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Who is
Asar Imhotep?

Asar Imhotep is a software developer, Cultural Theorist and Africana researcher from Houston, TX whose research focus is the cultural, linguistic and philosophical links between the Ancient Egyptian civilizations and modern Bantu cultures of central and South Africa.
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Available NOW!

Race and identity in Ancient Egypt, Volume 1: Towards an etymology of the place-name Km.t (2023), is available now. So get your copy TODAY! This has been an incredible journey and preparations are being made for the subsequent volumes in this series. I appreciate each and every one of you and thank you for your continued support.

Description: 
 
"Who were the ancient Egyptians? Where did they come from? What were the central themes permeating throughout their culture? What other African cultural groups share these principal themes? What ‘race’ were the ancient Egyptians? What were their phenotypic characteristics? How did they identify themselves? How were they described by outsiders (in terms of looks, temperament, and culture)? In terms of genetics, language, psychology, politics, ritual, and religion, what other human groups do the ancient Egyptians best cluster with? These questions and more are systematically explored in the three-volume series, Race and identity in Ancient Egypt, by Asar Imhotep."
 

Featured Videos

An upcoming documentary film on Egyptian & ciBantu connections

This is just an FYI that we will soon be moving forward on a documentary film connecting ancient Egyptian language, philosophy, and culture with modern African languages, philosophies, and cultures. It will be grounded in the book Aaluja, Vol. II: Cyena-Ntu Religion and Philosophy (2020). Keep coming back to see how you can contribute to the completion of this film. More information to come.

Featured Articles

This is the place where I place all of my latest thoughts and linguistic experiments.
This area will be updated periodically.

This is a brief exposé on the importance of paradigm in the methods and conclusions we come to when doing research.

In my eBook titled Where is the Love? How Language Can Reorient Us Back to Love’s Purpose (2013b), I sought to define love from an African and historical comparative linguistic standpoint.

This essay attempts to define the ancient Egyptian word txn "Tekhen" (Obelisk) through an analysis of the Kalenjiin language of East Africa.

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