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| #Post#: 3857-------------------------------------------------- | |
| New Trojan myth confirmed | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: January 30, 2021, 11:53 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| OLD CONTENT | |
| I told you so: | |
| www.nhm.ac.uk/discover/news/2019/april/neolithic-britain-where-d | |
| id-the-first-farmers-come-from.html | |
| [quote]The southern route | |
| The intrigue doesn't stop there. When the original Neolithic | |
| farmers left the Aegean and began spreading out across Europe, | |
| the population very quickly split into two rough groups that | |
| developed slightly different cultures. | |
| One of these went north along the Danube and mixed with the | |
| hunter-gatherer populations of Central Europe, while the other | |
| took a more southerly route along the Mediterranean before | |
| reaching Iberia. | |
| While we know that the hunter-gatherers of Britain share close | |
| ties with those from Scandinavia, the Neolithic culture shows a | |
| mix of both these Central European and Mediterranean traditions. | |
| It is difficult to fully understand where the Neolithic farmers | |
| came from. | |
| While it might make more sense for them to have crossed over | |
| from Central Europe group, the genetics show that the new influx | |
| of Neolithic farmers came instead from the Iberian contingent | |
| that travelled first along the Mediterranean and then up the | |
| Atlantic coast. | |
| 'To some extent, this is quite surprising,' says Tom. | |
| 'Culturally the Neolithic Britons looks like a mix, but | |
| genetically they are very much more Iberian and Mediterranean | |
| then they are central European.[/quote] | |
| It is not surprising. There was no location corresponding to | |
| Britain in the Aesir myths. The Brutus expedition is what | |
| accounts for Britain, which followed exactly the route described | |
| above. | |
| --- | |
| www.nationalgeographic.com/history/magazine/2020/05-06/face-7500 | |
| -year-old-woman-reveals-gibraltar-earliest-humans/ | |
| [quote]The skull�s age remained a mystery for many years. In | |
| 2019 the results of a landmark study proved through DNA analysis | |
| that it belonged to a woman who lived 7,500 years ago, making it | |
| the oldest remnant of a modern female woman found in Gibraltar | |
| to date. | |
| Analysis also revealed that the skull�s genetic ancestry lay far | |
| east of the Iberian Peninsula. The presence of genes from across | |
| the Mediterranean gave archaeologists new clues about how | |
| ancient humans traveled when agriculture was spreading through | |
| Europe. | |
| ... | |
| The results told the researchers a great deal: The skull | |
| belonged to a woman who lived around 5400 B.C.�many millennia | |
| after the Neanderthals of Gibraltar had become extinct. She was | |
| slightly built, light-skinned, with dark hair and eyes. She was | |
| also lactose intolerant (a common trait for that period). | |
| Dated to 7,500 years ago, Calpeia�s life corresponds to the | |
| later Neolithic period. She lived at a time when agriculture and | |
| raising livestock were spreading across the Iberian Peninsula, | |
| displacing the old hunter-gatherer model. Her lactose | |
| intolerance indicates that dairy farming was most likely not | |
| part of her culture. | |
| ... | |
| Researchers were most excited about what DNA revealed about | |
| Calpeia�s ancestry. Only 10 percent of Calpeia�s genome comes | |
| from the population found in the Iberian Peninsula, while the | |
| remaining 90 percent has its origin in Anatolia, modern-day | |
| Turkey.[/quote] | |
| #Post#: 5760-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Skara Brae: Orkney�s Neolithic Heart | |
| By: guest5 Date: April 22, 2021, 8:37 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Skara Brae: Orkney�s Neolithic Heart | |
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GgWJSbdb4kI | |
| #Post#: 8591-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: New Trojan myth confirmed | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: September 4, 2021, 11:45 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I told you so: | |
| https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/an-ancient-monument-associated-with-K… | |
| [quote]Arthur�s Stone dates to around 3700 B.C.E., making it a | |
| millennium older than Stonehenge, which was constructed around | |
| 2500 B.C.E. | |
| ... | |
| The number of Neolithic features present in the landscape | |
| surrounding Arthur�s Stone indicate �that this was a place that | |
| people came to for gatherings, meetings [and] feasting � and a | |
| place that retained its significance for centuries,� as Thomas | |
| tells Live Science�s Tom Metcalfe. | |
| ... | |
