If you want to discover your genetic history and where you came from... you’ve found the right place!

888-806-2588

review of scientific and news articles on dna testing and popular genetics

North Africans in Early Britain

Sunday, May 06, 2012
Check Out DNA Fingerprint Plus $300 


An Excursion into Arthurian Legend

We have had previous blog posts on North African genetics in Britain, for instance "When Wales Was Jewish." The present post zeros in on Tintagel, the fabled home of King Arthur and Mark of Cornwall. It is inspired by the mention of Gormund, the Irish "King of the Africans" in Welsh bardic literature, who was, we submit, a Vandal of the fifth or sixth century.

In British myth and historical tradition, not only Ireland but also Cornwall is the stronghold of “Africans.” Mark, the king of Cornwall in Arthurian legend and jealous husband of Isoud or Isolt of Ireland, is portrayed in the Tristan romances as dark-complexioned, rich and of fiery southern temperament. Mark or Marcus is a favored name among Jews, particularly English Jews in memory perhaps of the soldier in Roman Britain who was proclaimed emperor by the army there sometime in 406, in the last death rattle of imperial rule. His sister is Elizabeth, and his royal residence is fixed in Tintagel on the north coast of the Cornish peninsula facing Ireland. This site’s chief fame in medieval literature was as the castle of King Mark in the immensely popular cycle devoted to Cornwall.

A series of excavations began in Tintagel in 1933, uncovering a forgotten chapter in southwest Britain’s prehistory. According to O. J. Padel, “the area of Tintagel headland teems with fragments of pottery of a type manufactured in the Mediterranean area (mainly in North Africa and Asia Minor); these fragments are dated between the mid fifth century and the late sixth).” This researcher at the department of Welsh history at University College of Wales, Aberstwyth, goes on to say:

The importance of Tintagel as a find-site for this pottery cannot be overemphasized. Since being identified there, it has been found to occur at other sites within Dark-Age western Britain and Ireland, including other sites in Cornwall and Devon, Cadbury-south-west Ireland, and as far north as the Scottish Highlands . . . . Being imported from so far away, this pottery represents expensive, luxury, goods.”[i]

Arthur's Name Arabic?

The origin of the name Arthur has been endlessly debated.[ii] It is almost certainly not “Celtic,” neither from a P or Q dialect, and cannot be traced further back than post-Roman times. The center of gravity for its appearance is the sixth century. In 1998, archeological excavations at sixth-century Tintagel brought to light a find subsequently dubbed the Arthur Stone, mentioning the name Artognou, claimed to be cognate. Although the reading is questionable perhaps this inscription and milieu are on the right track.

Arthur’s name has become something of a grail quest for modern researchers. Other theories derive the name from Artorius (Roman or Messapic), Arnthur (Etruscan), Arcturus (the “bear star”) or *Arto-uiros in Brittonic (“bear man”).

Perhaps the Gordian knot of the difficulty can be cut if we consider that many of the names in early Welsh history have Arabic and North African roots. Camlann, for instance, the site of Arthur’s final deadly battle with the usurper Mordred, has resisted all efforts to etymologize or locate it. This unidentified place in England has a name that is supposed to mean Crooked Glenn.[iii] We suspect it may be a corruption of the common Arabic place-name Khamilah, “area of dense trees, low or depressed area with good pasturage.”[iv] Camelot, the fabled capital city of the Round Table, appears to be little more than the plural of the same term.

Arthur’s father is Uthr Pendragon, the epithet following his name meaning Chief, or Head, of the Warriors, or Dragons.[v] Now Arthur’s son is Amr, a pre-Islamic tribal name that is meaningless in any Brythonic language. Ar- is a common prefix in Arabic and North African naming conventions, meaning “the.” Ar-Rumi, for example, the name of an early Arab poet means “the Greek.” Ar-Rahman is “the Most Gracious,” Ar-Rabi, “the Master, and Ar-Rashid “the Right-Minded.”[vi] Many of these are traditional names of God’s servants in pre-Islamic religion. If we take Arthur’s name as Semitic or Arabic or Kufic Arabic it may be a corruption of his father’s name: Ar-Uthr. As to what Uthr might have meant originally, however, we will not venture an opinion here.

