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'''Arabid race''' was an historical term used for an historically perceived relation of the historically perceived "[[Caucasian race|Caucasoid race]]" among early 19th century ethnologists. The term "Arabid Race" was used in the late nineteenth, and early twentieth centuries, by ethnologists. <ref>{{cite book| author=John R. Baker | author-link=John Baker (biologist) | title=Race | place=New York and London | publisher=[[Oxford University Press]] | year=1974 | pp=625 | isbn=978-0-936396-04-0}}</ref>
'''Arabid race''' was an historical term used for an historically perceived relation of the historically perceived "[[Caucasian race|Caucasoid race]]" among early 19th century ethnologists. The term "Arabid Race" was used in the late nineteenth, and early twentieth centuries, by ethnologists. <ref>{{cite book| author=John R. Baker | author-link=John Baker (biologist) | title=Race | place=New York and London | publisher=[[Oxford University Press]] | year=1974 | pp=625 | isbn=978-0-936396-04-0}}</ref>


In the early [[20th century]] [[Charles Gabriel Seligman]] described his perception of the occurrence of the "Arabid Race" in the [[Sudan (region)|Sudan region]]:
In the early [[20th century]], [[Charles Gabriel Seligman]] described his perception of the occurrence of the "Arabid Race" in the [[Sudan (region)|Sudan region]]:
: In the Sudan area, classic Arabid types can be found among the [[Kababish]] and certain other Arabic-speaking desert tribes collectively known as [[Sudanese Arabs]]. Here, they often occur in solution with the local [[Hamites|Hamitic]] Mediterranean type, which was the morphological taxon to which belonged the [[A-Group Culture|A-Group]], [[C-Group Culture|C-Group]] and [[Meroe|Meroitic]] culture makers, among certain other early populations in the region. Elsewhere, Arabid elements fuse with the [[Negroid]] type of the region's indigenous [[Nilo-Saharan languages|Nilo-Saharan]] speakers, the [[Nilotic peoples|Nilotes]], thereby producing an [[Afro-Arab]] hybrid type.<ref>{{cite journal|jstor=2843546|title=Some Aspects of the Hamitic Problem in the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan.|first=C. G.|last=Seligmann| date=July 1913| journal=The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland|volume=43|pages=593–705|accessdate=|doi=10.2307/2843546}}</ref>
: In the Sudan area, classic Arabid types can be found among the [[Kababish]] and certain other Arabic-speaking desert tribes collectively known as [[Sudanese Arabs]]. Here, they often occur in solution with the local [[Hamites|Hamitic]] Mediterranean type, which was the morphological taxon to which belonged the [[A-Group Culture|A-Group]], [[C-Group Culture|C-Group]] and [[Meroe|Meroitic]] culture makers, among certain other early populations in the region. Elsewhere, Arabid elements fuse with the [[Negroid]] type of the region's indigenous [[Nilo-Saharan languages|Nilo-Saharan]] speakers, the [[Nilotic peoples|Nilotes]], thereby producing an [[Afro-Arab]] hybrid type.<ref>{{cite journal|jstor=2843546|title=Some Aspects of the Hamitic Problem in the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan.|first=C. G.|last=Seligmann| date=July 1913| journal=The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland|volume=43|pages=593–705|accessdate=|doi=10.2307/2843546}}</ref>



Revision as of 11:56, 19 January 2020

Arabid race was an historical term used for an historically perceived relation of the historically perceived "Caucasoid race" among early 19th century ethnologists. The term "Arabid Race" was used in the late nineteenth, and early twentieth centuries, by ethnologists. [1]

In the early 20th century, Charles Gabriel Seligman described his perception of the occurrence of the "Arabid Race" in the Sudan region:

In the Sudan area, classic Arabid types can be found among the Kababish and certain other Arabic-speaking desert tribes collectively known as Sudanese Arabs. Here, they often occur in solution with the local Hamitic Mediterranean type, which was the morphological taxon to which belonged the A-Group, C-Group and Meroitic culture makers, among certain other early populations in the region. Elsewhere, Arabid elements fuse with the Negroid type of the region's indigenous Nilo-Saharan speakers, the Nilotes, thereby producing an Afro-Arab hybrid type.[2]


See also

References

  1. ^ John R. Baker (1974). Race. New York and London: Oxford University Press. p. 625. ISBN 978-0-936396-04-0.
  2. ^ Seligmann, C. G. (July 1913). "Some Aspects of the Hamitic Problem in the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan". The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland. 43: 593–705. doi:10.2307/2843546. JSTOR 2843546.