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LANGUAGE & HUMAN MIGRATIONS *           

(Contact)

 

          As this is a very large topic containing many files, it required an organizational chart which was easy to use. The simplest way to arrange this still growing number of languages and associated information was to break them up into six groups: Early languages, Asiatic languages, West European, East European, North American and sundry articles.

 

Early Languages

Saharan

Sanskrit

Hebrew

Linear B

Egyptian

Sumerian

Asiatic

Dravidian

Ainu

Indonesian

Polynesian

 

 

West European

Latin

English

English Dictionary

Spanish

Dutch

German

 

Benedictines

Alcuin in England

Alcuin in Germany

Witches

Turn the world around.

East European

Greek

Slavic

Yiddish

 

North America

Eskimo

 

Sundry

VCV Dictionary

Indo-European Deception

New Classification

Bible

World Names

 

  

       Hypothesis 1: The Saharan language was the language of the peoples living in the Sahara during the last Ice Age, who had created the first true civilization on earth, possibly centered on lake Chad. As a result of deglaciation, starting about 16,000 bce., resulting in ever expanding desertification, these tribes were forced to flee for their lives, creating an exodus culminating between 7,000 and 3,500 bce (see Climate).  These refugees created four main secondary civilizations in Mesopotamia, Egypt, the Indus Valley and Anatolia.


       Hypothesis 2: The
Saharan language is still spoken as Dravidian in India (170 million speakers), as Ainu on the island of Hokkaido (18,000 speakers in 2005) and as Basque in Euskadi, Spain (800,000 speakers in 2005). Basque is likely the closest resembling the original language of the exodus.


       Hypothesis 3: The people of the exodus from the Sahara brought with them a matrilineal organized society, the nature based Goddess religion and the first highly developed language, maintained by very strong oral traditions.


       Hypothesis 4: As a result of several major advances in a number of fields such as agriculture, metallurgy, domestication of the horse and camel, astronomy etc. the female-based religion was weakened and male domination arrived ca 3,000 bce. in Egypt, Mesopotamia and Anatolia, and about 1,500 bce. in India. The newcomers brought along learned priesthoods who proceeded to invert all aspects of the old religion, society, language, legends etc. A new language was invented for each large area and placed under the control of a king.  Examples are,
Sumerian and Akadian in Mesopotamia, Old Egyptian in Egypt, Sanskrit and Hindi in India, Hebrew in Palestine, Hittite and Luvian in Anatolia etc. All these were the product of formulaic distortion and scholarly manipulation of the original Saharan language. The Bible repeats the command to distort the original language in Genesis 11:7.


       Hypothesis 5: These newly created languages were then introduced to the local populations by taking young boys into residential schools and forcing the new order onto them, where they were often brutally treated. The purpose was to destroy the old religion and language and the traditional oral teaching of wisdom, religion and legends, replacing it with a patriarchal vision of the world and civilization. They almost succeeded. The hidden sentences in the invented words can be
decoded ) with the use of the Basque dictionary and a simple formula (see Saharan).


Theory:


       All highly developed languages on earth (except possibly Chinese) can be shown to have been developed from the original Saharan language, which in itself was also scholarly enhanced from the Neolithic substratum. There exists no "family" of Indo-European or Semitic languages. There are no Indo-European or a proto-Indo-European. Language;.  All these unstable languages are invented by scholars. Only Saharan has remained relatively unchanged and is now spoken as Basque.

 

 

  Bibliography

 

 

For further detail, please refer to:

 

          Nyland, Edo.  2001.  Linguistic Archaeology: An
               Introduction.   Trafford Publ., Victoria, B.C., Canada.

               ISBN 1-55212-668-4. 541 p. [ see abstract & summary]

 

          Nyland, Edo.  2002.  Odysseus and the Sea Peoples: A

               Bronze Age History of Scotland  Trafford Publ., Victoria,

               B.C., Canada.  307 p.   [see abstract & summary].

 

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