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  2. Berbers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berbers

    Berbers are not an entirely homogeneous ethnicity, and they include a range of societies, ancestries, and lifestyles. The unifying forces for the Berber people may be their shared language or a collective identification with Berber heritage and history. As a legacy of the spread of Islam, the Berbers are now mostly Sunni Muslim.

  3. Canary Islands in pre-colonial times - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canary_Islands_in_pre...

    Although the Berbers are the most probable ancestors of the Guanches, it is deduced that important human movements [e.g., the Islamic-Arabic conquest of the Berbers] have reshaped Northwest Africa after the migratory wave to the Canary Islands" and the "results support, from a maternal perspective, the supposition that since the end of the 16th ...

  4. North Africa during classical antiquity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Africa_during...

    Berber civilization was already at a stage in which agriculture, manufacturing, trade, and political organization supported several states. Trade links between Carthage and the Berbers in the interior grew and thus created a new Punic society speaking Punic , but territorial expansion also resulted in the enslavement or military recruitment of ...

  5. Category:Berber history - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Berber_history

    Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more

  6. Garamantes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garamantes

    The Garamantes (Ancient Greek: Γαράμαντες, romanized: Garámantes; Latin: Garamantes) were ancient peoples, who may have descended from Berber tribes, Toubou tribes, and Saharan pastoralists [1] [2] [3] that settled in the Fezzan region by at least 1000 BC [4] and established a civilization that flourished until its end in the late ...

  7. Gabriel Camps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gabriel_Camps

    Gabriel Camps undertook research and published on the prehistoric and pre-Roman epochs of North Africa, but also on the Berber kingdoms, the Libyan script and the Punic people. Most of this work focussed on Berber history, and in 1984 he was the founder and first editor-in-chief of the Encyclopédie berbère, launched under the aegis of UNESCO.

  8. Berberism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berberism

    The Berber flag adopted by the World Amazigh Congress in 1998 Demonstration of Kabyles in Paris, April 2016. Berberism is a Berber ethnonationalist movement, that started mainly in Kabylia and Morocco during the French colonial era with the Kabyle myth and was largely driven by colonial capitalism and France's divide and conquer policy. [1]

  9. Kabyle people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kabyle_people

    During the first centuries of their history, Kabyles used the Libyco-Berber writing system (ancestor of the modern Tifinagh). Since the beginning of the 19th century, and under French influence, Kabyle intellectuals began to use the Latin script. It is the basis for the modern Berber Latin alphabet.