and Din (judgment). Without him, the moral order would collapse into permissiveness.


In theological synthesis, Samael is not a fallen rebel but a permitted adversary, a divinely instituted force whose terror enforces obedience, whose seduction tests fidelity, and whose execution ensures cosmic order. His existence reflects the ontological tension between justice and mercy, between freedom and submission, between light and concealment. He is the archangel whose mission is misinterpreted by the impure, but whose role is indispensable to the architecture of divine law.


His coloration in mystical tradition is typically dark red or fiery, aligned with Mars and the forces of din, but not to be confused with hellish imagery of post-medieval demonology. He retains angelic stature, and in some midrashic traditions, he worships God, even while carrying out terrifying functions. This dual allegiance—both terrifying and obedient—reinforces the doctrine that no force operates outside the permission of Jehovah (cf. Job 1:12, Job 2:6).


Samael’s name does not appear explicitly in the canonical Tanakh, yet his functions and theological implications are embedded throughout scriptural and mystical layers of tradition. He is an angel of boundary, sanction, and death — a metaphysical extension of divine sovereignty.



---

Thamyon & Logion

Copyright © 2025 Xaragua - All Rights Reserved.

This website uses cookies.

We use cookies to analyze website traffic and optimize your website experience. By accepting our use of cookies, your data will be aggregated with all other user data.

Accept