Safranek
Core Member
- Joined
- Sep 16, 2020
- Messages
- 477
- Reaction score
- 1,572
It is not being promoted as a world-wide civilization by all adherents. There's only a 'certain' group that seems to insist on that idea.This thread is about Tartaria, which is promoted as having been a worldwide civilisation, so if I am jumping the gun then perhaps you are dodging the bullets.
However, there is a proposed actual linguistic link being studied by some linguists which - if correct - shows a correlation between the languages of the NA Indians and Siberian tribes. This obviously would not have occurred within the 'Tartaria' time-frame.
I don't want to steer the thread off-topic so I will not go further into this as it has no relation to Tartaria beyond showing a common element in the origin of both those languages (NA Indian Lanape and the Turk, Mongol, Hun language base).
And BTW, I like the choice of idiom in response to mine.
The sources quoted in that article have nothing to do with Germany other than a couple of brief mentions as it focuses entirely on the influence and interactions of the Huns in relation to the four empires, based on the sources given.I note that this source was written or 'read' right in the middle of World War One. So it's a paper about 'The Hun' which seems to be intent on debunking the Kaiser's claim to descent from those ancient warriors. Could there be a conflict of interests there? Have you read the ancient sources that this paper is based upon?
No, I have not had the time to actually look up and read the books being sourced, I will make the effort to do so to see if they can be found in English though.
I personally do not adhere to the claim that Tartaria was a world-wide civilization. The reason for this is that so far, I have not found any credible sources that would mention Tartarians as anything other than foreigners and their language as a foreign language with respect to America.So the claim that Tartaria was a worldwide civilisation is a myth then. Is that also part of your conclusion?
I do strongly suspect that at least a part of the American natives do have links to the area we call Tartaria, Scythia, Siberia, Pontic Steppes, etc. but my hunch is that this link goes farther back than the time-period attributed to the area as Tartaria, maybe even farther back than when it was called Scythia.
That is my conclusion based on evidence I have studied so far, but my current assessment will certainly change if additional valid information is presented to the contrary.