Where did Europeans come from? Are Russians and Europeans just similar or have common roots?
Where did Europeans come from? Are Russians and Europeans just similar or have common roots?

Video: Where did Europeans come from? Are Russians and Europeans just similar or have common roots?

Video: Where did Europeans come from? Are Russians and Europeans just similar or have common roots?
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Asking such questions, you inevitably come to the conclusion that we have more in common than differences. Where does the antagonism and fear of each other come from? We were purposefully frightened by the West for many years, and the Europeans were, accordingly, frightened by the Russians.

Six years ago, I moved with my sons to live in Holland. Here the children went to school. There they encountered aggressive behavior from Dutch children. Their ridicule and nagging towards my sons were of the same direction, and the reason for the insults and attacks is that Russia is our Motherland. At first, the sons experienced the situation, and then realized that their Dutch classmates were simply experiencing fear, caused by ignorance, in front of everything Russian.

The media are literally teeming with negativity towards Russia, an avalanche of anti-Russian propaganda falls on people, so the Dutch have mixed feelings towards us Russians.

It is no secret that the school is a model of society, and this small example clearly shows the panicky horror on the part of Europeans in relation to Russia and Russians. At first glance, this seems at least strange, because we, the Russians, never did anything bad to the Dutch and other peoples inhabiting Europe, but quite the opposite, they attacked Russia.

Now back to the question Where did the Europeans come from? Dutchman Hermann Wirth, a well-known philologist, historian, archaeologist, researcher of ancient Germanic temples, as well as sacred languages and the origin of Christianity, noted that the world outlook of Europe differs significantly from that of Germanic paganism, which is described by the official science of our time.

In particular, Wirth recreates a picture of the past of the Frisians (ancient Germanic tribes, now inhabitants of the Netherlands), bringing to the readers ancient oral legends and written monuments. So in the Chronicles of Ur Linda * (linda - linden - sacred tree) - an ancient German god, the first lines say:

Some customs of the ancient Germanic peoples have indeed survived to this day. The famous Midzommerfeest holiday in the Netherlands is a midsummer holiday (Ivan Kupala Day) the Dutch celebrate on the summer solstice. The existence of this holiday confirms the fact that the ancient Germanic peoples were Sun worshipers.

The ancestors of the Germans on this day in the groves or near the ancient temples jumped over the fire, led round dances, rolled a burning wooden wheel wrapped in straw from the hill. This meant the setting of the old sun and the wheel of time, as well as the burning of the old in the name of renewal.

And here's another observation. A very common element of decorating the roofs of Frisian houses is the uilenbord (aulenbord) in the form of a swan or a horse. Its history dates back to ancient times and the friezes themselves do not know the designation of this symbol, which is still popular today. It is only known that this is an old cult symbol.

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Russian architects had certain knowledge in the construction of houses and buildings. The roof was presented as the vault of heaven. At the very top, on the main log of the roof - ohlupene, another name for the ridge, the neck and chest of the bird-horse are sharply arched. A horse, like a bird, is an ancient image of the sun. The horse is a symbol of aspiration. The roof slopes were like wings.

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Solar rosettes were depicted as a circle with six radii (the wheel of Jupiter), a circle with a cross inside, or a circle with eight rays. Next to the sun symbols, there are signs of the earth and fields (a rhombus or square, drawn along and across).

The Dutch call the ridge nok, apparently, only this part of the word “ridge” the medieval Dutch could pronounce.

Russian and Dutch folk tales also have an obvious specularity, the analysis of which requires another essay. Isn't it a surprising similarity with ancient Slavic traditions?

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In my opinion, such coincidences cannot be accidental. In this small observation, I once again find confirmation of the truth set forth in many books about the history of the Rus and Slavs, and their migration to Europe.

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* Die Ura-Linda-chronik Übersetzt und mit einer einführenden geschichtlichen Untersuchung. von Herman Wirth. Leipzig-KOA, 1933. S. 13

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