Ed the Red
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This is made as much of history as a hypothesis. For nobody knows for sure they can only equate historical (if true) examples.
Well how 'bout I start with my own research on the subject.
To start, why don't we all agree on some basic facts. That the recent migrations from the steppes added alot of culture as well as genes obviously, to the populations of Europe.
Firstly there may have been tribes that spilled over into Europe in previous migrations from the steppes or Anatolia, or even North Africa, but that is not the concern.
I have researched the movement of possible tribes of steppe Nomadic horseman through time continuum. There is many legends now which DNA will prove undoubtedly. Funny how the Scots themselves wrote these histories In the 1320's, 7 hundred years before the inclusion of any DNA material. I refer back to the Declaration of Arbroath, which states that they came from Greater Scythia. This is a statement which you have to absorb very literally. They do not say they are Scythian, they say they came from Greater Scythia, which should be denoted as a vast area described by Greek writers as being surrounding the black sea, or basically any area from North that would've not been subjagated into any other specific realm. The Scots of today are irrefutably R1b gene carriers. So it has already been established that these genes have come from the steppes. So how do the nobles of 1320 know any of this, when there is no database of gene placement, they were correct weren't they.
Now we have to establish if they seem to know of an area where Greater Scythia was named what was their migration. Well in the many histories of what I have come to learn starts to coincide with written legends. We know that the Irish Gaels and Scots are akin. Well there is also a ln Irish history of the book of Invasions which describes the last invading tribe of Milesians to the island or Ireland. Amazing how these stories might not be 100% accurate things unmistakably coincide. The Gaels were undoubtedly a Celtic tribe. The presence of Celtic genes in Spain is remarkable, they were given a distinction of Celtiberian in Roman times. So did gealic milesians invade Ireland from Spain? That is a very reasonable hypothesis.Milesians are supposed to be interpreted as sons of Mil, or Mils espain soldier of Spain. The other very peculiar thing is that the Declaration of Arbroath also states as Scots travelling by the Tyrrhenian sea? We're the Scots sea farers? Well throughout history they've been documented raiding the shores of Britain from Ireland. Another thing that is of significance is Milesians. Do you know there was an Anatolian port called Miletus and the inhabitants were called Milesians! We all know that Celts inhabited Anatolia as Galatians. Does the timeframe match? It starts to piece together doesn't it
Well how 'bout I start with my own research on the subject.
To start, why don't we all agree on some basic facts. That the recent migrations from the steppes added alot of culture as well as genes obviously, to the populations of Europe.
Firstly there may have been tribes that spilled over into Europe in previous migrations from the steppes or Anatolia, or even North Africa, but that is not the concern.
I have researched the movement of possible tribes of steppe Nomadic horseman through time continuum. There is many legends now which DNA will prove undoubtedly. Funny how the Scots themselves wrote these histories In the 1320's, 7 hundred years before the inclusion of any DNA material. I refer back to the Declaration of Arbroath, which states that they came from Greater Scythia. This is a statement which you have to absorb very literally. They do not say they are Scythian, they say they came from Greater Scythia, which should be denoted as a vast area described by Greek writers as being surrounding the black sea, or basically any area from North that would've not been subjagated into any other specific realm. The Scots of today are irrefutably R1b gene carriers. So it has already been established that these genes have come from the steppes. So how do the nobles of 1320 know any of this, when there is no database of gene placement, they were correct weren't they.
Now we have to establish if they seem to know of an area where Greater Scythia was named what was their migration. Well in the many histories of what I have come to learn starts to coincide with written legends. We know that the Irish Gaels and Scots are akin. Well there is also a ln Irish history of the book of Invasions which describes the last invading tribe of Milesians to the island or Ireland. Amazing how these stories might not be 100% accurate things unmistakably coincide. The Gaels were undoubtedly a Celtic tribe. The presence of Celtic genes in Spain is remarkable, they were given a distinction of Celtiberian in Roman times. So did gealic milesians invade Ireland from Spain? That is a very reasonable hypothesis.Milesians are supposed to be interpreted as sons of Mil, or Mils espain soldier of Spain. The other very peculiar thing is that the Declaration of Arbroath also states as Scots travelling by the Tyrrhenian sea? We're the Scots sea farers? Well throughout history they've been documented raiding the shores of Britain from Ireland. Another thing that is of significance is Milesians. Do you know there was an Anatolian port called Miletus and the inhabitants were called Milesians! We all know that Celts inhabited Anatolia as Galatians. Does the timeframe match? It starts to piece together doesn't it
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