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Huns - European Huns

A Wisdom Archive on Huns - European Huns

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Huns - European Huns

A selection of articles related to Huns - European Huns:

In Burgenland there are 2 Statutarstädte and 7 districts. From north to south: Burgenland - Statutarstädte. Eisenstadt Rust Burgenland - Districts

The European Huns are often thought to have been a western extension of the Xiongnu (Xiōngnú), (匈奴) n., a group of nomad tribes from north-eastern China and Central Asia. These people achieved military superiority over their rivals (most of them highly cultured and civilized) by their state of readiness for combat, amazing mobility, and weapons like the Hun bow. Attila was born around 406


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* Encyclopedia II - Attila the Hun - Background and beginnings

The European Huns are often thought to have been a western extension of the Xiongnu (Xiōngnú), (匈奴) n., a group of nomad tribes from north-eastern China and Central Asia. These people achieved military superiority over their rivals (most of them highly cultured and civilized) by their state of readiness for combat, amazing mobility, and weapons like the Hun bow. Attila was born around 406. Nothing certain is known about his childhood; the suppositi ...

Read more here: » Attila the Hun: Encyclopedia II - Attila the Hun - Background and beginnings

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* Encyclopedia II - Burgenland - Administration

In Burgenland there are 2 Statutarstädte and 7 districts. From north to south: Burgenland - Statutarstädte. Eisenstadt Rust Burgenland - Districts. Neusiedl am See (administrative center Neusiedl am See) (hun. Nezsider) Eisenstadt-Umgebung (Eisenstadt) (hun. Kismarton) Mattersburg (Mattersburg) (hun. Nagymarton) Oberpullendorf (Oberpullendorf) (hun. Felsőpulya) Oberwart (Oberwart) (hun. Felsőőr) Güssing (Güssing) (hun. Németújvár) Jenne ...

Read more here: » Burgenland: Encyclopedia II - Burgenland - Administration

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Videos - huns
Uyghurs and Hungarians (Secret History of Huns)Uyghurs and Hungarians (Secret History of Huns)

part from the books "The Children of Mu", "Lost Continent of Mu" by James Churchward: Great Uyghur Empire wa...

Explaining Debt To A HunExplaining Debt To A Hun

Explaining Debt To A Hun

Attila the Hun (Part 3)Attila the Hun (Part 3)

The Scourge of God (Part 3) Turkic - Magyar leader in the 5th century

hun warriorshun warriors

a group of warriors





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* Encyclopedia II - Attila the Hun - Appearance character and name

The main source for information on Attila is Priscus, a historian who traveled with Maximin on an embassy from Theodosius II in 448. He describes the village the nomadic Huns had built and settled down in as the size of the great city with solid wooden walls. He described Attila himself as: "short of stature, with a broad chest and a large head; his eyes were small, his beard thin and sprinkled with gray; and he had a flat nose and a swar ...

Read more here: » Attila the Hun: Encyclopedia II - Attila the Hun - Appearance character and name

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* Encyclopedia II - Barbarian - Later developments other cultures
Historically, the term barbarian has seen widespread use. Many peoples have dismissed alien cultures and even rival civilizations as barbarians because they were unrecognizably strange. The Greeks admired Scythians and Eastern Gauls as heroic individuals— even in the case of Anacharsis as philosophers—but considered their culture to be barbaric. The Romans indiscriminately regarded the various Germanic tri ...

Read more here: » Barbarian: Encyclopedia II - Barbarian - Later developments other cultures

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* Encyclopedia II - Book of Veles - The planks

Indo-European languages have a common word related to writing (English "book", German "Buch", Russian and Bulgarian "буква" (bukva)—"letter") which is cognate to beech, and so it was conjectured that the earliest writings were carved on beech wood. The Book of Veles was the first such text written on wooden planks ever found; recently, more such texts have been found, notably the birch bark writings of Novgorod. The planks were 38 cm wide, 22 cm tall and about 0.5 cm thick. The edges and surfaces of the planks are uneven and ne ...

Read more here: » Book of Veles: Encyclopedia II - Book of Veles - The planks

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* Encyclopedia II - Austria - History

Austria - Austria and the Holy Roman Empire. The territory of Austria originally known as the Celtic kingdom of Noricum, was a long time ally of Rome. It was occupied rather than conquered by the Romans during the reign of Augustus and made the province Noricum in 16 BC. Later it was conquered by Huns, Rugii, Lombards, Ostrogoths, Bavarii, Avars (until c. 800), and Franks (in that order). Finally, after 48 years of Hungarian rule (907 to 955), the core territory of Austria was awarded to Leopold of Babenberg in 976. Be ...

Read more here: » Austria: Encyclopedia II - Austria - History

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* Encyclopedia II - Colonisation - Historical Colonisations

Colonisation - Classical Period. In ancient times, maritime nations such as the city-states of Greece often established colonies. These appear to have been more benign, emphasising the farming of uninhabited land. In classical times, land suitable for farming was often claimed by migratory "barbarian tribes" who lived by hunting and gathering. To ancient civilised people, the land simply appeared vacant. Another great colonisation of ancient times was that of the Romans. The Roman Empire conquered a large ...

Read more here: » Colonisation: Encyclopedia II - Colonisation - Historical Colonisations

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* Encyclopedia II - Barbarian - Hellenic stereotype

Out of those sources the Hellenic stereotype was elaborated: barbarians are like children, unable to speak or reason properly, cowardly, effeminate, luxurious, cruel, unable to control their appetites and desires, politically unable to govern themselves. These stereotypes were voiced with much shrillness by writers like Isocrates in the 4th century BC who called for a war of conquest against Persia as a panacea for Greek problems. However, the Hellenic stereotype of barbarians was not a universal feature of Hellenic culture. Xenophon, ...

Read more here: » Barbarian: Encyclopedia II - Barbarian - Hellenic stereotype

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* Encyclopedia II - Barbarian - Romantic and post-Romantic barbarians

The modern sympathetic admiration for such fantasy barbarians as Conan the Barbarian is a direct descendant of the Enlightenment idealization of the "Noble Savage". The German Romantics recharacterized the barbarian stereotype. Now it was the civilized Roman—or that modern Romanized Gaul, the Frenchman—who was effeminate and soft, and the stout-hearted German barbarian who exemplified manly virtue. The refor ...

Read more here: » Barbarian: Encyclopedia II - Barbarian - Romantic and post-Romantic barbarians

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* Encyclopedia II - Chinese astrology - The Lunisolar Calender

Since the (traditional) Chinese zodiac follows the (lunisolar) Chinese calendar, the switch over date for the zodiac signs is the Chinese New Year, not January 1 as in the Gregorian calendar. Therefore, a person who was born in January or early February may have the sign of the previous year. For example, 1990 was the year of the horse, but anyone born from January 1 to January 26, 1990 was born in the Year of the Snake (the sign of the previous year), because the 1990 Year of the Horse began on January 27, 1990. There are many online sign c ...

Read more here: » Chinese astrology: Encyclopedia II - Chinese astrology - The Lunisolar Calender

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