- published: 21 Sep 2009
- views: 42851
9:50
Etruscans prt 1
Etruscan Ancient Mediterranean civilization
Origins and Evolution of the Etruscans' mtDNA...
published: 21 Sep 2009
Etruscans prt 1
Etruscan Ancient Mediterranean civilization
Origins and Evolution of the Etruscans' mtDNA
http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0055519
- published: 21 Sep 2009
- views: 42851
7:50
The Etruscan Origins of Rome and Italy
A clip about the history of the Etruscans. Not much is known about them except for what ha...
published: 16 Dec 2010
The Etruscan Origins of Rome and Italy
A clip about the history of the Etruscans. Not much is known about them except for what has been found in the form of art, in burial sites and the occasional literary mentions by Greeks and Romans. Contrary to what the narrator says, though, they did leave written records behind but very little surviving writings have been found which isn't strange considering that their language went extinct soon after the rise of Rome.
- published: 16 Dec 2010
- views: 10275
10:16
ETRUSCANS Lost Isralites Who Ruled Rome 900 BC - 300 BC
The Etruscans were Isralites that migrated to Italy from Israel under King Soloman in 900 ...
published: 16 Aug 2009
ETRUSCANS Lost Isralites Who Ruled Rome 900 BC - 300 BC
The Etruscans were Isralites that migrated to Italy from Israel under King Soloman in 900 BC and Ruled the then peasant goat herders who also migrated ( like the pilgrims ) from the land of EDOM or Idumea in lower palestine who became the Romans in 753 BC. The Etuscans ruled Italy from 900 BC to 300 BC when the Roman Edomites conquered them and took their culture in 343 BC
- published: 16 Aug 2009
- views: 22819
9:41
Etruscan DNA Part 1
The first half of an interview in which Dr Phil Perkins tells us about his research into t...
published: 06 Mar 2010
Etruscan DNA Part 1
The first half of an interview in which Dr Phil Perkins tells us about his research into the ancient Etruscans.
- published: 06 Mar 2010
- views: 8202
10:46
Latin Alphabet and Etruscans of Turkic Origin
http://h4bib.blogspot.com - Latin Alphabet and Etruscans of Turkic Origin (Turkey, Hungar...
published: 11 Jan 2011
Latin Alphabet and Etruscans of Turkic Origin
http://h4bib.blogspot.com - Latin Alphabet and Etruscans of Turkic Origin (Turkey, Hungary, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Azerbaijan, Nakhichevan, Turanian, East Turkistan, Kyrgyzstan, Chuvash, Dagestan, Gagavuzya, Hakasya, Karachay, Karakalpakistan, Tatarstan, Tuva, Yakutia, The Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus)
- published: 11 Jan 2011
- views: 1365
2:55
Ancient Etruscan House Discovered
http://www.discoverynews.com For the first time, Italian archaeologists have uncovered an ...
published: 10 Jun 2010
Ancient Etruscan House Discovered
http://www.discoverynews.com For the first time, Italian archaeologists have uncovered an intact Etruscan house. Researchers hope this find sheds light on the mysterious pre-Roman civilization. Rossella Lorenzi reports.
- published: 10 Jun 2010
- views: 16408
1:27
Funerary Art of the Etruscans
Paul Denis, Associate Curator, World Cultures, Royal Ontario Museum, describes the cinerar...
published: 13 Jul 2012
Funerary Art of the Etruscans
Paul Denis, Associate Curator, World Cultures, Royal Ontario Museum, describes the cinerary chest (200 BC) and the practices of the Etruscans towards the deceased. To learn more about the ancient empires of Rome, Nubia and Byzantium, visit the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto.
- published: 13 Jul 2012
- views: 257
24:48
A Place Called Etruria
Version without sound problems.
Journey to the ancient cities of Volterra, Populonia and ...
published: 16 Jan 2011
A Place Called Etruria
Version without sound problems.
Journey to the ancient cities of Volterra, Populonia and Cerveteri to see why Etruscans were so extravagant with their wealth and how they lost it all.
Enjoy :) !!!
- published: 16 Jan 2011
- views: 7292
8:14
Etruscanning3D
ETRUSCANNING 3D
Partners: Allard Pierson Museum-Amsterdam University, CNR ITABC, Visual D...
published: 28 Oct 2012
Etruscanning3D
ETRUSCANNING 3D
Partners: Allard Pierson Museum-Amsterdam University, CNR ITABC, Visual Dimension, National Museum for Antiquities in Leiden, the Gallo-Roman Museum in Tongeren. Associated partners: Vatican Museum, the National Etruscan Museum in Villa Giulia, in Rome; CNR ISCIMA.