True Etymology of Tintagel

The word Tintagel is difficult to etymologize in Cornish. A better theory than Padel’s hypothetical “Cornish *din, ‘fort’ (variant *tin), plus *tagell, ‘constriction’:  ‘the fort of the narrow neck’” (231) might be one based on the Semitic elements Thina “bend of headland” plus Ghayl “place with water,” a description which suits the natural topography (Tintagel Castle, aerial view, above). [vii]


Now how about Excalibur, Avalon and Morgan la Fay?  Watch this space . . . . 


[i]

O. J. Padel, “Some South-western Sites with Arthurian Associations,” in The Arthur of the Welsh, ed. Rachel Bromwich, A. O. H. Jarman and Brynley F. Roberts (Cardiff:  U of Wales P, 1991) 229-30.

[ii]

See Toby D. Griffen, “Arthur’s Name,” Celtic Studies Association of North America, April 8, 1993, Athens, Georgia, available at http://www.fanad.net/csana94.pdf.

[iii]

Calise 268.

[iv]

Groom 141.

[v]

Sims-Williams 54. Calise 259.

[vi]

See, for instance, Ibn Khallikan’s Biographical Dictionary, trans. B. Mac Guckin de Slane, IV (Paris:  Oriental Translation Fund of Great Britain and Ireland, 1871). The prefix ar also appears in toponyms, e.g. ar-Ramla, ar-Rusafa and ar-Roha (=Edessa). It would be a worthwhile exercise to determine how many English and Welsh place-names have derivations still denoted by their beginning in Ar-; we would start with perhaps Arun (an alternative name for the Isle of Man) and Arundel in the south of England.

[vii] See Nigel Groom, A Dictionary of Arabic Topography and Placenames (Beirut:  Liban, 1983) 94, 291.


Comments

Please tell us what you think

Name, website, and email are optional; if we publish your comment, your name will be shown, and may be linked to your website if provided, but the email you enter will not be published.





Captcha Image

Bookmark and Share

 

 