| Researchers identified two distinct phases in Arthur�s Stone�s | |
| construction. Initially, reports Current Archaeology, the | |
| hilltop tomb consisted of a long mound of stacked turf that | |
| pointed southwest, toward Dorstone Hill. It was surrounded by a | |
| palisade of wooden posts that eventually decayed, leading the | |
| mound to collapse. | |
| After the first mound fell, Neolithic people rebuilt it with a | |
| larger avenue of post pillars, two rock chambers and an upright | |
| stone. These later posts faced the southeast rather than the | |
| southwest.[/quote] | |
| Back when almost everyone else was saying Camelot was after the | |
| fall of Rome, I was saying it was from the Neolithic era, | |
| because Giants were among Arthur's opponents: | |
| [quote]Another origin story claims that Arthur killed a giant, | |
| whose elbows left impressions in the soil as he fell, at the | |
| site.[/quote] | |
| (And yes, I still believe Arthur and Grendel are the same | |
| person.) | |
| See also: | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/mythical-world/stonehenge-and-the-neolithic/ | |
| #Post#: 8995-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Neolithic Britain | Ancient History Documentary (4000 - 2500 BC) | |
| By: guest55 Date: September 23, 2021, 1:56 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Neolithic Britain | Ancient History Documentary (4000 - 2500 BC) | |
| [quote]The entire history of Neolithic Britain and Ireland from | |
| the migration and rise of the first farmers to the fall of their | |
| civilisation. | |
| Who were the first farmers of the British Isles? Where did they | |
| come from and why did they migrate to these islands? | |
| And why did they build all those incredible megalithic monuments | |
| that we see in the landscape today? | |
| This documentary covers the history of the Neolithic in Britain | |
| from around 4000 BC to the arrival of the Bell Beaker people in | |
| about 2500 BC. | |
| We will look at the first farmers of Europe and their migrations | |
| across the continent, as well as their interactions with the | |
| Mesolithic Western Hunter Gatherers who were already there. | |
| And we will dispel some of the biggest popular misconceptions | |
| about these amazing people. [/quote] | |
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZuZLxWvv5vg | |
| #Post#: 8996-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Neolithic Britain | Ancient History Documentary (4000 - 2500 | |
| BC) | |
| By: guest55 Date: September 23, 2021, 2:04 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Early farmers from across Europe directly descended from | |
| Neolithic Aegeans | |
| [quote]Significance | |
| One of the most enduring and widely debated questions in | |
| prehistoric archaeology concerns the origins of Europe�s | |
| earliest farmers: Were they the descendants of local | |
| hunter-gatherers, or did they migrate from southwestern Asia, | |
| where farming began? We recover genome-wide DNA sequences from | |
| early farmers on both the European and Asian sides of the Aegean | |
| to reveal an unbroken chain of ancestry leading from central and | |
| southwestern Europe back to Greece and northwestern Anatolia. | |
| Our study provides the coup de gr�ce to the notion that farming | |
| spread into and across Europe via the dissemination of ideas but | |
| without, or with only a limited, migration of people.[/quote] | |
| [quote]Abstract | |
| Farming and sedentism first appeared in southwestern Asia during | |
| the early Holocene and later spread to neighboring regions, | |
| including Europe, along multiple dispersal routes. Conspicuous | |
| uncertainties remain about the relative roles of migration, | |
| cultural diffusion, and admixture with local foragers in the | |
| early Neolithization of Europe. Here we present paleogenomic | |
| data for five Neolithic individuals from northern Greece and | |
| northwestern Turkey spanning the time and region of the earliest | |
| spread of farming into Europe. We use a novel approach to | |
| recalibrate raw reads and call genotypes from ancient DNA and | |
| observe striking genetic similarity both among Aegean early | |
| farmers and with those from across Europe. Our study | |
| demonstrates a direct genetic link between Mediterranean and | |
| Central European early farmers and those of Greece and Anatolia, | |
| extending the European Neolithic migratory chain all the way | |
| back to southwestern Asia.[/quote] | |
| Entire article: | |
| https://www.pnas.org/content/113/25/6886 | |
| #Post#: 9660-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: New Trojan myth confirmed | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: November 3, 2021, 10:30 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/king-arthurs-round-table | |
