According to the theories developed by Seraja Szapszal (1873-1961) the head of the Polish-Lithuanian Community between the two World Wars, said that the Karaites were not really Jews at all but instead Turko-Khazar nomadic proselytes. The evidence he used was falsified but it had its advantage to avoid Nazi persecution.
Read more » The Galician Karaites Part 2
THe Galician Karaites
Had it not been for the Galicz community, which was granted equal standing with the Christian citizens of the Hapsburg Empire, the similar privileges would never have been extended to the Russian communities by their Empress Catherine the Great who only did so after the personal request of the Hapsburg Emperor. Even so, the Russian communities never achieved the equal status that was bestowed on the Galicz community. And that as we that are historians, can say clearly, "is a fact."
Read more » THe Galician Karaites
496AD The Year China Discovered the World Part 4
THe final chapter in this short series of articles looking at East meets West through historical documents and genetic fingerprints. Was the Prince of Mahoza the Glittering Man who was ancestor of Genghis Khan? How much of their Y chromosomes were a match? Are there pockets of unique populations within the Far East that shouldn't exist? What clues are found in Laos and Cambodia? This articles searches for answers to those questions.
Read more » 496AD The Year China Discovered the World Part 4
496AD The Year China Discovered the World Part 3
If you have been reading my earlier articleson the various connections of the Kahana to the Empires of China then you knowthat this time I’ll be discussing genetic evidence that ties the two dynasties together. Not an easy thing to do when one looks superficially at someone of Semitic origins and someone else for Oriental origins and tries to find a common denominator. The first reaction is to assume that there can be no genetic link at all. But as we all know, appearances can be deceiving.
Read more » 496AD The Year China Discovered the World Part 3
496AD The Year China Discovered the World Part 2
n Part 1 I introduced you to the stories that have been circulating behind the legend of the Great Genghis Khan for centuries. From Mesopotamia we have the story of the love of Mar Zutra’s life, the Princess Ti-Ping, and from Mongolia we similarly have the love of the tribal queen Alan-Ko’s life, the glittering man. And together we looked at the common denominator between these two stories, the young prince named Mar Yanqa. A child that spanned two worlds but accepted by neither.
Read more » 496AD The Year China Discovered the World Part 2All Our News
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