E.V.O.CA: software development
In the "Etruscanning3D" european project framework, the virtual reconstruction of the Regolini Galassi tomb, in Cerveteri, has been realized, in order to re-contextualize its precious funerary goods, today preserved in the vatican Museums, in their ancient space, digitally represented in 3D. The Regolini Galassi is one of the most appealing Etruscan graves we know, famous for its rich contents but also for the many objects that show the Orientalizing influence.
The reconstruction has been preceded by a huge work of data collection, interpretations, topographical acquisitions through a variety of techniques, digital restorations, in order to create a plausible simulation of how the tomb could appear when it was closed, at the half of the VII century BC.
The final purpose of the VR application is communication inside museums, so the narrative approach and the metaphors of interactions played a key role.
The most innovative value of the VR application is the paradigm of interaction based on natural interfaces.
The user moves inside the 3D space through his body movements. The public explore the virtual tomb, get near the artifacts and listen to the narrative contents directly from the voices of the prestigious Etruscan personages buried inside; the princess and the warrior. All this is possible moving in the space in front of the projection, in the simplest and natural way and without any device and any marker. The user walks on a real map of the grave placed on the floor, onto which some "hotspots" are attached. Changing his position from one hotspot to another, he also moves in the virtual space, going closer to the objects and prompting the storytelling to emerge. The order in the choice of the hotspot activation is free, so every sequence can be activated. The projection of 12 m², the evocative storytelling done in first-person, the use lighting to gradually reveal the objects as the space is explored, and the physical involvement of the user produce a strong sensation of immersion. This solution not only makes the interaction amazing for the public, but allows people of every age and every "technical" skill to enjoy the virtual contents.
We are working in the definition of a proper grammar of gestures that can be tested on public and continuously improved, also with the support of experts in cognitive science.
This movie shows the first version of the application, we are now working in an update coming in the next months.
The application is built in Unity 3D and uses the Kinect sensor for motion capture. The system has been derived from the new generation of games, but for the first time it has been applied to VR environments dedicated to the CH .
Etruscanning project Coordinator: Wim Hupperetz (Allard Pierson Museum, Amsterdam)
Design of the application: Eva Pietroni (CNR-ITABC. Rome), Claudio Rufa (E.V.O.CA, Roma), Daniel Pletinckx (Visual Dimension, Ename)
Storytelling: Christie Ray (APM), Daniel Pletinckx, Augusto Palombini (CNR ITABC), with the scientific support of Maurizio Sannibale (Musei Vaticani) and Vincenzo Bellelli (CNR ISCIMA)
3D Modeling: Raffaele Carlani, Eva Pietroni, Marco di Ioia, Irene Carpanese (CNR ITABC)
Digitization of the objects: Daniel Pletinckx, Bart Devenyn, Eline Tavernier (Visual Dimension),
with the support of the Photography and Restoration departments of the Vatican Museums
Topographical digital acquisition with laser scanner: Eva Pietroni, Raffaele Carlani
Digital photos: Bartolomeo Trabassi (CNR ITABC)
Software development: Claudio Rufa, E.V.O.CA
blog: http://regolinigalassi.wordpress.com/
- published: 28 Oct 2012
- views: 628
3:50
Art and Splendor of the Etruscans: Caere
In this video you will see how Caere, modern day Cerveteri, Italy, dominated culture, art ...
published: 29 Oct 2008
Art and Splendor of the Etruscans: Caere
In this video you will see how Caere, modern day Cerveteri, Italy, dominated culture, art and craftmanship in ancient Italy for many centuries. The Etruscans of Caere were a proud and beauty loving people and this video shows it!
- published: 29 Oct 2008
- views: 6596
Vimeo results:
78:24
The Inaugural Henry Cole Lecture: Sir Christopher Frayling, 30 October 2008
The inaugural Henry Cole Lecture, held at the V&A; Museum in London on 30 October 2008. Th...
published: 22 Sep 2009
author: Victoria and Albert Museum
The Inaugural Henry Cole Lecture: Sir Christopher Frayling, 30 October 2008
The inaugural Henry Cole Lecture, held at the V&A; Museum in London on 30 October 2008. The purpose of the lecture is to celebrate the legacy of the Museum’s founding director, and explore its implications for museums, culture and society today.
