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Vinča (Hungary) 4000 b.c.e Language http://www.burlingtonnews.net/vinca2.gif http://de.academic.ru/pictures/dewiki/50/2004-07-31_gimbutas_vinca-schrift.png Cities Drenovac Vršac 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. Similar
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 wrote 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
constant threat of 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 culture represents the
first post French cave pre cuneiform/hieroglyphic writing yet known. Although
this language has yet to be recognized as begin translated by academics. The
characters and layout patterns are consistent with later languages of Europe;
specifically the Futhark. Which the original language the Edda were written
in was Futhark. The history of Hungary was also written in Futhark; but when
the king of said area converted to Christianity; he immediately ordered all
works written in the preLatin scripts to be
destroyed. |
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