| [quote]King Arthur�s Round Table is actually a late Neolithic | |
| period earthwork henge that dates back to around 2000-1000 | |
| B.C.�even further than Arthurian legend.[/quote] | |
| Except according to our interpretation which places Arthurian | |
| legend in the Neolithic era! | |
| [quote]Like other Neolithic monuments, the exact purpose of the | |
| site remains unknown. Although, it is thought that it might have | |
| been the meeting place for a large prehistoric community, | |
| perhaps for trading purposes though possibly also for ritual or | |
| ceremonial use. The latter is supported by Collingwood�s | |
| findings of a cremation site within the henge.[/quote] | |
| #Post#: 14140-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: New Trojan myth confirmed | |
| By: Zea_mays Date: June 16, 2022, 11:26 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| By ~2500 BC, Turanians arrived in Britain and almost completely | |
| replaced Neolithic lineages, giving us a lower bound for when | |
| Brutus, Arthur, etc. would have been around (see figure 3): | |
| https://www.researchgate.net/publication/323916898_The_Beaker_phenomenon_and_th… | |
| Interestingly, around this same time period, Troy was destroyed, | |
| corresponding to the major Turanian migrations which were | |
| occurring: | |
| [quote]The second destruction took place around 2300 BC, as part | |
| of a crisis that affected other sites in the Eastern | |
| Mediterranean and the Middle East.[/quote] | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Troy#Troy_II | |
| Homer's Troy is believed to have existed around 1000 years | |
| later, however: | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Troy#Troy_VI-VII | |
| If we take the story of the Trojan war literally, the timing | |
| doesn't make sense for Aeneas, Brutus, or Thor to have left | |
| after Homer's Trojan war. But it does make sense if ancient | |
| authors had conflated multiple similar stories of wars and | |
| migrations over the prior thousands of years. | |
| ---- | |
| As for Aeneas's founding of the Roman lineage, some | |
| archaeological evidence suggests the Etruscans could have | |
| founded Rome or otherwise heavily influenced it. They even | |
| invented the fasces. | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Etruscan_civilization#Possible_founding_of_Rome | |
| The Etruscans continued to speak a non-Indo-European language | |
| into Roman times (and I think it makes sense to imagine it was a | |
| language brought over during the Neolithic migrations). | |
| Some genetic studies found Etruscans can trace their genetics | |
| back to the Neolithic as well: | |
| [quote]A couple of mitochondrial DNA studies, published in 2013 | |
| in the journals PLOS One and American Journal of Physical | |
| Anthropology, based on Etruscan samples from Tuscany and Latium, | |
| concluded that the Etruscans were an indigenous population, | |
| showing that Etruscans' mtDNA appear to fall very close to a | |
| Neolithic population from Central Europe (Germany, Austria, | |
| Hungary) and to other Tuscan populations, strongly suggesting | |
| that the Etruscan civilization developed locally from the | |
| Villanovan culture, as already supported by archaeological | |
| evidence and anthropological research,[13][69] and that genetic | |
| links between Tuscany and western Anatolia date back to at least | |
| 5,000 years ago during the Neolithic and the "most likely | |
| separation time between Tuscany and Western Anatolia falls | |
| around 7,600 years ago", at the time of the migrations of Early | |
| European Farmers (EEF) from Anatolia to Europe in the early | |
| Neolithic.[/quote] | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Etruscan_civilization#Genetic_research | |
| I don't recall if this was picked up in the Diffusion Series, | |
| but the Etruscan word for god is ais/eis (plural aisar/eisar). | |
| That may sound very familiar! | |
| https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Appendix:Etruscan_word_list | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aesir | |
| Some linguists have speculated Etruscan can be placed in the | |
| "Tyrsenian" language family--which seems like it would clearly | |
| be linked to Neolithic dispersal: | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tyrsenian_languages | |
| ---- | |
| Brutus, Aeneas's descendant, continued migrating to Britain, | |
| according to myths. | |
| [quote]Neolithic individuals from southern France and Britain | |
| are also significantly closer to Iberian Early Neolithic farmers | |
| than they are to central European Early Neolithic farmers (Fig. | |
| 2b), consistent with a previous analysis of a Neolithic genome | |
| from Ireland. | |
| [...] | |
| Our results suggest that a portion of the ancestry of the | |
| Neolithic populations of Britain was derived from migrants who | |
