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The Vinca Language (Hungary)
4000 b.c.e
V Uruz A Ansuz I Isa R Raido The Vinča civilization dates to 6000 b. c. e. That is just fine
to understand and accept. But what is
not acceptable to understand is that things take time to engineer. You can not just go from a tent technology to wrokign stone overnight, it takes trial and error, it
takes mathematics to figure out even basic structural engineering. Even trying to
copy the geology of a cave is a
extremely complex thing to undertake. So all this stuff the Vinča
left behind takes a lot longer to master then one might think, it takes a minimune of 500 years for a tribe to go from a tent tech
to stone working. Even if that stone
working tech is only a half dug out hold with a couple feet tall wall, with
timbers on top, that is still complex when you think about it. Vinča / Old European Theory My theory is that the Vinča had direct contact with the Cro-Magnon culture
and was taught its language cave paintings, over time developed those cave paintings
from just art, or some rudimentary form of language into the root of what I
call the symbolic language base. The Vinča
are talked about in history as being the The Vinča
culture existed in central and eastern Europe from at least 6000 b. c.
e. up till the time a patriarchal
culture moved in or invaded, were beaten back and the 2 cultures merged. Over time the philosophy of the AEsier culture over took the philosophy of the Location The central and eastern parts of
Table translations As I find them I will post and
translate them What happened to
this language Over taken by the AEsier culture. References The poetic Edda’s The
Vinča are a culture which has been named
courtesy of the Vinča river in Hungary. Since
this was not the name of the river in antiquity nor was it the name of the
culture. The
Vinča is most closely related to the Vanier
culture of the Poetic Edda. Existed
at similar time. Simile writing format. Similar cultural makeup. According
to the Edda’s the Vanier
were a balanced matriarchal and patriarchal culture living in central and
eastern Europe sometime previous to the Greek invasions. Frey
and Freya were the main deities/high priest/ess and or
king and queen of this culture. The names and or titles did not translate
well thousands of years later, through a dozen name changes, where Snorri Sterlson finally
write down the oral history living on Iceland during the dark ages. The
problem is; that stories from Germany and Hungary written down through that
many language changes under the execution by being burned alive circa 1000 ce inquisition;
there is no possible way the stories are close to the original. Plus
adding the facts that the Vanier culture were invaded and came to a peaceful
armistice with the Aesier (the easier
were most likely a monotheistic culture from either the Hyksos descendants,
or an earlier monotheistic tribe). Over the next several hundred years the
cultures merged. Till the more dominant AEsier culture with more dominant schema
slowly took over the more peaceful Vanier. Evidence
of said can be seen in America now; the Latino culture is so dominant that
the American culture is slowly starting to integrate the Latino culture into
its infrastructure. Dial 2 for Spanish. The
Vinča are a culture which has been named
courtesy of the Vinča river in Hungary. Since
this was not the name of the river in antiquity nor was it the name of the
culture. The
Vinča is most closely related to the Vanier
culture of the Poetic Edda. Existed at similar time. Simile writing
format. Similar cultural makeup.
Old European / Vinča/vanier
Origin Some scholars believe that the Vinča symbols represent the earliest form of writing
ever found, predating ancient Egyptian and Sumerian writing by thousands of
years. Since the inscriptions are all short and appear on objects found in
burial sites, and the language represented is not known, it is highly
unlikely they will ever be deciphered. Symbols dating from the oldest
period of Vinča culture (6th-5th millennia BC)
Common symbols used throughout
the Vinča period Other Vinča
symbols Vinca language
Translations
Vinca Ingwaz laguz alhaz wunjo othello ewaz Vinča / Old
European Theory My theory is that the Vinča had direct contact with the Cro-Magnon culture
and was taught its language cave paintings, over time developed those cave
paintings from just art, or some rudimentary form of language into the root
of what I call the symbolic language base. The Vinča
are talked about in history as being the The Vinča
culture existed in central and eastern Europe from at least 6000 b. c.
e. up till the time a patriarchal
culture moved in or invaded, were beaten back and the 2 cultures merged. Over time the philosophy of the AEsier culture over took the philosophy of the Location The central and eastern parts
of Bibliography1908 M. M. Vasic, South-Eastern Elements in the
Prehistoric Civilisation of Servia, Annual of
the 1910 M. M. Vasic, Die Hauptergebnisse
der prahistorischen Ausgrabung
in Vinca in Jahre 1908, Prahistorische
Zeitschrift II, Berlin, 1, 23-39. 1911 M. M. Vasic, Die Datierung
der Vincaschicht, Prahistorische
Zeitschrift III, 1932 M. M. Vasic, Preistorijska
Vinca I, 1936 M. M. Vasic, Preistorijska
Vinca II-IV, 1939 F. Holste, Zur chronologischen Stellung der Vinca Keramik, Wiener Prahistorische Zeitschrift
XXVI/1, Wien, 1-21. 1950 V. Milojcic, Koros
- Starcevo - Vinca, Reinecke
Festschrift, 1951 M. Garasanin, Hronologija
vincanske grupe, 1957 D. Srejovic - B. Jovanovic, Pregled kamenog orudja i oruzja
iz Vince, Arheoloski
Vestnik VIII/3-4, 256-296. 1959. D. Srejovic - B. Jovanovic, Orudje i oruzje
od kosti i nakit iz
Vince, Starinar IX-X, 181-190. 1964 Z. Letica, The Neolithic Figurines from Vinca,
Archaeology 17/1, 1972 I. Schwidetzky, Menschliche
Skelettreste von Vinca, Glasnik antropoloskog
drustva Jugoslavije
8-9, 1979 G. Marjanovic-Vujovic, Necropole
Medievale Vinca, Inventaria Archaeologica,
fasc. 22, Zagreb, Y 209-218. 1984 Vinca u praistoriji
i srednjem veku, Katalog Galerije SANU 50, // Project Rastko
/ Archaeology
// Old European / Vinča Origin Some
scholars believe that the Vinča symbols
represent the earliest form of writing ever found, predating ancient Egyptian
and Sumerian writing by thousands of years. Since the inscriptions are all
short and appear on objects found in burial sites, and the language
represented is not known, it is highly unlikely they will ever be deciphered.
Symbols
dating from the oldest period of Vinča culture
(6th-5th millennia BC) Much more to come like the rest of the symbols and my translations of what this ancient language actually means. Vinca http://www.yuheritage.com/vinca.htm http://www.rastko.org.yu/arheologija/vinca/vinca_eng.html#_Toc504111709 http://www.omniglot.com/writing/vinca.htm http://www.alphabets-world.com/vinca.html http://www.prehistory.it/ftp/winn11.htm http://www.celticlady.com/celt-syms/basic.html |
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