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Armenian Stone Henge Story - CNN

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  • KanadaHye
    replied
    Re: Armenian Stone Henge Story - CNN

    Originally posted by Siggie View Post
    Hima esh yegha?
    Iravan khelkd gorsuntsutsir.... gadooeen hamar khosum em

    Leave a comment:


  • Siggie
    replied
    Re: Armenian Stone Henge Story - CNN

    Originally posted by KanadaHye View Post
    Eshov chem grnal shrnorkov khosil.
    Hima esh yegha teh noren iren masin geh khosis... ourishnereh garevor chen?

    and it's "eshin hed" Lezvov geh khosin, voch teh eshov.

    Leave a comment:


  • KanadaHye
    replied
    Re: Armenian Stone Henge Story - CNN

    Originally posted by Siggie View Post
    *throws up her hands* What is wrong with you people?! Poushman yegha! Panmeh uzetsank sorvel... Pokharen martu bes shenorkin yev hargankov khosis asang genes vor hech khosaktsutyun chela.
    Eshov chem grnal shrnorkov khosil.

    Leave a comment:


  • Siggie
    replied
    Re: Armenian Stone Henge Story - CNN

    Originally posted by KanadaHye View Post
    Who died and made you historian?
    *throws up her hands* What is wrong with you people?! Poushman yegha! Panmeh uzetsank sorvel... Pokharen martu bes shenorkin yev hargankov khosis asang genes vor hech khosaktsutyun chela.

    Leave a comment:


  • bell-the-cat
    replied
    Re: Armenian Stone Henge Story - CNN

    Originally posted by KanadaHye View Post
    Who died and made you historian?
    When you want to actually have a serious exchange, let me know.

    Leave a comment:


  • KanadaHye
    replied
    Re: Armenian Stone Henge Story - CNN

    Originally posted by bell-the-cat View Post
    Cilicia was the Greek name for the territory along the south-eastern coastal region of Asia Minor, then the name for the same territory when it was a province of the Roman Empire. There were almost no Armenians living there until the tenth century AD. The original population had been wiped out by the Muslim invasions in the 7th century and the hundreds of years of war that had followed, when Cilicia was the front line between the Byzantine Empire and the Muslim emirates in Aleppo and Damascus.

    Urfa/Edessa was not in Cilicia, it was in northern Syria, and was never part of the Armenian kingdom located in Cilicia.
    Who died and made you historian?

    Leave a comment:


  • bell-the-cat
    replied
    Re: Armenian Stone Henge Story - CNN

    Originally posted by Siggie View Post
    It looked to me (from other maps I googled) that it was awfully close to Cilicia too. Wasn't Cilicia founded more recently than the 5000 years ago they're thinking this "observatory" was built? This is why I said I didn't take a position...
    Cilicia was the Greek name for the territory along the south-eastern coastal region of Asia Minor, then the name for the same territory when it was a province of the Roman Empire. There were almost no Armenians living there until the tenth century AD. Most books suggest they came in the 11th century as refugees following the Turkish invasions of Armenia, but I wonder if many had, in fact, come a century before that - perhaps the Byzantine empire had invited Armenians in as colonists into a largely depopulated land. The original population had been wiped out by the Muslim invasions in the 7th century and the hundreds of years of war that had followed, when Cilicia was the front line between the Byzantine Empire and the Muslim emirates in Aleppo and Damascus.

    Urfa/Edessa was not in Cilicia, it was in northern Syria, and was never part of the Armenian kingdom located in Cilicia.
    Last edited by bell-the-cat; 04-07-2011, 12:08 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Siggie
    replied
    Re: Armenian Stone Henge Story - CNN

    Originally posted by bell-the-cat View Post
    I don't know if that direction alters over time or not.

    But the map at 1:32 showing plans of both Stonehenge and Karahunge indicate that the direction of the processional ways are identical - both plans are orientated the same way and the arrows point in the same direction. So if the summer solstice direction does change over time, wouldn't that prove that both monuments date from the same period? Unless the direction moves back and forth and so the same direction will repeat itself over time.
    I mistyped... I meant precession. The wobble of the Earth.
    I don't understand exactly how they do this. I understand it only in theory which is they can estimate time from the position of celestial bodies. This is working backwards from what they do to predict where they'll be in the future.

    Leave a comment:


  • Siggie
    replied
    Re: Armenian Stone Henge Story - CNN

    Originally posted by KanadaHye View Post
    Are you Armenian?
    See? You ignore what I say and ask a stupid question instead. When you want to actually have a serious exchange, let me know.

    Leave a comment:


  • bell-the-cat
    replied
    Re: Armenian Stone Henge Story - CNN

    Originally posted by Siggie View Post
    Ah yes, the other stuff at the site! Of course...
    I think the scientist they refer to in the video dated it by Earth's precession and the positions of celestial bodies in the sky. Perhaps they haven't been granted permission to dig? I don't really know anything about this beyond what's presented in the video.
    I don't know if that direction alters over time or not.

    But the map at 1:32 showing plans of both Stonehenge and Karahunge indicate that the direction of the processional ways are identical - both plans are orientated the same way and the arrows point in the same direction. So if the summer solstice direction does change over time, wouldn't that prove that both monuments date from the same period? Unless the direction moves back and forth and so the same direction will repeat itself over time.

    Leave a comment:

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