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| #Post#: 2140-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Yandi vs Huangdi myth confirmed | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: November 11, 2020, 10:31 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| OLD CONTENT | |
| phys.org/news/2020-05-ancient-dna-unveils-important-piece.html | |
| [quote]Newly released genomes from Neolithic East Asia have | |
| unveiled a missing piece of human prehistory, according to a | |
| study conducted by Prof. Fu Qiaomei's team from the Institute of | |
| Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology (IVPP) of the | |
| Chinese Academy of Sciences. | |
| ... | |
| The scientists also found that Early Neolithic East Asians were | |
| more genetically differentiated from each other than present-day | |
| East Asians are. In early Neolithic East Asia since 9,500 BP, a | |
| northern ancestry existed along the Yellow River and up into the | |
| eastern steppes of Siberia, distinct from a southern ancestry | |
| that existed along the coast of the southern Chinese mainland | |
| and islands in the Taiwan Strait since 8,400 BP.[/quote] | |
| I told you Huangdi was: | |
| 1) not Shennongshi | |
| 2) Turanian | |
| [quote]Population movement may have already started impacting | |
| East Asians by the Late Neolithic. For example, the Late | |
| Neolithic southern East Asians may have shared a connection to | |
| coastal northern East Asians and the former's ancestry may have | |
| extended north as well.[/quote] | |
| Yes, because while most of the best arable land in China is in | |
| the south, there is also some in the northeast, so Aryan | |
| diffusion to the northeast via a sea route would have been | |
| sensible: | |
| https://2.bp.blogspot.com/-Iro-RuFyUi0/VTRKLBDFpzI/AAAAAAAAAUw/g9MsuKO5xcs/w120… | |
| (This would be consistent with, thousands of years later, the | |
| superiority of the (coastal northern origin) Qing dynasty | |
| compared to the (inland northern origin) Yuan dynasty.) | |
| The North-South racial soul divergence also emerges in art: | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_School | |
| [quote]According to William Watson, while the Northern School | |
| contains "the painters who favour clear, emphatic structure in | |
| their compositions, with the use of explicit perspective | |
| devices", the Southern School "cultivate a more intimate style | |
| of landscape bathed in cloud and mist, in which pleasing | |
| calligraphic forms tend to take the place of conventions | |
| established for the representation of rocks, trees, etc. The | |
| painter of the Southern School was interested in distant | |
| effects, but his colleague of the Northern School paid more | |
| attention to the devices of composition which achieve the | |
| illusion of recession, and at the same time more attentive to | |
| close realism of detail. ... some artists hover between the | |
| two".[3] A more philosophical distinction is that the Southern | |
| School painters "were thought to have sought the inner realities | |
| and expressed their own lofty natures" while the Northern | |
| "painted only the outward appearance of things, the worldly and | |
| decorative".[4][/quote] | |
| #Post#: 2141-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Yandi vs Huangdi myth confirmed | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: November 11, 2020, 10:37 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Latest: | |
| https://lifestyle.inquirer.net/374225/neolithic-escalon-man-discovered-in-surig… | |
| [quote]�The Escalon Man significantly provides human skeletal | |
| evidence of the Austronesians whose amazing navigation feat | |
| based on indigenous knowledge of astronomy using wooden | |
| outriggered boats in coming and going led to the peopling of the | |
| Philippines, Island Southeast Asia, all the way to Polynesia,� | |
| he added. | |
| ... | |
| Agriculturist | |
| Results from radiocarbon and mitochondrial DNA analyses, | |
| according to the researchers, �indicated that the Escalon Man | |
| belongs to the haplogroup E1a1a, which is known to be the marker | |
| of Austronesian-speaking agriculturist populations that | |
| originated in Taiwan and spread southward through the | |
| Philippines to the Western Pacific, since about 4000 BP.� | |