The lecture, entitled 'We Must Have Steam: Get Cole! Henry Cole, the Chamber of Horrors, and the Educational Role of the Museum' was delivered by Professor Sir Christopher Frayling. He presented new research on the “chamber of horrors” (a contemporary nickname for one of the V&A;'s earliest galleries, 'Decorations on False Principles', that opened in 1852) and the myths and realities of its reception, then opened up a wider debate on design education and museums from the nineteenth century to the present day.
Transcript:
Mark Jones: The annual Henry Cole lecture has been initiated to celebrate Henry Cole's legacy and to explore the contribution that culture can make to education and society today. It has also been launched to celebrate the opening of the Sackler Centre for arts education, including the Hochhauser Auditorium in which we sit tonight. There could be no one better than Professor Sir Christopher Frayling to give the inaugural Henry Cole Lecture. Christopher is a rare being: an intellectual who is a great communicator; a theorist who has a firm grip on the practical realities of life: a writer who truly and instinctively understands the words of making design and visual communication. As an enormously successful and respected Rector of the Royal College of Art, as Chairman of the Arts Council, and as a member and chair of boards too numerous to mention - but not forgetting the Royal Mint Advisory Committee which has recently been responsible for redesigning the coinage (personal interest) and as by far the longest-serving Trustee of the V&A;, he brings together culture, education and public service in a way which Henry Cole would have approved and admired. So it's more than fitting that he should be giving this first Henry Cole Lecture, 'We Must Have Steam: Get Cole! Henry Cole, the Chamber of Horrors, and the Educational Role of the Museum'.
CHRISTOPHER FRAYLING:
Thank you very much indeed Mark and thank you very much for inviting me to give this first Henry Cole Lecture. Just how much of an honour it is for me will I hope become clear as the lecture progresses.
Mark, Chairpeople, ladies and gentlemen:
Hidden away in the garden of the South Kensington Museum - now the Madejski Garden of the V&A; - there is a small and easily overlooked commemorative plaque that doesn't have a museum number. It reads: 'In Memory of Jim Died 1879 Aged 15 Years, Faithful Dog of Sir Henry Cole of this Museum'. Jim had in fact died on 30 January 1879. He was with Henry Cole in his heyday, as the king of South Kensington - its museums and colleges - and saw him through to retirement from the public service and beyond. And next to this inscription there's another one dedicated to Jim's successor, Tycho, and dated 1885. The dogs are actually buried in the garden. Now we know from Henry Cole's diary that between 1864 and 1879 Jim, who was a cairn terrier, was often to be seen in public at his master's side. In 1864 they were together inspecting the new memorial to the Great Exhibition of 1851 just behind the Albert Hall - a statue of Prince Albert by Joseph Durham on a lofty plinth covered in statistics about the income, expenditure and visitor numbers to the Great Exhibition: 6,039,195 to be exact. Cole had been a tireless champion of Prince Albert and according to the Princess Royal (later Empress of Prussia) there was a family saying in Buckingham Palace at the time, invented by Albert himself, that when things needed doing 'when we want steam we must get Cole'. We may therefore assume that when looking at the memorial, Cole was interested in the inscription, the statistics and the likeness of Prince Albert, while Jim was more interested in the possibilities of the plinth. In early 1866 - these are five studies of Jim, an etching by Henry Cole himself of 1864. In early 1866, first thing in the morning, soon after the workmen's bell had rung, Henry and Jim would set forth together from Cole's newly constructed official residence in the Museum (where he moved in July 1863) to tour the building sites of South Kensington - a name which was first invented by Cole when he re-named the museum The South Kensington Museum to describe the new developments happening around Brompton Church. According to 'The Builder' magazine, these two well-known figures would 'be seen clambering over bricks, mortar and girders up ladders and about scaffolding'. Several buildings in the South Kensington Renaissance Revival style were springing up all around them: The Natural History Museum, The College of Science, the extension to this Museum. And on the morning the Bethnal Green Museum opened - 24 June 1872 - Jim showed a healthy distaste for his master's well-known predilection for pomp and
10:29
Etruscan Women
Twenty-five hundred years ago, Etruscan women living in the Italian region of what is now ...
published: 24 Sep 2012
author: Tanguy de Thuret
Etruscan Women
Twenty-five hundred years ago, Etruscan women living in the Italian region of what is now called Tuscany were afforded a remarkably equal status with men.
