History /
Sarmatism in Poland [119]
Mario Alinei
And I showed you before that Alinei is a lone nutter who is shunned and proven wrong by the mainstream historians and scientists....you really should look to someone better suited to support your points (if you can find someone that is)....but I can understand why you would feel so attached to him.
"Some of his main linguistic contributions related to ideas of "paleolinguistics" have been widely rejected by mainsteam historical linguistics, such as the Paleolithic Continuity Theory, which contends that the Indo-European languages originated in Europe and have existed there since the Paleolithic."Why don't you bring some other historians and scientists to prove your points? Some more respectable names and works? That would help you greatly to gain more credibility...
Svasika was spread on vast territory, same as Proto Slavs, same as ancient Sarmatians, old Slavs and modern day Slavs.
And there is a difference if you say "
Slavs borrowed and used Swastika" or "S
lavs invented Svastika/Swastika is of slavic origin" - a huge difference!
Stonehenge seems Celtic ;-) don't worry.
Apropos Stonehenge....they found another one in Germany (or kind of), near Leipzig:
:)
ananova.com/news/story/sm_49311.html
"German Stonehenge predates British site
Archaeologists say they have found the site of a German Stonehenge which is even older than the British one.
The series of rings in a field near Leipzig in the east of the country are said to be at least 7,000 years old - 2,000 years older than Stonehenge.
Archaeologists say it was the site of a stone-age temple where they believe people and animals were sacrificed to the gods.
The 120-metre diameter rings also have gates, one of which works like Stonehenge to direct the sun's rays onto a central point at sunrise on mid-summer's day.
In contrast to Stonehenge, the rings were not made up of giant rocks but of thousands of oak-wood stakes which have not survived the passage of time.
Only the marks in the ground where the stakes once stood have remained - and have now been discovered by the archaeologists."(but maybe it was the Slavs???)
:):):)
What about the sky disc of Nebra? The slavs too???
"German experts on Thursday hailed Europe's oldest astronomical observatory, discovered in Saxony-Anhalt last year, a "milestone in archaeological research" after the details of the sensational find were made public."dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,942824,00.html
dw-world.de/popups/popup_lupe/0,,942824_ind_1,00.html