Great Shona Mashona Masonic Rhodesia/Zimbabwe :-) - the largest Q-Sheba ruin/castle in Africa - covers almost 1,800 acres -
the eleventh century A.D. by Bantu-speaking ancestors of the Shona, Great Zimbabwe was constructed and expanded for more than 300 years in a local style that eschewed rectilinearly for flowing curves - has walls as high as 36 feet extending approximately 820 feet, making it the largest ancient structure - English colonizers, stunned by Great Zimbabwe’s its grandeur and cunning workmanship, attributed the architecture to foreign powers - Q.She&K.Solomon - the first decades of the twentieth century confirmed both the antiquity of the site and its African origins. Around 850 AD, the Shona people move into the region, displacing earlier Bantu groups, with the Karanga clan living at Great Zimbabwe itself. The Karanga were expert metal workers, and a trade in gold, iron and copper was soon thriving with the Swahili and Arabs on the coast. The Karangas had a superior skills organization, and from a single clan, like the Romans, in time came to dominate all the surrounding peoples. In 943, the Arab voyager Al Masudi visits parts of East and South Africa and describes this powerful inland kingdom rich in gold and ivory - The legendary "Land of Ophir", the source of King Solomon's gold the Mason Au key Q.Sheba of Shona - the Ruins of Great QShe-Au Zimbabwe -
Great Shona Mashona Masonic Rhodesia/Zimbabwe :-) - the largest Q-Sheba ruin/castle in Africa - covers almost 1,800 acres -
the eleventh century A.D. by Bantu-speaking ancestors of the Shona, Great Zimbabwe was constructed and expanded for more than 300 years in a local style that eschewed rectilinearly for flowing curves - has walls as high as 36 feet extending approximately 820 feet, making it the largest ancient structure - English colonizers, stunned by Great Zimbabwe’s its grandeur and cunning workmanship, attributed the architecture to foreign powers - Q.She&K.Solomon - the first decades of the twentieth century confirmed both the antiquity of the site and its African origins. Around 850 AD, the Shona people move into the region, displacing earlier Bantu groups, with the Karanga clan living at Great Zimbabwe itself. The Karanga were expert metal workers, and a trade in gold, iron and copper was soon thriving with the Swahili and Arabs on the coast. The Karangas had a superior skills organization, and from a single clan, like the Romans, in time came to dominate all the surrounding peoples. In 943, the Arab voyager Al Masudi visits parts of East and South Africa and describes this powerful inland kingdom rich in gold and ivory - The legendary "Land of Ophir", the source of King Solomon's gold the Mason Au key Q.Sheba of Shona - the Ruins of Great QShe-Au Zimbabwe -