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Libu

 
Hoover's Profile: Liberty Group Limited
(Johannesburg:LIBU)
Contact Information
Liberty Group Limited
1 Ameshoff St., Braamfontein
Johannesburg 2001, South Africa
Tel. +27-11-408-3911
Fax +27-11-408-2109

Type: Public
On the web: http://www.liberty.co.za

Because there is freedom in security, The Liberty Group provides clients with life, health, and disability insurance. The company also offers a range of investment advice and products. The Liberty Group sells individual and group insurance policies and investment products in South Africa and Namibia. Business products include executive coverage and employee benefits while its individual products include accident and funeral expense plans. The firm's Liberty Group Properties unit leases and manages a portfolio of real estate holdings; its STANLIB subsidiary provides asset management services. South African banking firm Standard Bank Group owns just over 50% of the Liberty Group.

Key numbers for fiscal year ending December, 2008:
Sales: $2,430.3M
One year growth: (67.0%)
Net income: $187.2M
Income growth: (62.3%)

Officers:
Chairman: S.J. (Saki) Macozoma
Chief Executive and Director: Bruce Hemphill
Financial Director and Director: Russell Harte

Competitors:
FirstRand
Old Mutual
Sanlam

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Wikipedia: Libu
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The Libu (, R'bw, Ribou, Labu Laguatan, or Lwatae) were an ancient north African tribe, from which the name Libya derives.

Their occupation of ancient Libya is first attested in ancient Egyptian texts from the New Kingdom, especially from the Ramesside Period. The earliest occurrence is in a Ramses II inscription.[1] There were no vowels in the Egyptian script. The name Libu is written as LBW or RBW in Egyptian hieroglyphs. In the Great Karnak Inscription Merneptah describes how hostilities between Egypt and Libya broke out and how the Libyans were defeated [2]. Ramses III defeated the Libyans in the 5th year of his reign, but six years later the Libyans joined the Meshwesh and invaded the western Delta and were defeated again [3]. Libu appears as an ethnic name on the Merneptah Stele, also known as the Israel Stele[4] Afterward, the name appeared repeatedly in other pharaonic records.

This name Libu was taken over by the Greeks of Cyrenaica, who co-existed with them.[5] Geographically, the name of this tribe was adopted by the Greeks for "Cyrenaica" as well as for northwestern Africa in general. Later, the name appeared in the Hebrew language, written in the Bible as Lehabim and Lubim, indicating the ethnic population and the geographic territory as well.[citation needed]

In the neo-Punic inscriptions, Libu was written as Lby for the masculine noun, and Lbt for the feminine noun of Libyan. The name supposedly was used as an ethnic name in those inscriptions.

Laguatan was the name later Roman authors used to refer to the nomadic tribes in the Cyrenaica area.[6] They have been described as primarily raiders and nomadic,[7] but others consider them a settled group who also raided.[8]

References

  1. ^ Clark, Desmond J. (ed.) (1982) "Egypt and Libia" The Cambridge History of Africa: From the earliest times to c. 500 BC volume I, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, England, p. 919, ISBN 0-521-22215-X
  2. ^ Breasted, James H. (1906) Ancient Records of Egypt, Part Three, Chicago, §§572ff.
  3. ^ J. H. Breasted, Ancient Records of Egypt, Part Four, Chicago 1906, §§83ff.
  4. ^ [..]The vile chief of the Libu who fled under cover of night alone without a feather on his head, his feet unshod, his wives seized before his very eyes, the meal for his food taken away, and without water in the water-skin to keep him alive; the faces of his brothers are savage to kill him, his captains fighting one against the other, their camps burnt and made into ashes ... After Gardiner, Alan Henderson (1964) Egypt of the Pharaohs: an introduction Oxford University Press, London, p. 273, ISBN 0-19-500267-9
  5. ^ Fage, J. D. (ed.) (1978) "The Libyans" The Cambridge History of Africa: From c. 500 BC to AD 1050 volume II, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, England, p. 141, ISBN 0-521-21592-7
  6. ^ Wickham, Chris (2007) Framing the Early Middle Ages Oxford University Press, London, p. 333, ISBN 0-19-921296-1, citing Synesios, Correspondance, nn. 107-8, 125, 132 (aa. 405-12)
  7. ^ Sjöström, Isabella (1993) Tripolitania in Transition Avebury, Aldershot, England, p. 27, ISBN 1-85628-707-6, citing Brogan, O. (1975) "Inscriptions in the Libyan alphabet from Tripolitania and some notes on the tribes of the region" p. 282 ff. In Bynon, J. and Bynon, T. (eds.) (1975) Hamito-Semitica: Proceedings of a colloquium held by the Historical Section of the Linguistics Association (Great Britain) at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, on the 18th, 19th and 20th March 1970 Mouton, The Hague, pp. 267-289, OCLC 1884610
  8. ^ See Mattingly (1983) p. 96

Further reading

See also



 
 
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Ker (king)
Lebu
List of state leaders in 750s BC

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