Posted on 03/20/2018 5:30:57 PM PDT by SunkenCiv
I've read reports that first the Greeks and later the Romans made trips to the Canary Islands to obtain slaves there because the had a Nordic appearance, tall, blonde and White and they were the preferred sex slave.
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The Canary islands were the only place where real Portugese existed after the muzzie mauraders over-ran southern Europe.
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No, nothing like that at all.
:^) I was just thinking about how the Roman ethnicity was already well on the way out by the time of the Pompeian War and the end of the so-called Roman Republic. To be Roman was to have Roman citizenship, and as the citizenship was expanded to include all areas under Roman rule, the influence of Roman culture -- whoops, I mean, the cultural appropriation by non-Romans of Roman customs, lifestyle, and trappings -- was ubiquitous. This has happened before, this time I was on the hopper.
In Spain, Neandertals were performing complex burials at least 38,000 years ago, or (mind-bogglingly enough) 23,000 years before these Moroccan burials..
I had not heard that Mozart might be part Negro, however I had heard the Beethoven was. Links below regarding the true “black Mozart” who was not the Mozart we know as most famous. Also a link on many notables of mixed blood including an ancestor of Queen Victoria and thus of half of Europe’s royalty.
https://curiosity.com/topics/joseph-boulogne-was-the-black-mozart-before-mozart-was-alive-curiosity/
http://kpkollenborn.blogspot.com/2014/12/15-historical-figures-you-didnt-know.html
What are you talking about? You got so many facts wrong in that sentence it is incredible
soon to be a separate topic?
Entomologist confirms first Saharan farming 10,000 years ago
Sat, Mar 17, 2018
http://popular-archaeology.com/issue/winter-2018/article/entomologist-confirms-first-saharan-farming-10-000-years-ago
By and large such claims are ill-sourced, at best.
But 100% of the time, they are of no importance, since race doesn’t really exist.
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Your comment was way off.
90% of the portugese families in central Calif are descended from immigrants from the canary islands and the azores.
Many call themselves “canaros.”
It doesn’t matter which nation “owns” the territory!
That's wrong - the Canary islands are not and never were portuguese and they were populated by Iberian settlers WELL after the Reconquista was in control of much of Iberia (in the 1300s)
Then you change this to talk about California -- may be they are descended from the few Portuguese that lived in the Canary Islands, but going from the ancestry of people in California to making a leap about only true portuguese escaping the 8th century Muslim invasion in the Canary Islands is hilariously wrong.
“moors” were not black byt Berbers
really? Can you provide me links to that please?
Yes. It's something that I read...but, I cannot prove it.
As I remember, this same article mentioned the desire for light-skinned sex slaves and trips (also) to Northern Europe to obtain them.
(Sorry, all I have to offer is my memory)
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The people frpm those islands self-identify as Portugese (whether you like it or not).
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Leftie propagandists are born shocked.
"New technological approaches are allowing anthropologists to peer even deeper into the bones of our ancestors," said Quam. "In the case of La Ferrassie 1, these approaches have made it possible to identify new fossil remains and pathological conditions of the original skeleton as well as confirm that this individual was deliberately buried.
The adult male La Ferrassie 1 Neandertal skeleton was found in 1909 in a French cave site, along with the remains of an adult woman and several Neandertal children. All of the skeletons were interpreted as representing intentional burials, and the finds sparked much public interest at the time regarding just how human-like the Neandertals were. The La Ferrassie 1 skeleton, in particular, has been highly influential in Neandertal studies since its discovery.
La Ferrassie 1 was an old man (likely over 50 years old) who suffered various broken bones during his lifetime and had ongoing respiratory issues when he died. Soon after, he was buried by other members of his group in the La Ferrassie rockshelter, which was repeatedly occupied by Neandertals during millennia. The skeleton was found in a burial pit and has been dated to between 40,000 and 54,000 years.
[New technology reveals secrets of famous Neandertal skeleton La Ferrassie 1 | Binghamton University | Public Release: 27-Mar-2018]
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