| spread along the Atlantic coast. Megalithic tombs document | |
| substantial interaction along the Atlantic fa�ade of Europe, and | |
| our results are consistent with such interactions reflecting | |
| south-to-north movements of people.[/quote] | |
| https://www.researchgate.net/publication/323916898_The_Beaker_phenomenon_and_th… | |
| Above we can also see they found evidence of seperate Danubian | |
| Basin and coastal dispersions that were known from archaeology: | |
| https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/1f/Expansion_n%C3%A9olit… | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Expansion_n%C3%A9olithique.png | |
| By ~4000 BC, they had made it to Britain (according to | |
| archaeology): | |
| https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/bc/Chronology_of_arrival… | |
| https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Chronology_of_arrival_times_of_the_Neol… | |
| But not before passing through Aquitaine/Vasconia and northern | |
| France (according to mythology and the map above). | |
| [quote]Geoffrey of Monmouth's account tells much the same story, | |
| but in greater detail.[11] | |
| [...] | |
| After some adventures in north Africa and a close encounter with | |
| the Sirens, Brutus discovers another group of exiled Trojans | |
| living on the shores of the Tyrrhenian Sea, led by the | |
| prodigious warrior Corineus. In Gaul, Corineus provokes a war | |
| with Goffarius Pictus, king of Aquitaine, after hunting in the | |
| king's forests without permission. Brutus's nephew Turonus dies | |
| in the fighting, and the city of Tours is founded where he is | |
| buried. The Trojans win most of their battles but are conscious | |
| that the Gauls have the advantage of numbers, so go back to | |
| their ships and sail for Britain, then called Albion. They land | |
| on "Totonesium litus"�"the sea-coast of Totnes". They meet the | |
| giant descendants of Albion and defeat them.[/quote] | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brutus_of_Troy#Historia_Regum_Britanniae | |
| According to genetics, the giants were defeated indeed: | |
| [quote]Unlike other European Neolithic populations, we detect no | |
| resurgence of hunter-gatherer ancestry at any time during the | |
| Neolithic in Britain. Genetic affinities with Iberian Neolithic | |
| individuals indicate that British Neolithic people were mostly | |
| descended from Aegean farmers who followed the Mediterranean | |
| route of dispersal.[/quote] | |
| https://www.nature.com/articles/s41559-019-0871-9 | |
| ---- | |
| As for southern Spain and Aquitaine/Vasconia, Greek/Roman writer | |
| Strabo reported the Tartessian people of Spain traced their | |
| history back 6000 years. Any ideas of how this region fits into | |
| mythology? (I don't think Tartessos is Atlantis, as some have | |
| proposed, since that would be the opposite direction of the | |
| Neolithic migrations.) | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tartessian_language#History | |
| From the discussion here: | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/ancient-world/the-ancient-rolemodels-of-our-e… | |
| [quote]Racially, we could speculate that Occitania had more | |
| Aryan blood than the rest of medieval Christendom in part due to | |
| absence of Viking genetic imprint, hence not coincidentally came | |
| up with the most Gnostic form of Christianity.[/quote] | |
| Correspondingly, in Al-Andalus: | |
| [quote]The Turdetani of the Roman period are generally | |
| considered the heirs of the Tartessian culture. Strabo mentions | |
| that: "The Turdetanians are ranked as the wisest of the | |
| Iberians; and they make use of an alphabet, and possess records | |
| of their ancient history, poems, and laws written in verse that | |
| are six thousand years old, as they assert."[14][/quote] | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tartessian_language#History | |
| Assuming their dating chronology is at least somewhat accurate, | |
| this could easily mean the Tartessians traced their mythological | |
| origins back to the Neolithic diffusion. (Note how some sites in | |
| Occitania are also of similar age): | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Chronology_of_arrival_times_of_the_Neolithic… | |
| The Tartessian language is a non-Indo-European language, and I | |
| would speculate it's most likely it's a remnant of the languages | |
| brought by the Neolithic diffusion. | |
| It has been hypothesized that the Basque language is the last | |
| remaining member of the "Vasconic languages". The originator of | |
| this theory suggests it is a Paleolithic language, some others | |
| have suggested it was a non-Indo-European language related to | |
| Turanian migrations, but I think it is just as likely to be | |