An American Art Historian & journalist explains her passion about them & why they are still relevant in contemporary Italian society.
Shot & edited by
Tanguy de Thuret
March 2012
©TanguydeThuret2012
Location :
National Etruscan Museum Villa Giulia, Rome, Italy
Music:
Nino Rota "Fellini-Satyricon".
The use of the music is not for commercial purposes.
2:04
full_etruscan
running from boot 2 ibm x21's to mirror each other in full_etruscan torture test,
machine...
published: 24 Apr 2010
author: xxn
full_etruscan
running from boot 2 ibm x21's to mirror each other in full_etruscan torture test,
machine 1
tab1: ifconfig eth0 192.168.1.1 && cat /dev/mem | netcat 192.168.1.2 666
tab2: ifconfig eth0 192.168.1.2 && netcat -l -p 666 | tee /dev/dsp - > /dev/mem &
machine 2
tab1: ifconfig eth0 192.168.1.2 && netcat -l -p 666 | tee /dev/dsp - > /dev/mem &
tab2: ifconfig eth0 192.168.1.1 && cat /dev/mem | netcat 192.168.1.2 666
The Etruscan torture has been described as chaining the living person to a rotting corpse, face to face and limb to limb until the living person perishes by the decay of the corpse. Only when the living person was blackened by putrefaction, the Etruscan robbers freed the living, now a corpse, from the chains. A metaphysical torture and a model for the intelligible ontology, Aristotle suggests that the relation between the body, the soul (psyche) and the intellect (nous) as the triad of his ontology can be explained as follows: ‘their bodies [those who have fallen into the hands of the Etruscans], the living with the dead, were bound so exactly as possible one against another: so our souls, tied together with our bodies as the living fixed upon the dead.’ (Cicero quoting Aristotle in Hortensius)
http://xxn.org.uk/doku.php?id=etruscan:workings
Youtube results:
2:00
Etruscans of Italy Are Originated from Anatolia: Genetic Evidences
In an effort to resolve the contradictions, a team of geneticists from
different universi...
published: 03 Jul 2010
Etruscans of Italy Are Originated from Anatolia: Genetic Evidences
In an effort to resolve the contradictions, a team of geneticists from
different universities in Italy and Spain undertook the first genetic
studies of the ancient Etruscans, based on mitochondrial DNA from 80
bone samples taken from tombs dating from the seventh century to the
third century BC in Etruria.
The study has shown that there is a link between Etruscans and certain populations of Anatolia. In particular, the areas of historical Etruscan occupation have a relatively high concentration of y-haplogroup G.
- published: 03 Jul 2010
- views: 6616
15:02
Etruscan Pyramids Found In Italy
*PLEASE READ DESCRIPTION*
FIRST EVER ETRUSCAN PYRAMIDS FOUND IN ITALY
There are at least...
published: 10 Oct 2012
Etruscan Pyramids Found In Italy
*PLEASE READ DESCRIPTION*
FIRST EVER ETRUSCAN PYRAMIDS FOUND IN ITALY
There are at least five Etruscan pyramids under the city. Three of these structures have yet to be excavated.
The first ever Etruscan pyramids have been located underneath a wine cellar in the city of Orvieto in central Italy, according to a team of U.S. and Italian archaeologists.
Carved into the rock of the tufa plateau --a sedimentary area that is a result of volcanic activity -- on which the city stands, the subterranean structures were largely filled. Only the top-most modern layer was visible.
"Within this upper section, which had been modified in modern times and was used as a wine cellar, we noticed a series of ancient stairs carved into the wall. They were clearly of Etruscan construction," David B. George of the Department of Classics at Saint Anselm, told Discovery News.
As they started digging, George and co-director of the excavation Claudio Bizzarri of the Parco Archeologico Ambientale dell'Orvietano noted that the cave's walls were tapered up in a pyramidal fashion. Intriguingly, a series of tunnels, again of Etruscan construction, ran underneath the wine cellar hinting to the possibility of deeper undiscovered structures below.
ARTICLE SOURCE:
http://news.discovery.com/history/etruscan-pyramids-120918.html
http://news.discovery.com/history/etruscan-house-slide-show.html
http://news.discovery.com/history/etruscan-mother-birth-art-111019.html
VIDEO CLIP SOURCE:
Gary Biltcliffe - The Legacy of the Etruscans
45 MINUTES - 4 years ago
Gary Biltcliffe, Independent Researcher,presents the ancient Pelasgi and Etruscan connections with Britain, magnificent megalithic stonework, lost cities, and the city state society of archaic Europe.
