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"The use of the adjective Greek also calls for comment. From about 2500 BC onwards, successive waves of people speaking kindred dialects migrated from the north into what is now Greece and the neighbouring parts of Turkey in Asia. By 1000 BC they had colonized or conquered many of the islands of the Mediterranean, including Cyprus, Crete, and Sicily. Before 500 BC they had trading ports along the coast of Asia Minor and as far west as Marseilles. What they had pre-eminently in common was their language and, after 600 BC, their alphabet borrowed largely from their Semitic trade rivals, the Phoenicians of the Old Testament when the latter had prosperous ports at Tyre and Sidon in Syria, in Africa at Carthage, and farther West in Spain." -- Lancelot Hogben from book "Mathematics for the Million"
Africa is not north of Greece.
If I can find that easily in a math book then it must exist in other books more apropos to the subject matter at hand. MrJ you are not even trying or you are just as retarded as the afrocentrist.
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