Re: [tied] Re: a story about Galia

From: alexmoeller@...
Message: 16373
Date: 2002-10-17

----- Original Message -----
From: "Amedeo Amendola" <amedeo_a_2002@...>
To: <cybalist@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Thursday, October 17, 2002 9:52 PM
Subject: [tied] Re: a story about Galia


Why do you say you are researching wrong information??? I'd
like you
to research this information: Bands of Indo-Europeans [Aryans
or
whatever you want to call them]marching all over Eurasia and
leaving
their language there. Would there be something wrong if 10
authors
spoke of them as being in 20 or 30 different "countries"? At
least
the authors you post passed on legends which may or may not be
true,
but there were such people as they spoke of. (I take their
accounts
with a grain of salt. Legends and myths usually contain a
grain of
salt.)

[Moeller] I say I like to see if the informations are wrong
because personally I could not research all the references. If
I should have had the posibility to do it, I should have said
"I read it and i am sure"But in this case in some places I
quote just another autorhs and it simply can be that a
refernece used by them to be erronated.
Anyway, I dont know what the IE people think but from all
these myths and stories it is more as clear that all the south
of europe from west to east , the places in Little Assia ,
everywhere where the traco-phirigians came , they have had all
almost the same language.
The so called latinisation is not the result of empire and not
of the curch, tough I guess it have had both their smaller
role there. Specialy the curch in the west of Europa.
The so called latinisation is just romanism and romanism
doesnt mean "Rome" & Latium . Rome and Latium has been the
best and strongest exponent of this romanism. But the rest,
there are all paralel evolutions within the same romanic
family and not "neo latin" languages.
The indices are more clear ar for slavic families, we have a
lot of references, but somewhere the point 0 is supposed to be
the Roman Empire.
The point 0 is somewhere before the Roman Empire. And I guess,
here is a lot and interesting work to do.