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=5622664211124813308
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[PDF] History of Britain by R W MORGAN (1848)
http://freetheplanet.net/file_download/100/History+of+Britain++by+R+W+MORGAN+(1848).pdf
-
ANCIENT LONDON #3
by E.O.Gordon (1914)
FOOTPRINTS OF NOTABLE BRITISH MONARCHS
http://www.keithhunt.com/London3.html
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The Literary gazette: A weekly journal of literature, science, and the fine arts (Google eBook)
http://books.google.com/books?id=rahGAQAAIAAJ
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Ancient People of the Toga - Etruscans, Early Rome
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bT5xh_1Z5g8
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Gary Biltcliffe - The Legacy of the Etruscans & The Mysterious Pelasgi
http://www.redicecreations.com/radio/2009/07jul/RIR-090712.html
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Alan Wilson & Baram Blackett - British and Welsh History, the Ancient Coelbren & the Khumry
http://www.redicecreations.com/radio/2010/02feb/RIR-100211.html
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Alan Wilson - Welsh History, the Ark of the Covenant & Star Constellations in Wales Landscape
http://www.redicecreations.com/radio/2010/02feb/RIR-100211-SUB.html
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Etruscan Clevsin, Umbrian Camars, Roman Clusium, Modern Chiusi
http://www.mysteriousetruscans.com/clevsin.html
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The tomb of the Etruscan king Lars Porsena, built around 500 BCE at Clusium (modern Chiusi), Italy, was described as follows by the Roman writer Marcus Varro (116-27 BCE):
Porsena was buried below the city of Clusium in the place where he had built a square monument of dressed stones. Each side was three hundred feet in length and fifty in height, and beneath the base there was an inextricable labyrinth, into which, if any-body entered without a clue of thread, he could never discover his way out. Above this square building there stand five pyramids, one at each corner and one in the centre, seventy-five feet broad at the base and one hundred and fifty feet high. These pyramids so taper in shape that upon the top of all of them together there is supported a brazen globe, and upon that again a petasus from which bells are suspended by chains. These make a tinkling sound when blown about by the wind, as was done in bygone times at Dodona. Upon this globe there are four more pyramids, each a hundred feet in height, and above them is a platform on which are five more pyramids.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomb_of_Lars_Porsena
-
THE ETRUSCAN OR ITALIAN LABYRINTH
http://www.sacred-texts.com/etc/ml/ml10.htm
-
10. Accessing Afterlife: Tombs of Roman Aristocrats, Freedmen, and Slaves
by YaleCourses on Sep 11, 2009
11:04 - Chapter 2. Etruscan Antecedents of the Mausoleum of Augustus
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tFuVayxNWMU&t;=10m55s
= = = = = = = =
* "Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use."
- published: 10 Oct 2012
- views: 513
13:21
Etruscans - Ancient Turks / Mediterranean Turanians of Eurasia
"Year 1995: After a week-long meeting in Italy (Florence), Prof. Dr. Giovannangelo Campore...
published: 22 Mar 2012
Etruscans - Ancient Turks / Mediterranean Turanians of Eurasia
"Year 1995: After a week-long meeting in Italy (Florence), Prof. Dr. Giovannangelo Camporeale, one of the most authoritative scientists regarding Etruscan studies, agreed to the fact that ancient Etruscan insriptions were written in Turkic tounge." (Prof. Dr. Turgay Tüfekçioğlu, Etruscans, Orkun Publishing)
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
"That the Etruscans were Turanians, and that they belonged to the North Turanian or Altaic branch of the Turanian stem, cannot be denied." (Victoria Institute (Great Britain), Journal of the Transactions of the Victoria Institute, Or Philosophical Society of Great Britain, Band 10, BiblioBazaar, 2009, p.200)
"Working with linguistic evidence and etymological "method", Georgiev asserts that the Etruscans were none other than the Trojans, the legendary founders of Rome." (Philip Baldi, The foundations of Latin, Walter de Gruyter, 2002, p.111)
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
The Etruscans originated from Central Asia. Anatolia was home to Etruscans at least in 5000-6000 B.C., and later in 3500 B.C. to the Sumerians and the Cimmerians in later periods. The Etruscans migrated over the Caspian Sea and later arrived to Insburg, Austria. Before Etruscans settled to Italy, they lived in the area of Glozel (France) in 4000 B.C. In 1500 B.C. the Etruscans arrived to the Po Valley in northern Italy. From there they settled to Etruria (Toskana).
