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Originally posted by Nygdan
As far as connections between nubia and mesoamerica, and basing it on statues, the people in that region of mesoamerica where the statues are from look like the statues, ie, they're not statues of black nubians living in central america, and the people that live there, I have never heard of a genetic study that showed that they were the result of a migration of nubians from east africa.
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Originally posted by mosca
As for the similarities, Montezuma indicated when he first met Pizzarro and his 300 conquistadors, that his oldest writings indicated his people migrated to turtle island right after the flood alongside white men.
Originally posted by mosca
As for the similarities, Montezuma indicated when he first met Pizzarro and his 300 conquistadors, that his oldest writings indicated his people migrated to turtle island right after the flood alongside white men.
Originally posted by Nygdan
As far as connections between nubia and mesoamerica, and basing it on statues, the people in that region of mesoamerica where the statues are from look like the statues, ie, they're not statues of black nubians living in central america, and the people that live there, I have never heard of a genetic study that showed that they were the result of a migration of nubians from east africa.
Originally posted by foofoo
As you are a moderator I assume you have seen or be aware of the pictures of the massive heads in Zecharia's Sitchin's book "The Lost Realms" which suggest that the Olmecs had an African Negroid appearance.
But as a starting point given that these stone "heads" look so obviously of Negroids one could assume that there was some connection between the Olmecs and people in Africa.
The Mende script found on monuments at Monte Alban in Mexico, has been deciphered and it was found to be identical to the Mende script used in West Africa. Afterwards, the language was found to be the very same language spoken by the Mende of West Africa.
dr stranngecraft
Because Pizarro conquered Sapa Inca's empire. In Peru. South America.
Originally posted by foofoo
As you are a moderator I assume you have seen or be aware of the pictures of the massive heads in Zecharia's Sitchin's book "The Lost Realms" which suggest that the Olmecs had an African Negroid appearance.
I am not aware of any genetic proof and I am not aware that anyone would fund such research.
The last link refers to similarities in written language between the Olmecs and...
Originally posted by foofoo
@Nygdan,
thank you for a considered reply. I also found Zecharia Sitchen's picture of the ancient Olmec toy elephant interesting - knowledge of elephants in South America within an ancient society!
Originally posted by dr_strangecraft
Did you make a typing error (all of us do, since we think faster than we type), or did your source say this? If the latter, then that source is definitely not to be trusted . .
Originally posted by mosca
...and I was fascinated not only by the fact that Montezuma surrendered willingly but by the descriptions of the original Aztec homeland (Aztlan) contained black and red volcanic rocks and Im told the islands due west of the Canary Islands do too (was it Azores?)
My emphasis.
Legend states that the Mexica Indians originally came to the Valley of Mexico from a region in the northwest, popularly known as Atzlan-Chicomoztoc. The name Aztec, in fact, is believed to have been derived from this ancestral homeland, Aztlan (The Place of Herons).
In A.D. 1111, the Mexica left their native Aztlan to settle in Chicomoztoc (Seven Caves). According to legend, they had offended their patron god Huitzilopochtli by cutting down a forbidden tree. As a result, the Mexica were condemned to leave Aztlan and forced to wander until they received a sign from their gods, directing them to settle down permanently.
My emphasis.
The land of Atzlan was said to have been a marshy island situated in the middle of a lake. Some historians actually consider the names "Chicomoztoc" and "Aztlan" to be two terms for the same place, and believe that the island and the seven caves are simply two features of the same region. For nearly five centuries, popular imagination has speculated about the location of the legendary Aztlan. Some people refer to Aztlan as a concept, not an actual place that ever existed.
However, many historians believe that Aztlan did exist. The historian Paul Kirchhoff suggested that Aztlan lay along a tributary of the Lerna River, to the west of the Valley of Mexico. Other experts have suggested the Aztlan might be the island of Janitzio in the center of Lake Pátzcuaro, also to the west, with its physical correspondence to the description of Aztlan. Many people have speculated that the ancestral home of the Aztecs lay in California, New Mexico or in the Mexican states of Sonora and Sinaloa.
The idea that Sinaloa, Sonora, California, and New Mexico might be the site of Aztlan is a very plausible explanation when historical linguistics have been considered. "The north-to-south movement of the Aztlan groups is supported by research in historical linguistics, " writes Professor Smith in The Aztecs, "The Náhuatl language, classified in the Nahuan group of the Uto-Aztecan family of languages, is unrelated to most Mesoamerican native languages." As a matter of fact, "Náhuatl was a relatively recent intrusion" into central Mexico.
On the other hand, if one observes the locations of the indigenous people who spoke the Uto-Aztecan languages, all of their lands lay to the northwest of the Valley of Mexico. The northern Uto-Aztecans occupied a large section of the American Southwest. Among them were the Hopi and Zuni Indians of New Mexico and the Gabrielino Indians of the Los Angeles Basin. The Central Uto-Aztecans - occupying large parts of Chihuahua, Sinaloa and Sonora in northwestern Mexico - included the Papago, Opata, Yaqui, Mayo, Concho, Huichol and Tepehuán. It is reasonable to assume that where there is a linguistic relationship there is most likely also a genetic relationship. Thus, it is highly likely that the legendary Aztlan was located in northwestern Mexico or the Southwestern United States.
Originally posted by dr_strangecraft
But Lief's Vinland colony really wasn't a "significant" cultural contact. The Skraelings (indians) in Newfoundland already had as good a bow as the Vikings had, and there were only a few score Europeans. Not enough of a threat for the natives to get busy trying to copy the metal implements Vikings used. And the colony lasted less than a decade. Like I said, not really "culturally significant."