- Home
- Dreadlocks
- History of Dreadlocks
- The Genesis History of Dreadlocks
The Genesis History of Dreadlocks
- By naanis naturals
- Published 10/25/2007
- History of Dreadlocks
-
Rating:




naanis naturals
naanis naturals is a hand-crafted, natural and organic beauty care line. Articles from http://naani.com are reprinted with permission and featured on FGK. Order select naani's naturals products from http://shopgrandmaskitchen.com
View all articles by naanis naturals
The Namib Desert in Namibia is considered the world's oldest desert. It
covers more than 102,248 square miles (270,000 square kilometers) of
the southwestern edge of the African continent. It also has the
distinction of having the highest sand dunes in the world. Some of them
rise to more than 1,300 feet (400 meters). Namibia, officially the
Republic of Namibia, is a country in southern Africa on the Atlantic
coast. It shares borders with Angola and Zambia to the north, Botswana
to the east, and South Africa to the south. It gained independence from
South Africa in 1990 and its capital city is Windhoek (German:
Windhuk). Namibia is a member state of the United Nations (UN), the
Southern African Development Community (SADC), the African Union (AU),
and the Commonwealth of Nations.
Finding
Afrocentric data is at best very unattainable. With agenda focus bias
history in play with any working modern history; at best you only can
work through deduction of what you have access to. Bushmen of the
region had an advanced early culture, evidenced by archaeological data.
For example, Bushmen from the Botswana region migrated south to the
Waterberg Massif in the era 10,000 to 20,000 years ago. They left rock
paintings at the Lapala Wilderness area and Goudriver recording their
life and times, including characterizations of rhinoceros, elephant and
a variety of antelope species (resembling impala, kudu and eland, all
present day inhabitants).
It is imperative to try to establish time lines for the reason to project forward. I find myself in constant rage as I try to find information on my people and read things like: “thieving and murderous, dirty, and of a low type; but their chiefs were more or less highly bred. These people seldom die natural deaths; many are killed when fighting, many are murdered, and sick persons are as a rule smothered by their relatives.” This is how a well know data source describes the animalistic savages of Africa. This coming from Criminal festered heathens who choice to enslave fellow human beings! Not to digress into a tyrant, it is safe to say that the African People who occupied the world’s oldest desert were of substance and prowess.
From the deserts of Namibia comes the Himba People. The Himba are an ethnic group of about 20,000 to 50,000 people, living in northern Namibia, in the Kunene region (formerly Kaokoland). They are a nomadic, pastoral people, closely related to the Herero, and speak the same language. Finding true historical data, again, is very difficult without bias negativity and biased opinion. With that in mind the Himba breed cattle and goats. The responsibility of milking the cows lies with the women. Women take care of the children, and one woman will take care of another woman's children. Women tend to perform more labor-intensive work than men do, such as carrying water to the village and building homes.
The Himba wear little clothing, but the women are famous for covering themselves with a mixture of butter fat, ochre, and herbs to protect themselves from the sun. The mixture gives their skins a reddish tinge. The mixture symbolizes earth's rich red color and the blood that symbolizes life. Women braid each others hair and cover it in their ochre mixture.

Looking at the style of hair this ancient culture of civilized African People, it is very noticeable of the locks/dreads they have in their hair. Today these Beautiful Black People still wear their hair in a fashion carried down from thousands of years. I personal find these Beautiful Black Queens extremely attractive. It is hard to find the beginnings of the locked hair but we, including the White world have accepted the fact that all mankind evolved from Africa. The fact that we find this hair style a negative form of expression and ugly is just another form of self hatred brought about from other communities. Those same communities that write world history in a slanted, biased, condemnatory self preserving manner. One of my absolute destinations I must visit when I take my pilgrimage to Africa.
I started my story with Namibia because I couldn’t think of a better place to start with the history of the dreadlock or the style most define as Dreadlocks. I feel compelled to bring forth this information because of a Beautiful Black Queen named Yvonne who operates as a Loctician Stylist @ Locs For Life, in Chicago. I have to admit that I didn’t give much thought to dreadlocks prior to her referring to locking your hair as a journey. Just like most stick up the butt so called educated conservative Black buppies I too had a misconception of dreadlocks. Aside from Bob Marley and my knowing the Jamaican culture adorned dreads I didn’t know much more. I wasn’t guilty of thinking that Ganja (marijuana), the herb of inspiration and dreads were one in the same as many folk do.