| They said this type is less diverse in the Philippines and in | |
| the Sulawesi Islands, which suggests its movement during the | |
| postglacial period. | |
| The study also indicated that the Escalon Man is taller than the | |
| Aeta, Mamanwa and Negrito people who arrived in the country | |
| during the late Paleolithic area, which is about 50,000 to | |
| 10,000 years ago. | |
| It also noted that the Escalon Man is a farmer and not a | |
| hunter-gatherer and theorized it to be the ancestors of Mindanao | |
| groups, notably the Manobo.[/quote] | |
| I told you so. | |
| #Post#: 7144-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Yandi vs Huangdi myth confirmed | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: June 14, 2021, 2:57 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| https://www.artnews.com/art-news/news/neolithic-cabin-fragments-discovered-chin… | |
| [quote]Fragments of 4,500-Year-Old Neolithic Cabin Discovered in | |
| Southwest China | |
| ... | |
| The carbonized bamboo fragments may have once belonged to a | |
| house from the Baodun culture (2700 B.C.E.�1700 B.C.E.), a | |
| Neolithic settlement in the Yangtze River area. Because Baodun | |
| is the earliest known mass settlement on the Chendu Plain, it | |
| has been a source of fascination among Chinese archaeologists, | |
| who believe it challenges the long-held notion that the Yellow | |
| River Valley was the sole origin of ancient civilization in the | |
| country. Past research has shown that inhabitants grew rice and | |
| foxtail millet, and were responsible for the earliest known form | |
| of rice cultivation on the Chengdu Plain. | |
| Baodun houses were constructed using the wattle-and-daub method, | |
| which involves wooden frames and earthen walls. In this case, | |
| however, the frames were bamboo, and the walls were made from | |
| mud. Tang Miao, deputy head of the Baodun Project, told ECNS | |
| that �the discovery has directly proved the existence of the | |
| bamboo-mud wall.�[/quote] | |
| For reference, bamboo habitat worldwide: | |
| https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Manal-Anis/publication/333531438/figure/fi… | |
| #Post#: 12889-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Yandi vs Huangdi myth confirmed | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: April 18, 2022, 9:15 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| https://www.yahoo.com/news/quest-save-cantonese-world-dominated-123003051.html | |
| [quote]As efforts began to save Cantonese at Stanford, the | |
| language remained under threat worldwide. | |
| It is being swamped by Mandarin, the official language of more | |
| than 1 billion people in China and Taiwan � as different from | |
| Cantonese as Spanish is from French. | |
| ... | |
| Mandarin�s four tones are enough to flummox English speakers. | |
| For example, depending on the inflection, "ma" can mean | |
| "mother," "numb," "horse" or "yell at." | |
| With nine tones, Cantonese is even more challenging to learn. | |
| Scholars say it is closer to ancient Chinese than Mandarin is � | |
| a Tang Dynasty poem would sound more like the original if read | |
| in Cantonese.[/quote] | |
| This is what I have been saying all along. Mandarin is Turanized | |
| Chinese: | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Mandarin | |
| [quote]Old Mandarin or Early Mandarin was the speech of northern | |
| China during the Jurchen-ruled Jin dynasty and the Mongol-led | |
| Yuan dynasty (12th to 14th centuries).[/quote] | |
| Cantonese is Aryan Chinese: | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cantonese | |
| [quote]It is the traditional prestige variety of the Yue Chinese | |
| dialect group, which has over 80 million native speakers.[1] | |
| While the term Cantonese specifically refers to the prestige | |
| variety, it is often used to refer to the entire Yue subgroup of | |
| Chinese[/quote] | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prestige_(sociolinguistics) | |
| [quote]Prestige varieties are language or dialect families which | |
| are generally considered by a society to be the most "correct" | |
| or otherwise superior.[/quote] | |
| Related: | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/questions-debates/chinese-question/msg12527/#… | |
| [quote]Northern Chinese are a mix of early Han, Turkic peoples, | |