| Neolithic. This doesn't necessarily mean Basque culture as a | |
| whole retains more Aryan qualities than others, just that, being | |
| in an isolated backwater, the language was not replaced. | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vasconic_substrate_hypothesis | |
| However, note that the swastika is a customary symbol of the | |
| Basques, and I think I read it was also used by other | |
| "Paleohispanic" cultures. | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lauburu | |
| Sparse data has prevented the Tartessian language from being | |
| grouped under the Vasconic languages, but, again, it was among | |
| the non-Indo-European languages spoken in Spain into Roman | |
| times. | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paleohispanic_languages | |
| #Post#: 14143-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: New Trojan myth confirmed | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: June 17, 2022, 1:02 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| "the timing doesn't make sense for Aeneas, Brutus, or Thor to | |
| have left after Homer's Trojan war." | |
| In Aryan Diffusion Part 6, our position was: | |
| [quote]while the archaeological Thor and Brutus were indeed | |
| princes of Troy (as asserted by the Edda and the Historia | |
| respectively), they could not possibly have been descendants of | |
| Priam or anyone else from the Bronze Age, but should actually | |
| have predated Priam by thousands of years. The only Trojan | |
| expedition that really did migrate after the Trojan War was that | |
| of Prince Aeneas to Italy (as asserted by the Aeneid).[/quote] | |
| The difference is that Brutus' New Trojans and Thor's Aesir were | |
| respectively the first infusions of Aryan blood into Britain and | |
| Germany, whereas Aeneas' post-Trojan-War Trojans were not the | |
| first infusion of Aryan blood into Italy (where the Saturnians | |
| had already arrived much earlier). | |
| Thus I totally disregard the claim in Historia that Brutus is a | |
| descendant of Aeneas. | |
| "As for southern Spain and Aquitaine/Vasconia, Greek/Roman | |
| writer Strabo reported the Tartessian people of Spain traced | |
| their history back 6000 years. Any ideas of how this region fits | |
| into mythology?" | |
| They could be Saturnians: | |
| http://aryanism.net/wp-content/uploads/Cardial.png | |
| or even Athenians as theorized in Part 6: | |
| [quote]Libyans west of Lake Trito (�Western Libyans�) were | |
| farmers while Libyans east of Lake Trito (�Eastern Libyans�) | |
| were shepherds | |
| ... | |
| Some theories claim that Athena spent her childhood in Libya, | |
| which not only does not contradict the Byblos account (which | |
| states that Ilus knew all the Mediterranean lands) but would | |
| moreover explain Athena�s familiarity with Sicily - a sensible | |
| stop on any voyage between Tunisia and Greece. On this account, | |
| �Western Libyans� could be classified as a different branch of | |
| Athenians, possibly the branch (Almagra culture) which first | |
| spread cereals and other crops - again including the olive tree | |
| - to Andalusia, slightly predating the Saturnian (Cardial | |
| culture) arrival in East Iberia. Brutus could have picked up | |
| descendants of both groups as he sailed round the Iberian | |
| peninsula.[/quote] | |
| The archaeology: | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prehistoric_Iberia#Neolithic | |
| [quote]In the 6th millennium BC, Andalusia experiences the | |
| arrival of the first agriculturalists. Their origin is uncertain | |
| (though North Africa is a serious candidate) but they arrive | |
| with already developed crops (cereals and legumes). The presence | |
| of domestic animals instead is unlikely, as only pig and rabbit | |
| remains have been found and these could belong to wild animals. | |
| They also consumed large amounts of olives but it's uncertain | |
| too whether this tree was cultivated or merely harvested in its | |
| wild form. Their typical artifact is the La Almagra style | |
| pottery, quite variegated.[10] | |
| The Andalusian Neolithic also influenced other areas, notably | |
| Southern Portugal, where, soon after the arrival of agriculture, | |
| the first dolmen tombs begin to be built c. 4800 BC, being | |
| possibly the oldest of their kind anywhere.[10] | |
| C. 4700 BC Cardium pottery Neolithic culture (also known as | |
| Mediterranean Neolithic) arrives to Eastern Iberia. While some | |
| remains of this culture have been found as far west as Portugal, | |
| its distribution is basically Mediterranean (Catalonia, | |
| Valencian region, Ebro valley, Balearic islands). | |
| The interior and the northern coastal areas remain largely | |
| marginal in this process of spread of agriculture.[/quote] | |
| ***************************************************** |