THE EVOLUTION OF VILLAGES, POPULATIONS, AND GEOGRAPHICAL NAMES IN BRITAIN: From 
Rome, in the form of the 400 BC Janiform vase [3], we see the two populations there present. The woman on 
the left with full lips, a pug nose, and low nose bridge represents the African race typically found with 
(often) a ball of wooly or wiry hair (1, 2). Conversely, the woman on the right with a high nose brige, straight, 
pointed nose and thin lips represents the Anglo-Saxon, typically with long, flowing hair - sometime wavy (4, 5).

Plate 17 shows one of the earliest surviving village plans with a church surronded by houses dated to 1444.
Figures 1 and 2 display Celts, an African race, described by Thomas William Shore, Origin of the Anglo-Saxon Race, as the 
indigenous black-skinned inhabitants of England; the original Britons - a race different from the incoming Anglo-Saxons. 
That they [1, 2] were African can be comparing them with Romans (6, 7, 8) and Celts (8 to 12). The list of geographical names 
shows that the African (by phenotype)designations are still used as place names in England and America. In America is found, 
for instance, Bryn Mawr, Castle, Palace, Hempstead, Perth Harbor. The name mountain is derived from the Celts (Mynydd).

The term “Mor” means “sea” and it is the present authors belief that the designation as in “Black Moor” meant black seaman. 
Support for this is found in England being populated by Neolithic sea-goers evidenced in the 3000 BC, Yorkshire boat [9].
The incoming Anglo-Saxons found a ready-made society of Africans who had already conceptualized the Medieval Village - 
the forerunner of city-planning underlying the design and function of the modern Western state...art, art history, Paul Marc Washington, paleoneolithic@yahoo.com



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