| Mongols, Koreans, Tibetans and some other mostly nomadic tribes | |
| which disappeared into the Han melting pot. | |
| Southern Chinese were not nomadic, lived in a more mountainous | |
| region, and were mostly involved in rice cultivation. | |
| ... | |
| Stronger alcohol drinking culture: The Chinese from Northeast | |
| China (Jilin, Heilongjiang, Liaoning) especially like to drink a | |
| lot alcoholic drinks like the Russians or the Koreans do. | |
| Heavier and more robust food: Compared to Chinese food from | |
| Southern China, Chinese food from Northern China tends to be | |
| greasier, heavier on the stomach, saltier, and more robust in | |
| flavour. More meats and less vegetables are featured on Northern | |
| Chinese food. | |
| ... | |
| Stronger tea drinking culture: Southern Chinese people, | |
| especially Chinese people from Chaozhou region of China and | |
| Fujian region of China, tend to drink a lot more tea than | |
| Northern Chinese people. Chinese statistic said that Chinese | |
| people from Chaozhou region of China consume the most tea per | |
| capita compared to the other Chinese from other regions of | |
| China. | |
| Lighter and more delicate food: As opposed to Northern Chinese | |
| food, Southern Chinese food tends to be less greasy, lighter on | |
| the stomach, less salty, and more delicate in flavour. More | |
| vegetables are featured on Southern Chinese food because | |
| vegetables could grow better in Southern China than in Northern | |
| China.[/quote] | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/issues/china-and-united-states-relations/msg1… | |
| [quote]It has been noted that Cantonese culture is traditionally | |
| marked by a "culture of distance from Confucius" (Jyutping: | |
| Jyun5 jyu4 man4 faa3; Traditional Chinese: | |
| 遠儒文化, literally "culture of distance | |
| from Confucius"),[49] which may be related to Lingnan | |
| historically being a fringe region of the Chinese Empire and | |
| influence from Tang dynasty (who placed greater emphasis on | |
| Taoism and Buddhism than Confucianism): While Confucian | |
| philosophy still has its deep influence on Cantonese culture, | |
| Confucius Temples are harder to find in Lingnan than Buddhist or | |
| Taoist ones.[/quote] | |
| #Post#: 12892-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Yandi vs Huangdi myth confirmed | |
| By: rp Date: April 18, 2022, 11:47 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I was just thinking about how remarkable the differences were | |
| between Cantonese and Mandarin are yesterday after watching | |
| Ip-Man, and here I see this article on twitter today. After | |
| watching the film, I felt that Cantonese represented a more | |
| "authentic" side of China not usually known to those living in | |
| the West. Add to this the fact that Westerners' first choice of | |
| dialect is Mandarin when attempting to show off their | |
| "Chinese-ness". Seriously, go on youtube and you will find tons | |
| of "Whites" (including Jews) showing off their Mandarin in an | |
| attempt to pass off as "experts" in Chinese culture. | |
| However, regarding the article, I do not like the way they | |
| worded it using preservationist language. Or would you make an | |
| exception for this language? | |
| More importantly, I recall on Aryanism you mentioned we should | |
| not be linguistic supremacists, or would you make an exception | |
| in this case since the original speakers are identifiably | |
| Turanian? | |
| #Post#: 12893-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Yandi vs Huangdi myth confirmed | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: April 19, 2022, 12:04 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| "I do not like the way they worded it using preservationist | |
| language." | |
| Neither do I. Which is why I didn't quote those parts. | |
| "I recall on Aryanism you mentioned we should not be linguistic | |
| supremacists" | |
| I mean we shouldn't claim that one language family is superior | |
| to all others: | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Language_family | |
| We should, however, compare between different lineages within | |
| the same language family, as was also done here, for example: | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/true-left-vs-false-left/true-left-breakthroug… | |