Recent Posts


Tags

consanguinity Middle Ages Eric Wayner Arizona State University Beringia Richard Lewontin Tifaneg DNA security Gunnar Thompson hominids Discovery Channel human migrations George van der Merwede Phoenicians DNA magazine Alabama New York Review of Books Jews and Muslims in British Colonial America Melanesians Gila River religion Donald N. Yates Native American DNA Test Y chromosomal haplogroups Sarmatians George Starr-Bresette Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute Akhenaten Plato Moundbuilders Tutankamun Bryony Jones Majorca ancient DNA National Health Laboratories far from the tree Cherokee DNA Rutgers University China HapMap Teresa Panther-Yates Nature Genetics Roberta Estes M. J. Harper Mark Thomas rapid DNA testing FBI Bryan Sykes Isabel Allende Ashkenazi Jews mummies Europe Population genetics immunology Sam Kean Sorbs Britain Fritz Zimmerman Neanderthals Pueblo Indians Wales Arabia University of Leicester Gravettian culture epigenetics Current Anthropology genomics labs Early Jews and Muslims of England and Wales (book) Sea Peoples megapopulations Richard Buckley Cajuns Y chromosome DNA personal genomics The Nation magazine Tucson Jone Entine Greeks Nova Scotia Phoenix linguistics haplogroup X genealogy El Castillo cave paintings Oxford Nanopore Scientific American Wendy Roth Alec Jeffreys Jews Kentucky FOX News familial Mediterranean fever genetics Arizona King Arthur Elizabeth C. Hirschman Indo-Europeans Nikola Tesla single nucleotide polymorphism Nephilim, Fritz Zimmerman England Peter Parham Abraham Lincoln X chromosome Austronesian, Filipinos, Australoid National Geographic Daily News mutation rate Promega Basques Life Technologies Colin Renfrew Victor Hugo myths Albert Einstein College of Medicine N. Brent Kennedy Charles Perou Clovis Melungeon Heritage Association Virginia DeMarce seafaring Rafael Falk PNAS GlobalFiler DNA Fingerprint Test Genome Sciences Building Roma People First Peoples French DNA Henry VII Kate Wong giants Shlomo Sand occipital bun Science magazine Finnish people Marija Gimbutas Epigraphic Society MHC Chromosomal Labs Bode Technology Israel, Shlomo Sand Cohen Modal Haplotype Cancer Genome Atlas Chuetas clinical chemistry Hohokam Indians Leicester population isolates DNA Fingerprint Test French Canadians Patagonia Anglo-Saxons haplogroup H ethics genetic determinism Hohokam Phyllis Starnes pheromones anthropology haplogroup T corn Abenaki Indians AP Kurgan Culture haplogroup E India oncology autosomal DNA Barack Obama Henry IV European DNA Comanche Indians Russell Belk Columbia University Thuya human leukocyte testing Harry Ostrer human leukocyte antigens Michael Grant Tintagel Zionism university of North Carolina at Chapel Hill haplogroup N Daily News and Analysis Phillipe Charlier evolution Bradshaw Foundation Normans ISOGG DNA databases breast cancer NPR Cave art Israel cannibalism Horatio Cushman ethnicity Iran Asian DNA Telltown Holocaust Sinti Pima Indians Mary Settegast Arabic Cornwall Algonquian Indians Celts mental foramen Nadia Abu El-Haj Melungeons medicine palatal tori Solutreans Timothy Bestor Chauvet cave paintings North Carolina Magdalenian culture Smithsonian Magazine Tom Martin Scroft New York Academy of Sciences Terry Gross horizontal inheritance Caucasian Nature Communications Havasupai Indians Hopi Indians Henriette Mertz Constantine Rafinesque Khoisan Altai Turks DNA Forums BATWING Maya research Joseph Jacobs Les Miserables Stephen Oppenheimer Lebanon prehistory archeology methylation Egyptians Helladic art Anasazi Russia Marie Cheng haplogroup B population genetics Pomponia Graecina Native American DNA Sasquatch forensics Lab Corp Applied Epistemology Scotland Melungeon Union John Wilwol Janet Lewis Crain Micmac Indians Grim Sleeper Jon Entine Cleopatra mitochondrial DNA andrew solomon Middle Eastern DNA DNA testing companies Turkic DNA Bode Technology Science Daily, Genome Biol. Evol., Eran Elhaik, Khazarian Hypothesis, Rhineland Hypothesis Freemont Indians Svante Paabo Charles Darwin Navajo haplogroup U Michael Schwartz history of science Jewish genetics Stone Age Salt River Harold Goodwin Penny Ferguson clan symbols African DNA Italy Louis XVI Ireland Zuni Indians Neolithic Revolution Irish history Keros Great Goddess statistics Melba Ketchum Discover magazine Colin Pitchfork Khazars haplogroup J Pueblo Grande Museum Acadians climate change BBCNews cancer INORA Dienekes Anthropology Blog Chris Tyler-Smith Wikipedia Choctaw Indians Chris Stringer Riane Eisler Jack Goins Bill Tiffee microsatellites Rare Genes Jim Bentley Harold Sterling Gladwin rock art education EURO DNA Fingerprint Test Bigfoot polydactylism Paleolithic Age Stacy Schiff Rush Limbaugh Etruscans race IntegenX hoaxes Denisovans King Arthur, Tintagel, The Earliest Jews and Muslims of England and Wales Panther's Lodge Bentley surname research news American Journal of Human Genetics bloviators Maronites surnames Richard III Philippa Langley American history Barnard College health and medicine Gypsies Belgium Gregory Mendel Theodore Steinberg North African DNA Anne Marie Fine ethnic markers

Archive