As a stuck up buppie, I did have the idea of dreads as being dirty tangled matted filth. I also was lulled into the belief that the style didn’t represent me or my culture. Of course every stigma, stereotype, and superficial concept of locking hair is not only far from truth but extremely degrading to our history. At the right is a young Black Boy with plait and with ozondato and ondengura neckbands, of the Himba, Namibia, Africa the photo dated: Anneliese Scherz, 1940's and you can’t help to notice the resemblance to the Pharaoh Braid worn by young Egyptian Royalty.
For ancient Egyptians, appearance was an important issue. Appearance indicated a person’s status, role in a society or political significance. Egyptian hairstyles and our hairstyles today have many things in common. Like modern hairstyles Egyptian hairstyles varied with age, gender and social status.
Children had unique hairstyles in ancient Egypt. Their hair was shaved off or cut short except for a long lock of hair left on the side of the head, the so-called side-lock of youth. This s-shaped lock was depicted by the hieroglyphic symbol of a child or youth. Both girls and boys wore this style until the onset of puberty. Young boys often shaved their heads, while young girls wore their hair in plaits or sometimes did up their hair in a ponytail style, hanging down the center of the back. Young girl dancers used to wear long thick braided ponytails. The edge of the tail was either naturally curled or was enhanced to do so. If the ponytail was not curled at the end, it was weighted down by adornments or metal discs.
Women's
hairstyles were more unique than those of men. Women generally
preferred a smooth, close coiffure, a natural wave and long curl. This
method was achieved by weaving individual strands together. This long
and tedious process was afforded to by the wealthiest. Egyptians
threaded gold tubes on each tress, or strung inlaid gold rosettes
between vertical ribs of small beads to form full head covers. If you
think getting your hair loc’ed today is time consuming and of
course costly think how long it took to take strains individually and
weave and loc with gold and beads.
The look of loc’ed hair was so desirable and regally preferred that the Egyptians chose to shave their heads and adorn wigs. In ancient Egypt, men and women used to shave their heads bald replacing their natural hair with wigs. Egyptian women did not walk around showing their bald heads, they always wore the wigs. Head shaving had a number of benefits. First, removing their hair made it much more comfortable in the hot Egyptian climate. Second, it was easy to maintain a high degree of cleanliness avoiding danger of lice infestation. Considering the timely process it took to loc hair and maintain its majesties, it was also a good reason to shave heads. This allowed others to create the desired fantastic loc’ed hair with time and care without hovering over someone’s head. In addition, people wore wigs when their natural hair was gone due to old age. However, even though the Egyptians shaved their heads, they did not think the bald look was preferable to having hair.
From Namibia to Egypt is around three
thousand plus miles. The history of Africa of which is not properly
taught in the Western world is that the cultures migrated from south to
north. Most folks don’t know that Slavery germinated from the
northern west coast of Africa. Black communities, not uncivilized
tribes, in the south were for the most part were devoid of that
horrendous savage act because it took longer for the European tribes to
find shipping lanes to the south.
Between Namibia to Egypt you will find a vast history of hair styles from braids to loc’s to hair pigment changing. Personal grooming and decoration are valued. The Dinka rub their bodies with oil made by boiling butter. They cut decorative designs into their skin. They remove some teeth for beauty and wear dung ash to repel mosquitoes. Men dye their hair red with cow urine, while women shave their hair and eyebrows, but leave a knot of hair on top of the head. The Dinka are a group of several closely related peoples living in southern Sudan along both sides of the White Nile. They cover a wide area along the many streams and small rivers, concentrated in the Upper Nile province in southeast Sudan and across into southwest Ethiopia.
From the oldest desert on the planet which would arguably then constitute the oldest culture, to the Sudan up to Egypt to the east coast of Africa the style of locking hair is very well documented. It denotes royalty and locked hair has been a symbol of a highly spiritual person who is trying to come closer to God(s). This brings me to the point of departure from the continent of Africa to the rest of the world.
New-generation Rastafarians will tell you that the culture of locked hair came, originally, from Africa, but any knowledge beyond the continent that locks came from is unknown. Where old-generation Rastafarians hold great pride in their natural hair and see it as a symbol of their fight against Babylon, non-violence, non-conformity, communalism and solidarity, and as a heavy spiritual statement, many new-generation Rastas see their dreads as a passport to smoking ganja and listening to Reggae music, not understanding the real Rastafarian culture and values.