In 743 B.C. Rome was established by "Romulus" (in Turkic: 'People of Rome'). This plot is concering the foundation of Rome, similar to the Genesis of Altaic Peoples from Central Asia (see: Asena-Legend/Ergenekon Legend). The highly civilized Etruscans dominated from the Po Valley to the northern part of todays Rome.
In 600 B.C. the power of Etruscans reached their climax until the Etruscan dominance ended in 100 B.C. They neglect their language, got assimilated by Celtic and Latin peoples, and finally lost their power to their Latin rivals, who were called "Barbarians" by the Etruscans.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * Graphics: * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Etruscan Alphabet (Mirşan, K. 1970; Proto-Türkler, p. 28):
* * * http://onturk.files.wordpress.com/2011/04/etrc3bcsk-abece.jpg
Reading example (Mirşan, K. 1970; Proto-Türkler)
* * * http://onturk.files.wordpress.com/2011/04/etrc3bcsk-anahtar.jpg
ËLİTİB ESİZUÇ ALTUÇ ELİK,
Reminding to the people which is send by the kingdom,
ULUQUP AÇILUC ETUY!
suddenly making it possible to open the holy chest!
UYUPPI-ÜYİPPİ ËDİSİTİB
by saying: "Does it fit to my home?",
UB-OQ APPARUYA ALTITIL
although hesitantly taken away.
ALIRITIP APPARUY EDİTİLSİT ÜQ ËSİKİCÜY YATASIZ
You will grasp the meaning of continual coming and going:
ÖZÜK ÜY ËSİTİD APPARTUCUÇ
By inspiring the feeling of having a home,
ULUDUTUB YATAALIZ ÜY
With a feeling of greatness and security and you will have a homeland.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* * * * Source: http://onturk.wordpress.com/2011/04/09/etruskler/ * * * *
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"It should also be noted that all these divinity names such as "Sais, Zeus, Ais, and Ayas or Ak Ayas, represent the Sky God in the Pelasgian, Etruscan, Hellenic and Turkic Saka and Central Asiatic Turkic shaman cultures. The name of this divinity must have been brought all the way from Central Asia to the Balkans and Mediterranean coasts by the Turkic speaking SAKA peoples and their ancestors." (Polat Kaya, Reading of the Lemnos Island Inscription, A preliminary report, 1997)
It is also worth mentioning that modern Tuva, a Turanian people, call their shamanic protector spirits érénï - a cognate term for the ancient Hellenic erinnyes, which were dark "Fury" spirits that punished and pursued sinners (see: "Shamanism" by Mircea Eliade, p.498)
"Unless a great substratum of the inhabitants of Greece belonged to the Turanian family, their religion, like their language, ought to have presented a much closer affinity to the earlier sriptures of the Aryan race than we find to be the case. The curious anthropic mythology of the Grecian Pantheon seems only explicable on the assumption of a petential Turanian element on the population, [...]." (James Fergusson, Tree and serpent worship, or, Illustrations of mythology and art in India in the first and fourth centuries after Christ: from the sculptures of the Buddhist topes at Sanchi and Amravati, Asian Educational Services, 2004, Reprint London 1873 edn., p.13)
- published: 22 Mar 2012
- views: 2594
4:37
Etruscans, The Ancient Centers of Lazio ABNewsTV
Etruscans, The Ancient Centers of Lazio tells the story of the period of maximum prosperit...
published: 19 Jan 2009
Etruscans, The Ancient Centers of Lazio ABNewsTV
Etruscans, The Ancient Centers of Lazio tells the story of the period of maximum prosperity and expansion of the Etruscan civilization during the 6th and 5th century BCE—the vita urban—the life of the city across the extraordinary development of the principal urban centers of the province of Lazio: Vulci, Veio, Tarquinia, and Cereteri. In exhibition from October 21st in Rome at the Palazzo delle Esposizioni.
ABNewsTV is a television production agency based in Rome providing comprehensive coverage of important news events, art, and culture as they occur and impact Italy. Our print and multimedia content is provided for and broadcasted on various important television networks, radio, newspapers and magazines in Spain.
- published: 19 Jan 2009
- views: 7990