historycisalpin
VIP Member
Ancient descendants indigenous peoples of old Europe, not pre-Indoeuropean, but rather, pre-indomesopotamic people, given that the real Aryans were the populations Meso-Saharasian the Semitic race.
"After the 4000-3500 BC, they are obvious of radical social transformations in the ruins of settlements previously matristi and peaceful along the river valleys of Central Asia, Mesopotamia and North Africa. In
each case, the evidence of the increase in aridity and land abandonment coincides with migratory pressures on settlements with secure water supplies, such as those located in the oases or along the
exotic rivers. Central Asia also underwent a change of water levels in lakes and rivers beds, in conjunction with climatic instability and aridity that stimulated the abandonment of large farming communities
lake or with irrigation. The settlements on the Nile or the Tigris-Euphrates, as the portions more humid highlands of the Levant, Anatolia and Iran were invaded and conquered by peoples who had abandoned
Arabia and / or Central Asia continuously drying up. Later they emerged were new centralized despotic. In almost all cases that I have studied they are found in the architecture of tombs, temples and
fortifications of widows ritual murder trials (eg. The murder of his mother when performed by the eldest son), cranial deformations, emphasis on horses and camels, and the increase of military force as a
result of these invasions. While these new centralized and despotic states grew in power, they expanded their territories, sometimes conquering nomadic pastoral tribes still present on the steppe in drying
up. Some of these despotic states invaded the marshes adjacent to Saharasia to expand their territories. They conquered the peoples of the wetlands or, failing to do so, they stimulated defensive reactions,
evident in the subsequent appearance of fortifications, weapons technology and an intermediate level of patrism in these wetlands. Other despotic states Saharasiani eventually disappeared from the history
books with the intensification of aridity that dried up altogether their livelihood (DeMeo 1985, Chapter 6 of 1986).
In the more humid areas of the border Saharasia patrism appears later, and only after, having developed within the Saharasiano nucleus undergoing drying. As aridity gripped the Saharasia and while the
answer armored patrist gripped more and more the peoples of Saharasia, migrations out of the dry regions increasingly put these people in contact with the most peaceful peoples of the moister border
areas of Saharasia. The migrations outside of Saharasia took place more and more in the form of massive invasions of the more fertile border territories. In these border areas patrism took root not because
of desertification or famine trauma, but killing and replacing Matristic original populations by patristic invaders groups, or by the forced adoption of new social institutions patrist introduced by the conquerors
invaders. For example, after 4000 BC, Europe was invaded in succession by ax peoples as kurgans, Scythians, Sarmatians, Huns, Arabs, Mongols and Turks. Each of them was in turn to make war, to
conquer, to pillage and generally transforming Europe towards increasingly patrist. The European social institutions progressively from matrismo veered toward patrism. The most western parts of Europe,
particularly Britain and Scandinavia, developed patrist conditions much later and in a more diluted fashion Europe and the eastern Mediterranean, which were more profoundly influenced by Saharasiani
peoples".
Origins and Spread of patrism in Saharasia, c. 4000 B.C. .: evidence of a worldwide geographic scheme linked to the climate in human behavior * James DeMeo
Post Scriptum:
The natives europid Italic tended to short stature, as we are described by Julius Caesar.
Caesar described the victory over Audatuci (a Germanic tribe that had settled in the gallic territory) in his book De Bello Gallico, in this way: "When they saw that the Romans, after having approached the
war machines and prepared the embankment, built in a distance, a tower, began to mock them from the wall, asking, with derogatory words, because such a large machine was built so far and with what
hands and what men so small forces (in fact, almost all the Gauls despised the stature of Roman, low in comparison to that them) could hope to move one so heavy tower. But when they realized that the
tower was moving and approaching the walls, impressed to see something so new and unusual, they sent ambassadors to Caesar to treat for peace."