| This is no different than our racial attitude of never claiming | |
| one ethnicity to be superior to all others, but judging | |
| superiority and inferiority of bloodlines within each ethnicity. | |
| (In both domains, anti-Turanian attitudes are encouraged.) | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/true-left-vs-false-left/true-left-breakthroug… | |
| "Ip-Man" | |
| The problem with Ip Man 1 is that it makes it appear as though | |
| Chinese nationalism requires being anti-Japanese, which is | |
| stupid. I prefer Ip Man 2 which concentrates on anti-British | |
| sentiment. In tackling the issue of Japan: | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fearless_(2006_film) | |
| is more to my liking as it makes it clear that anti-Western | |
| Japanese are fine, and it is solely pro-Western Japanese who are | |
| the problem. | |
| #Post#: 12897-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Yandi vs Huangdi myth confirmed | |
| By: rp Date: April 19, 2022, 2:45 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| "The problem with Ip Man 1 is that it makes it appear as though | |
| Chinese nationalism requires being anti-Japanese" | |
| I agree. Only the first half on the film was good because it | |
| avoided the anti-Japanese theme and the main villain was a | |
| Northerner. It even took a slight jab at the Westernized | |
| (progressivist) attitudes prevalent in China at that time. In | |
| one scene, for example, the police officer Captain Li says "why | |
| are you guys still talking about Kung Fu? Nowadays, it's all | |
| about guns!". | |
| #Post#: 15731-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Yandi vs Huangdi myth confirmed | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: September 19, 2022, 8:39 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202208/1274300.shtml | |
| [quote]Hemudu Culture: Ancient farmers who enjoyed peace and | |
| bounty | |
| Stretching along the lower reaches of the Yangtze River, the | |
| Hemudu Culture dates back to the Neolithic Period 7,000 years | |
| ago. The culture gained its name from where it was first | |
| discovered - Hemudu in Yuyao, East China's Zhejiang Province. | |
| In the documents recorded and preserved in the Hemudu Cultural | |
| Site Museum in Zhejiang, archaeologists described the culture as | |
| "ancestors who knew how to enjoy their lives." | |
| Archaeologists believe that the people of Hemudu lived a rather | |
| peaceful and comfortable life as no signs of fierce conflicts or | |
| lack of food were found during the excavation. | |
| "These ancestors from 7,000 years ago already knew how to live | |
| an exquisite life along the Yangtze River," researchers wrote in | |
| the Hemudu Culture Catalog collected in the museum in Yuyao. | |
| "They were a group who desired sun and sky, without worrying | |
| about food or war." | |
| ... | |
| It overturned the traditional view of "Yellow River Centralism," | |
| the idea that ancient Chinese civilization mainly radiated out | |
| from its center around the Yellow River. Instead, a large and | |
| mature culture was discovered along another major river, opening | |
| a window to the Neolithic history of southern China.[/quote] | |
| #Post#: 17307-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Yandi vs Huangdi myth confirmed | |
| By: SirGalahad Date: December 30, 2022, 6:04 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| @90sRetroFan Is it possible that the Shennongshi were | |
| non-Chinese, both ethnically and linguistically? Would you | |
| personally describe them as non-Chinese? The Aryan Diffusion | |
| series mentions the southern Yue being superior to the northern | |
| Huaxia/Han, but as far as I can tell, the Yue only became | |
| Chinese after the Han assimilated them. From this angle, it | |
| would make more sense to call the historical Yue Vietnamese | |
| ("Yue" and "Viet" are cognates after all, and the Vietnamese | |
| also happen to consider "Thần N�ng" one of their ancestors | |
| and culture founders), than it would be to call them Chinese. | |
| Labeling them as Vietnamese would be a massive | |
| oversimplification since the Hundred Yue appear to have been | |
| pretty diverse ethnically, linguistically, and even racially | |
| (the Yue are described as barbarian animists on the one hand and | |
| peaceful rice farmers on the other), but it's just for the sake | |
