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<shardana)> Archeology Index <Bronze Age Index> <American Archeology>
ORIGIN
OF ETHNIC GROUPS IN IRELAND, SCOTLAND AND NORTHERN EUROPE [Contacts] The origin
of the ethnic groups of Ireland, Scotland and Northern Europe, requires a
look back in history to the events that took place in the lands on the
southern shores of the Mediterranean Sea.
This was a region, which supported a large population of diverse
ethnic groups from long before the time of the Christian Era. Among them were the Sea Peoples that are believed to
have settled there in prehistoric times. According to some authors, they were
Norsemen who arrived initially in the 12th Century bce. from lands
bordering the Baltic and North Seas (see Sea
Peoples and Fig. 193). Edo
Nyland [email] (personal
communication) has suggested that Ramesses III, who reigned from 1188 to 1165
bce, called the Sea Peoples living in the area at that time Shardana. Their
exploits are elaborately carved on his funerary temple at Medinet Habu,
perfectly preserved. They along with
the Berbers were master astronomers and spoke an early form of
Basque-Saharan. This has been
confirmed by Apollonius of Rhodes. In
fact, the mummy of Ramesses II was very blond, as well as some of the other
pharaohs and high officials. The Shardana, derived from the
word Sharma Dana signifies “good looking - all: "All good
looking". They lived along the
Mediterranean coast of Egypt and Libya and had a formidable fleet trading
with the Black Sea Peoples. They populated the Dniepr valley from where
they became the Poles, Baltic peoples, Friesians and Vikings, all the same
genetic background. They also settled
northeastern Turkey as the Kaska (meaning head), where they still live
today as the Kirrukaska (meaning blond heads) or Circaskians. After Mohammed's death the Four Caliphs conquered Libya and
Egypt. The Gnostic Christian people living there
at the time were given a choice, either to convert to Islam or leave. Thus, after 600 AD most of them launched
their ships and sailed to southern France, Ireland and western Scotland, not
as conquerors but as a population migration. Those that reached Scotland were
called the Askotza, the aSKOTZa, meaning “multitude”, and
now called Scots. Some venturesome people even went to West Virginia where
they wrote their Ogam script on some walls, [see the Horse Creek Petroglyph]. |
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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].