XPost: alt.philosophy.taoism, alt.philosophy.zen   
   From: dra@openguitar.com   
      
   On Fri, 14 Oct 2016 14:44:17 -0700   
   "{:-])))" wrote:   
      
   > >> If Canada had existed, they would have gone there,   
   > >   
   > >They did. Where there were later Algonquins on the coast,   
   > >that's where they landed.   
   >   
   > At Plymouth? About a thousand years later?   
      
   Close? Sure.   
      
      
   >   
   > Okay.   
   > Maybe if I read the link to the article up at the top,   
   > I might know what this is all about.   
   >   
   > >> > Three shrines to Loki have been found   
   > >> >near Deva so far. Germanic peoples had three castes.   
   > >> >The rulers' god was Odin or Votan, the landsmans'   
   > >> >Thor (pronounced thoor or toor) or Turan, and everyone   
   > >> >elses was Loki. They were very into Mithra also, and   
   > >> >even Ra.   
   > >   
   > >Powhatan for morning was raiab. Ra (sun) iabt (east).   
   > >>   
   > >> They had migrated, over the Caucasus, prior thereto,   
   > >> hence froth turning in and out to be a race of people,   
   > >> also known as, the people. Having long since forgotten.   
   > >   
   > >The XXth was originally from the Rhineland.   
   >   
   > The XXth, those were the Romans, if I'm following this.   
   > Not the Norse. The Atticotti were defeated, in the south?   
   > But, in the north, above Hadrian's Wall, not so?   
      
   The Atticotti were from North America. They did not   
   invade the north of Britain. The reorganized XXth   
   killed most of them, but some survived in Wales.   
      
   The Scotti were   
   Irish, the Picts from Scottish, and the Saxons   
   were from Northern Europe. The Atticotti, according   
   to Roman records, were a "warlike race of men   
   from the West."   
      
   >   
   > > Before   
   > >it was sent west in the 4th century   
   > >it was augmented and reinforced   
   > >by 600 "Syrian" archers. Persians.   
   >   
   > Okay. Now those, Syrians, might have been some   
   > of what were also known by other names as well.   
      
   Precisely.   
   >   
   > > Roman armies   
   > >of occupation consisted in troops of every ethnicity   
   > >except that of the area occupied. Their business   
   > >was war, genocide, and exploitation, and   
   > >they were very good at it.   
   >   
   > Okay.   
   >   
   > >> >A Powhatan word for God was Ra-Wotton-eMd. Another   
   > >> >was Okee. One coincidence among many.   
   > >>   
   > >> Odin and Thor were of the line of Omri.   
   > >> Another word was Khomri. From the Sacasuni.   
   > >>   
   > >> >Oslo is pronounced Uslu, as in move.   
   > >>   
   > >> Sacasuni is also from whence Saxon arises.   
   > >   
   > >Or there is a common origin.   
   > >   
   > >Saxon may be from saxe, their short sword.   
   >   
   > I've heard the battle-axe was also advanced weaponry.   
      
   The Germans had adopted Roman tactics by then. I don't   
   know how well they were supplied with throwing axes.   
   >   
   > >Damisac and monosac are Powhatan for knife. Secutor and   
   > >section seem to be related words.   
   >   
   > I like free-associating words. Some people object to doing that.   
      
   When it goes with the grammar, it's a lot less free.   
   Irish and Greek have no infinitives, so Latin words   
   in Powhatan are "ireh", to go, "mecher" to eat, and   
   there are a few more in Sams' "Forest Prineval" which   
   is Vol. I of his "History of Virginia".   
   >   
   > >German means spearman. The gar is a spear shaped fish.   
   > >Gar is one of the oldest Indoeuropean words.   
   >   
   > I've heard that Dan arises from the Danites, and dan-words,   
   > Danes, Denmark, Danube and all such derive from an old tribe.   
      
   But there is no reason the think that the   
   "Tuatha de Danaan" were in any way German.   
   I think they were probably in the Aegean   
   area before the Greeks arrived as they were   
   in Ireland before the Irish arrived.   
      
   The Irish and the Greeks share the Muse/Goddess   
   of story Clio or Cliodhna. Cliodhna (Lady Clio?)   
   told Cormac that if he kissed the blarney stone,   
   he would have the gift of gab.   
      
   > >> I am unfamiliar with such works.   
   > >   
   > >Check your local library. It's a quick read.   
   >   
   > Looks to be a science fiction writer.   
   > Maybe that's a different author.   
      
   I don't know that he/she published anything else.   
      
   Metta, Rale   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
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