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Name Trail Start Here

Name Trail

Start Here

A five-minute overview for readers arriving from search, social media, classroom questions, or public-memory confusion.

Source-aware, correction-friendly, and built to separate history from viral claims.

5-minute overview

Name Trail separates occupational words, outsider labels, regional labels, endonyms, exonyms, religious and political labels, and community-memory terms. The goal is not to flatten history into one identity claim. The goal is to make each term reviewable.

Recommended reading order

  1. Read Barber vs Barbarian vs Berber.
  2. Open the Glossary and compare terms by category.
  3. Use Claims and Myths when a statement sounds viral or too certain.
  4. Go deeper at CultureUP.us, TheFoundationsOf.us, or MoorOfUS.org only after the term lane is clear.

I arrived from a claim about Moors, Berbers, Black identity, or Muur language

  1. Start with Are Berbers Moors?.
  2. Read Are Moors Black?.
  3. Read Mauri, Mauretania, Morocco, and Moor.
  4. Read Moorish America, Muur Language, and Evidence Labels.
  5. Check the glossary and claims pages.

Evidence label legend

Established evidence Scholarly interpretation Popular narrative Community memory Needs source review

Do not collapse these terms

Do not turn a similar-looking word into ancestry proof, ethnic proof, legal-status proof, DNA proof, spiritual proof, or membership proof. A name can be evidence, memory, classification, translation, insult, geography, occupation, or community language depending on the source.

Where to go deeper

Name Trail is useful on its own, then routes readers into the deeper ecosystem with clearer purpose.

Public Memory & Culture

CultureUP.us

Follow how language, archives, media, music, institutions, and Black American public memory shape what communities remember.

Best for: public memory, language and culture, archives, Black American cultural context, media/source trails

Foundations, Muur & Place-Based Learning

TheFoundationsOf.us

Study foundations, Muur history, ancestral memory, place-based research, safe sharing, and correction-aware community learning.

Best for: Muur learning, Foundational Black American context, community research, place-based memory, safe participation

Evidence-First Moor History

MoorOfUS.org

Study Moorish history through timelines, glossary terms, sources, people, places, and myth-vs-history claim reviews.

Best for: Moor history, al-Andalus, North Africa, claim review, evidence-first study

Have a source note or correction?

Send it through the corrections path so a source, wording boundary, or claim label can be reviewed without turning the page into an unsupported identity claim.

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