Where Rastafarians once shunned everything from Babylon, such as soda, alcohol and cigarettes, modern Rastas are often seen smoking, wearing designer clothing, eating meat and drinking beer. Wearing your hair naturally has become more of a status symbol than a spiritual decision, and people begin locking their hair so that they are seen as conscious, afrocentric, or different, rather than for honest spiritual and conscious reasons.
Finding
Afrocentric data is at best very unattainable. With agenda focus bias
history in play with any working modern history; at best you only can
work through deduction of what you have access to. Bushmen of the
region had an advanced early culture, evidenced by archaeological data.
For example, Bushmen from the Botswana region migrated south to the
Waterberg Massif in the era 10,000 to 20,000 years ago. They left rock
paintings at the Lapala Wilderness area and Goudriver recording their
life and times, including characterizations of rhinoceros, elephant and
a variety of antelope species (resembling impala, kudu and eland, all
present day inhabitants).It is imperative to try to establish time lines for the reason to project forward. I find myself in constant rage as I try to find information on my people and read things like: “thieving and murderous, dirty, and of a low type; but their chiefs were more or less highly bred. These people seldom die natural deaths; many are killed when fighting, many are murdered, and sick persons are as a rule smothered by their relatives.” This is how a well know data source describes the animalistic savages of Africa. This coming from Criminal festered heathens who choice to enslave fellow human beings! Not to digress into a tyrant, it is safe to say that the African People who occupied the world’s oldest desert were of substance and prowess.
From the deserts of Namibia comes the Himba People. The Himba are an ethnic group of about 20,000 to 50,000 people, living in northern Namibia, in the Kunene region (formerly Kaokoland). They are a nomadic, pastoral people, closely related to the Herero, and speak the same language. Finding true historical data, again, is very difficult without bias negativity and biased opinion. With that in mind the Himba breed cattle and goats. The responsibility of milking the cows lies with the women. Women take care of the children, and one woman will take care of another woman's children. Women tend to perform more labor-intensive work than men do, such as carrying water to the village and building homes.
The Himba wear little clothing, but the women are famous for covering themselves with a mixture of butter fat, ochre, and herbs to protect themselves from the sun. The mixture gives their skins a reddish tinge. The mixture symbolizes earth's rich red color and the blood that symbolizes life. Women braid each others hair and cover it in their ochre mixture.

Looking at the style of hair this ancient culture of civilized African People, it is very noticeable of the locks/dreads they have in their hair. Today these Beautiful Black People still wear their hair in a fashion carried down from thousands of years. I personal find these Beautiful Black Queens extremely attractive. It is hard to find the beginnings of the locked hair but we, including the White world have accepted the fact that all mankind evolved from Africa. The fact that we find this hair style a negative form of expression and ugly is just another form of self hatred brought about from other communities. Those same communities that write world history in a slanted, biased, condemnatory self preserving manner. One of my absolute destinations I must visit when I take my pilgrimage to Africa.
I started my story with Namibia because I couldn’t think of a better place to start with the history of the dreadlock or the style most define as Dreadlocks. I feel compelled to bring forth this information because of a Beautiful Black Queen named Yvonne who operates as a Loctician Stylist @ Locs For Life, in Chicago. I have to admit that I didn’t give much thought to dreadlocks prior to her referring to locking your hair as a journey. Just like most stick up the butt so called educated conservative Black buppies I too had a misconception of dreadlocks. Aside from Bob Marley and my knowing the Jamaican culture adorned dreads I didn’t know much more. I wasn’t guilty of thinking that Ganja (marijuana), the herb of inspiration and dreads were one in the same as many folk do.

As a stuck up buppie, I did have the idea of dreads as being dirty tangled matted filth. I also was lulled into the belief that the style didn’t represent me or my culture. Of course every stigma, stereotype, and superficial concept of locking hair is not only far from truth but extremely degrading to our history. At the right is a young Black Boy with plait and with ozondato and ondengura neckbands, of the Himba, Namibia, Africa the photo dated: Anneliese Scherz, 1940's and you can’t help to notice the resemblance to the Pharaoh Braid worn by young Egyptian Royalty.
