Coming Soon: Dictionary of Surnames…

Coming Soon: A brand-new format in the dictionary genre called Foundational Black British Surnames, the people, places and their primacy. In this ground-breaking series you will read for the first time about the original holders of many surnames used today. Volume One takes the reader on an evidenced, onomastic and historical journey by presenting anContinue reading “Coming Soon: Dictionary of Surnames…”

JUST IN: Updated edition of Issue # 6 with MORE evidence of Foundational Black Irish Culture…

See the comparable Irish stone akin to the Nok terracotta figure shown here. See St Ciaran’s image for the first time who was historically described as The Black One…and so much more. https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B09RBJBTQG?ref_=dbs_m_mng_rwt_calw_thcv_2&storeType=ebooks&qid=1736106741&sr=8-1 Brought to you by the Missing Faces In Teaching.

Research methodologies of onomastics and phenomenology evidence that John Brown was indigenous to the land…

Meanwhile, Dorset Museum continue to claim that he was a ‘slave’. Watch the powerful evidence introduced in Dr Charles’s presentation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RljasPkLqBY&t=1004s Brought to you by the Missing Faces In Teaching.

FBBs From Suffolk & Their German Kinfolk. ISSUE # 18 NOW AVAILABLE…

A 6th century FBB from Suffolk with a cornrow hairstyle. Read about the FBBs of Suffolk/Sufi-folk and their German kinfolk. Issue # 18 evidences the light as a powerful illumination of the founding populations of Suffolk as the Engles/Angles of Engelland who migrated onto these shores with their kinfolk from Germany. They became the Abbots and Nuns of the region whoContinue reading “FBBs From Suffolk & Their German Kinfolk. ISSUE # 18 NOW AVAILABLE…”

MFIT ON THE MOVE…

Dedicated readers of MFIT’s Journal continue to trace through evidence, the ancient footsteps of Foundational Black Britons (FBBs). This reader is shown here in Sussex holding up issue # 15, the ancestral home of Beachy Woman and where William Conqueror fought at the battle of Hastings. Note, that Winchester (on the sign) is in Hampshire,Continue reading “MFIT ON THE MOVE…”