
HEBREW EMPIRE
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The Continent of Africa
Hands off our HEBREW EMPIRE.
The Hebrew Empire better known as Africa is a continent dominated by Hebrews, the people who they called Blacks, Americans and Africans. They called us everything but the Children of YHWH, God.
HEBREW YISRAELITE SOVEREIGN NATIONALISM HAS RISEN WORLDWIDE ✊🏿
Who We Are
We are an online community of Hebrews making digital (websites) for profit. Our community recognizes "BLACK people" as Hebrews. We are united in an efforts to bring about global peace and blessings. We follow YHWH only, the original Hebrew Bible, laws, statutes, and ordinances (Deut 6:4-25) to the best of our ability, as people. We measure our health, food, fitness and push toward financial development, working for our overall well-being on earth.
What We Do
We work as a community group to develop Hebrew assets and holdings via our websites. We teach, practice, and follow YAHs Torah laws, statutes, and ordinances whom we recognize as the "Most High" God of our ancestors! - Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. We choose to follow and obey YHWH alone through our actions, culture and style of worship, not by faith but by his spirit who gives us breath and life.
Great Zimbabwe
Great Zimbabwe was a city in the south-eastern hills of the modern country of Zimbabwe, near Masvingo. It was settled from around 1000 CE, and served as the capital of the Kingdom of Great Zimbabwe from the 13th century. It is the largest stone structure in precolonial Southern Africa. Major construction on the city began in the 11th century until the 15th century, and it was abandoned in the 16th or 17th century.[1][2][3] The edifices were erected by ancestors of the Shona people, currently located in Zimbabwe and nearby countries.[4] The stone city spans an area of 7.22 square kilometres (2.79 mi2) and could have housed up to 18,000 people at its peak, giving it a population density of approximately 2,500 inhabitants per square kilometre (6,500/sq mi). The Zimbabwe state centred on it likely covered 50,000 km² (19,000 sq mi).[3] It is recognised as a World Heritage Site by UNESCO.
The site of Great Zimbabwe is composed of the Hill Complex, the Valley Complex, and the Great Enclosure (constructed at different times), and contained area for commoner housing within the perimeter walls. There is disagreement on the functions of the complexes among scholars. Some consider them to have been residences for the royals and elites at different periods of the site, while others infer them to have had separate functions. The Great Enclosure, with its 11 m (36 ft) high dry stone walls (that is, constructed without mortar), was built during the 13th and 14th centuries, and likely served as the royal residence, with demarcated public spaces for rituals.[3]
The earliest document mentioning the Great Zimbabwe ruins was in 1531 by Vicente Pegado, captain of the Portuguese garrison of Sofala on the coast of modern-day Mozambique, who recorded it as Symbaoe. The first confirmed visits by Europeans were in the late 19th century, with investigations of the site starting in 1871.[5] Great Zimbabwe and surrounding sites were looted by European antiquarians between the 1890s and 1920s. Some later studies of the monument were controversial, as the white government of Rhodesia pressured archaeologists to deny its construction by black Africans. Its African origin only became consensus by the 1950s. Great Zimbabwe has since been adopted as a national monument by the Zimbabwean government, and the modern independent state was named after it.
The word great distinguishes the site from the many smaller ruins, known as "zimbabwes", spread across the Zimbabwe Highveld.[6] There are around 200 such sites in Southern Africa, such as Bumbusi in Zimbabwe and Manyikeni in Mozambique, with monumental, mortarless walls.[7]





Where is Zimbabwe
Zimbabwe is found on the continent of Africa.....

Where is Zimbabwe?
Zimbabwe lies between the Limpopo and Zambezi rivers in south central Africa. It is bounded by Zambia (797km) in the north and northwest, by South Africa (225km) in the south by Mozambique(1 231km) in the east and north-east, and by Botswana (813km)in the south-west. It has no coastline and is totally landlocked.
North of the Tropic of Capricorn...
The country, part of the great plateau that is a major feature of the geography of southern Africa, lies at 20 00south, 30 00east, wholly to the north of the Tropic of Capricorn. Zimbabwe covers a total area of 390 580 sq km or 150 674 square miles.

Zimbabwe is roughly three times the size of England or slightly larger that Montana
The terrain of mostly high plateau with higher central plateau (high veld) mountains in the east of the country. The lowest point is the junction of the Runde and Save rivers at 162m and the highest is Mount Inyangai at 2 592m.
It has a wonderful tropical climate, moderated by altitude. The rainy season is November to March.
What can be found in this wonderful country?
Many natural resources including gold...
The natural resources in Zimbabwe are vast and these include coal, gold chromium ore, asbestos, nickel, copper, iron ore, vanadium, lithium, tin, platinum group of metals.
Home - To One of the Seven Natural Wonders of the World...
Victoria Falls is one of the seven wonders of the world, stretching 1.7 kilometres wide and shared by the countries of Zambia and Zimbabwe. The falls are formed as the full width of the Zambezi River plummets into a 108 metre high cleft. During the wet season, the spray from the falls can be seen nearly 50 kilometres away, hence the name Mosi-oa-Tunya (the ‘Smoke that Thunders’).
The falls drop into a deep, narrow chasm, which is connected to a long series of gorges. This unique form allows the falls to be viewed face-on 60 metres away from the opposite side of the gorges.

Victoria Falls:
Home - To Lake Kariba A Man Made Lake spread over more that 5 000sq km...
Before 1950 when Lake Kariba was built, Zimbabwe had no great body of water. Not in its Savannah plains, filled with elephant and lion.
Nor any in its sweltering, humid lowlands and none on the fertile highveld soils that covered the staggering mineral riches buried deep beneath. Among its craggy peaks and hidden valleys were only thundering, cascading falls and streams.
Water was there in abundance but no lake or sea, Indeed there was the mighty Zambezi river which probed the rock faults and fissures of its ancient bed it carved out eight successive precipices to form one of the greatest physical spectacles in Africa - The Victoria Falls.
So during the 1950, upstream from a deep gorge, half a kilometre wide, in the north-east corner of the Zambezi Valley, many hundred toiled and eighty-seven died to build the Kariba dam. Now, where once there was only a narrow river gorge, the cool waters of a new great African lake spread out over more than 5 000 square kilometres of once parched earth.
Lake Kariba stretching almost 300 kilometres from south-west to north-east and more than forty kilometres across its widest north-south axis was the final brush stoke that transformed Zimbabwe into a land of incredible beauty.