| of argument. | |
| I just wish that there was more clarification on the specific | |
| identity of the Shennongshi, because even though ethnicity and | |
| language mean very little to us, it gets kind of confusing the | |
| more I look into the topic. And it might be even more confusing | |
| for the average Joe who stumbles upon our website. Shennong is | |
| labeled as a mythical Chinese leader in pretty much every | |
| article about him that I can find online, and part 2 of our | |
| Aryan Diffusion series centers itself around China, but that | |
| might not necessarily be the case. What are your thoughts on the | |
| issue? I think that the article about Aryan diffusion into | |
| Europe does a good job of clarifying that all Aryan influence in | |
| Europe ultimately derives from Anatolia, even though "Anatolian" | |
| isn't very specific either, so it has its own issues. It's just | |
| that the article on China seems to have less clarification | |
| #Post#: 17310-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Yandi vs Huangdi myth confirmed | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: December 30, 2022, 8:32 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| "Is it possible that the Shennongshi were non-Chinese, both | |
| ethnically and linguistically?" | |
| Strictly speaking, no one was Chinese prior to the Qin dynasty | |
| which standardized the Chinese language. | |
| "Would you personally describe them as non-Chinese?" | |
| No, I want them to consider the Huaxia as less Chinese than | |
| themselves. | |
| "Yue only became Chinese after the Han assimilated them." | |
| Qin had already expanded into Yue: | |
| https://mediakron.bc.edu/files/globalart/styles/full/public/globalart_E0Shq4.jpg | |
| but Qin and Han were ideologically opposed (anti-Confucianist vs | |
| pro-Confucianist), and residual discomfort with Han culture | |
| remained in former Yue territories even after the Han dynasty, | |
| as mentioned here: | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/mythical-world/yandi-vs-huangdi-myth-confirme… | |
| [quote]It has been noted that Cantonese culture is traditionally | |
| marked by a "culture of distance from Confucius" (Jyutping: | |
| Jyun5 jyu4 man4 faa3; Traditional Chinese: | |
| 遠儒文化, literally "culture of distance | |
| from Confucius"),[49] which may be related to Lingnan | |
| historically being a fringe region of the Chinese Empire and | |
| influence from Tang dynasty (who placed greater emphasis on | |
| Taoism and Buddhism than Confucianism): While Confucian | |
| philosophy still has its deep influence on Cantonese culture, | |
| Confucius Temples are harder to find in Lingnan than Buddhist or | |
| Taoist ones.[/quote] | |
| so it could be argued that Yue is a more valid successor to Qin | |
| (and hence China) than Han ever was. | |
| 'it would make more sense to call the historical Yue Vietnamese | |
| ("Yue" and "Viet" are cognates after all," | |
| "Vietnam" literally means "South of Yue". Saying the Yue were | |
| Vietnamese would be saying they were south of themselves, which | |
| makes no sense. I agree, however, that Yue should feel closer to | |
| Vietnamese than to Han (let alone the further Turanized versions | |
| after the Yuan dynasty!). | |
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5NNPaJF2_7Q | |
| "Shennong is labeled as a mythical Chinese leader" | |
| I do not have a problem with this. It is the more Turanized | |
| whose Chineseness should be more suspect, considering that the | |
| categorical Qin conception of China was to infrastructurally | |
| incorporate the Yue (hence the Lingqu): | |
| https://d3i71xaburhd42.cloudfront.net/19fb88385d86138bafaee13ab09ee4ea21a27907/… | |
| but exclude the Xiongnu (hence the Great Wall): | |
| https://i.pinimg.com/originals/9f/02/be/9f02be0efac299f4afdf28a5ee120723.jpg | |
| It was only the Han who disliked the Yue: | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baiyue#Culture | |
| [quote]The Han also said their language was "animal | |
| shrieking"[/quote] | |
| Nothing has changed, by the way: | |
| https://finance.yahoo.com/news/chinas-version-tiktok-reportedly-judges-09071944… | |
| [quote]China�s version of TikTok reportedly judges Cantonese | |
| �unrecognizable�[/quote] | |
| ;D | |
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