San Tribe-Oldest tribe of Africa
San Tribe-Oldest tribe of Africa

Before the arrival of white settlers in the middle of the 17th century, South Africa was inhabited by three distinct groups: hunters and gatherers (San), shepherds (Khoikhoi), and farmers (Bantu). By the time of Christ, the San was mainly a hunter and later raised goats, sheep, and cattle (later the Khoi, also known as Hottentot). In East San, immigrants met and intermarried with immigrants, using the unique “click” language they had, and it is now popular.
This group of people had small animals such as sheep and goats and was similar to the San in many ways by collecting wild plants and pets. The Kehoe and San people are their descendants from the ancestors of hunter-gatherers, the Khoekhoe, who acquired domestic animals 2 to 500 years ago. The Khoisan, the first South Africans and one of the first different groups of Homo sapiens, are experiencing centuries of gradual adoption of a new wave of settlers including descendants of the Bantu who now form the majority of black people in the country.
The purpose of land redistribution excluded the Khoisan from South Africa and did not see them as the first people, and their land was taken from them under apartheid. Today, about 100,000 people live in Botswana, Namibia, Angola, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, and South Africa. The people of San are known for their ability to hunt and live in the deserts of South Africa.
The Ndebele people of the south have a distinct culture and religion that sets them apart from other African nations. The San and Khoikhoi South Africans are described as the world's oldest people, the oldest people in Africa, and the first people in South Africa. In fact, they are two related but different people who entered South Africa more than 140,000 years ago.
It is a historical conference based on the nomadic lifestyle of hunters that groups of northern people, crossing the Okavango River in Botswana and Etosha National Park in northwestern Namibia (south of Angola), people in many parts of Namibia and Botswana, reaching Zambia and Zimbabwe and southerners in the center of the Kalahari along the Molopo River are the last remnants of the great South African people. San Africans do not have a direct relationship with modern immigrants who spread their DNA around the world.
Archaeologists and genetics agree that the San is one of the most intriguing tribes in the world and is a descendant of the original Homo sapiens group who lived in southern Africa some 150,000 years ago. This means that they are descendants of some of the first people to settle there before black and white people moved to the African continent. The San are the first inhabitants of the region, and it is estimated that they have settled and settled in most parts of southern Africa for the past 30,000 years.
The San of South Africa who lived as hunters and gatherers for thousands of years are the descendants of the first human ancestors, who also produced other groups of Africans, people who left the continent to fill other parts of the world. Although not closely related to the Bantu tribes, the San are descendants of the Paleolithic ancestors. Studies suggest that the San ancestors were separated some 100,000 years ago from other early groups and later re-entered the genetic pool.
The San are one of the oldest hunters in the world and are considered to be the first humans in South Africa. The San are a friendly, artistic, and peaceable people who have never invented weapons of war and lived with their nature for more than 20,000 years in harmony. The SAN nation is divided and divided by its DNA and other indigenous African groups.
The Boers, the German colony of South-West Africa, and the British defender of Bechuanaland, the San survived and prospered in what is now Namibia, Botswana, and most of today's San. Until the 1950s, several thousand San tribes hunted large game in the Kalahari Desert in Namibia with poison arrows and collected crops for food. Today, the cultural life of the San Bushmen is restricted to a small area on the Botswana island of Makgadikgadi Pan as they have lost the ability to cover large areas due to the construction of large national parks and the growth of land left for agriculture and mining.
Many displaced forest dwellers live in unsanitary settlements that are unsuitable for hunting and gathering, and they tend to grow food and work in ranches. According to archeology, we have traditions of stone-like tools and immeasurable art traditions dating back 27,000 years before the Apollo 11 stones, but San is the world's longest artistic tradition. Common aspects of South African San art can be explained by the thoughts that permeate the cognitive systems of the San people in the area. As the first settlers in the world, the San have a bad history of suffering, social rejection, cultural and racial self-expression, and their rights as a group. But with the increase in political understanding, they became the first people to reinvent themselves with the help of compassionate outsiders fighting for land and civil rights.
The name San is used to refer to a diverse group of hunters and collectors living in southern Africa and who have historical and linguistic links. The San are also known as the Bushmen, a term used by the European colonists and are considered degrading. The San are called degrading forests by the indigenous peoples of South Africa, related to the Khoekhoe and Khoikhoi.
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