For ancient Egyptians, appearance was an important issue. Appearance indicated a person’s status, role in a society or political significance. Egyptian hairstyles and our hairstyles today have many things in common. Like modern hairstyles Egyptian hairstyles varied with age, gender and social status.
Children had unique hairstyles in ancient Egypt. Their hair was shaved off or cut short except for a long lock of hair left on the side of the head, the so-called side-lock of youth. This s-shaped lock was depicted by the hieroglyphic symbol of a child or youth. Both girls and boys wore this style until the onset of puberty. Young boys often shaved their heads, while young girls wore their hair in plaits or sometimes did up their hair in a ponytail style, hanging down the center of the back. Young girl dancers used to wear long thick braided ponytails. The edge of the tail was either naturally curled or was enhanced to do so. If the ponytail was not curled at the end, it was weighted down by adornments or metal discs.
Women's
hairstyles were more unique than those of men. Women generally
preferred a smooth, close coiffure, a natural wave and long curl. This
method was achieved by weaving individual strands together. This long
and tedious process was afforded to by the wealthiest. Egyptians
threaded gold tubes on each tress, or strung inlaid gold rosettes
between vertical ribs of small beads to form full head covers. If you
think getting your hair loc’ed today is time consuming and of
course costly think how long it took to take strains individually and
weave and loc with gold and beads.The look of loc’ed hair was so desirable and regally preferred that the Egyptians chose to shave their heads and adorn wigs. In ancient Egypt, men and women used to shave their heads bald replacing their natural hair with wigs. Egyptian women did not walk around showing their bald heads, they always wore the wigs. Head shaving had a number of benefits. First, removing their hair made it much more comfortable in the hot Egyptian climate. Second, it was easy to maintain a high degree of cleanliness avoiding danger of lice infestation. Considering the timely process it took to loc hair and maintain its majesties, it was also a good reason to shave heads. This allowed others to create the desired fantastic loc’ed hair with time and care without hovering over someone’s head. In addition, people wore wigs when their natural hair was gone due to old age. However, even though the Egyptians shaved their heads, they did not think the bald look was preferable to having hair.
From Namibia to Egypt is around three
thousand plus miles. The history of Africa of which is not properly
taught in the Western world is that the cultures migrated from south to
north. Most folks don’t know that Slavery germinated from the
northern west coast of Africa. Black communities, not uncivilized
tribes, in the south were for the most part were devoid of that
horrendous savage act because it took longer for the European tribes to
find shipping lanes to the south.Between Namibia to Egypt you will find a vast history of hair styles from braids to loc’s to hair pigment changing. Personal grooming and decoration are valued. The Dinka rub their bodies with oil made by boiling butter. They cut decorative designs into their skin. They remove some teeth for beauty and wear dung ash to repel mosquitoes. Men dye their hair red with cow urine, while women shave their hair and eyebrows, but leave a knot of hair on top of the head. The Dinka are a group of several closely related peoples living in southern Sudan along both sides of the White Nile. They cover a wide area along the many streams and small rivers, concentrated in the Upper Nile province in southeast Sudan and across into southwest Ethiopia.
From the oldest desert on the planet which would arguably then constitute the oldest culture, to the Sudan up to Egypt to the east coast of Africa the style of locking hair is very well documented. It denotes royalty and locked hair has been a symbol of a highly spiritual person who is trying to come closer to God(s). This brings me to the point of departure from the continent of Africa to the rest of the world.
New-generation Rastafarians will tell you that the culture of locked hair came, originally, from Africa, but any knowledge beyond the continent that locks came from is unknown. Where old-generation Rastafarians hold great pride in their natural hair and see it as a symbol of their fight against Babylon, non-violence, non-conformity, communalism and solidarity, and as a heavy spiritual statement, many new-generation Rastas see their dreads as a passport to smoking ganja and listening to Reggae music, not understanding the real Rastafarian culture and values.
Where Rastafarians once shunned everything from Babylon, such as soda, alcohol and cigarettes, modern Rastas are often seen smoking, wearing designer clothing, eating meat and drinking beer. Wearing your hair naturally has become more of a status symbol than a spiritual decision, and people begin locking their hair so that they are seen as conscious, afrocentric, or different, rather than for honest spiritual and conscious reasons.
Share this Article
Comments
Comment #1 (Posted by dennis)
Rating:








great article...it clarified quite a few things for me...







