ZAPRASZA.net POLSKA ZAPRASZA KRAKÓW ZAPRASZA TV ZAPRASZA ART ZAPRASZA
Dodaj artykuł  

KIM JESTEŚMY ARTYKUŁY COVID-19 CIEKAWE LINKI 2002-2009 NASZ PATRONAT DZIŚ W KRAKOWIE DZIŚ W POLSCE

Inne artykuły

Czym jest totalitaryzm liberalny w kulturze 
10 luty 2011      Artur Łoboda
Dziennik pisarza Karola Zielińskiego z Krakowa (14.07.2011) 
10 październik 2020      Zygmunt Jan Prusiński
„Szczepionka” Pfizera: zabić 200, aby „ocalić” jednego?  
9 listopad 2021     
Pocałunek dla polskich polityków 
21 październik 2011      Artur Łoboda
Krzyżu Chrystusa 
31 marzec 2018     
Opodatkować nieboszczyków ! 
19 sierpień 2010      Zygmunt Jan Prusiński
Staję wyraźnie po stronie Rostowskiego 
27 kwiecień 2011      Artur Łoboda
Zagrożenie przyjdzie z Zachodu 
12 marzec 2012      Artur Łoboda
Sodomici chcą oddawać swą krew  
9 grudzień 2014      www.polskawalczaca.com
Szkolny przykład manipulacji - komentarz 
9 styczeń 2021      Artur Łoboda
Instytut Józefa Piłsudskiego w Ameryce zaprasza w dniu 6 maja (piątek) o godz. 19-tej 
28 kwiecień 2011      przysłał ICP
PRZED YPRES BYŁ BOLIMÓW – mija sto lat – WIESŁAW SOKOŁOWSKI  
2 styczeń 2015      www.trwanie.com
Zdobywanie serc i umysłów Afganów mimo nocnych włamań? 
21 marzec 2012      Iwo Cyprian Pogonowski
Lepiej z mądrym stracić – niż z głupim zyskać 
26 październik 2013      Artur Łoboda
Dlaczego Tusk nie zgodzi się na debatę z Gowinem? 
28 lipiec 2013      Artur Łoboda
Immunitet jurysdykcyjny 
15 grudzień 2017     
Nazifikacja Izraela – kiedy Izraelczycy mówią o eksterminacji i zagładzie, łatwo zrozumieć, dlaczego państwo niemieckie ich wspiera 
23 styczeń 2024      Tony Greenstein
Bez edukacji pozostaniemy niewolnikami 
29 październik 2012      Artur Łoboda
Co prawda to prawda 
11 styczeń 2016      Artur Łoboda
Polański i "Pianista" 
3 styczeń 2010      Artur Łoboda

 
 

National Memory

The national memory stored in Poland does not include arrivals of forefathers of Poles from some faraway lands because apparently the national identity of Poles was formed in the basin of the Vistula River, in the great central European lowlands in the vicinity of the steppes of Ukraine and of Russia where the original Proto Indo-European language was developed and already used some 5500 years ago. This development is described by David W. Anthony, professor of anthropology at Hartwick College in England. This author has conducted extensive archaeological and DNA fieldwork in the Ukraine, Russia, and Kazakhstan.

The book “The Horse, the Wheel, and Language: How Bronze-Age Riders From the Eurasian Steppes Shaped the Modern World” presents good scientific arguments that are in agreement with the old mythology of Poland and with existing linguistic evidence. The Baltic Sea was sometimes called the Slavonic Sea or Morze Słowiańskie. The Balto-Slavs are known to have lived on the shores of the Baltic Sea as far back as nearly 4000 years ago, according to genetic evidence and carefully time-dated DNA studies.

According to linguists, some 3500 years ago the Balto-Slavic language separated from the Arian language in which Sanscrit texts were written in India. Five hundred years later it divided itself into the Baltic and the Slavic families of languages. During the next 1500 years the Slavic family of languages was developing in parallel with other families of related languages, such as Baltic, Celtic, Germanic, Hellenic, Iranian, Kurdish, Latin, and Sanskrit, among other families of Indo-European languages.

Therefore Lithuanian, Polish, (old) Prussian, English, Welsh, French, Greek, Kurdish, and Punjabi belong to the Indo- European family of languages. Some 1500 years ago the Polish language separated from the old Slavic or the old Slavonic language and started its own development, which is still in progress.

The turning point in the spreading of Indo-European languages came with the domestication of horses, which was first accomplished around 4,800 years ago, at least some 2,000 years after cattle, sheep, pigs, and goats had been domesticated in other parts of the world. Horses were most likely used initially as a source of meat. Some centuries later, horses were ridden and had the markings of the bits left on their teeth. Eventually horses were used to pull carts, first with solid wheels and later on wheels with spokes.

Proto-Indo-European speakers became mobile herders who spread their language through the steppes. They then became skilled warriors and were equipped with battle chariots on wheels with spokes. They spread their language farther and farther so that now nearly 3 billion people use languages that originated from the proto-Indo-European language. Today some 90 percent of the world’s scientific and technological knowledge has been discovered by people speaking languages derived from the proto-Indo-European language.

Today linguistic studies give information about the cross-influence between European languages. The old Slavic word for the wind “wetru” in antiquity and wiatr in modern Polish serves as a borrowed word adapted to English as "weather" and to German as “Wetter.” Polish word for weather “pogoda” has a philosophical derivation based on the fact that weather can not be controlled by humans. Similarly Slavic word for human being is composed of two words: “wiek” (vyek) or a century and “czoło” (cho-wo) in Polish “człowiek” (chow-vyek) and in Russian “chewovyek.” Thus the two words together have a philosophical meaning of “forefront of the ages” or “product of centuries of evolution.” The spoken or written word in all Slvic languages is “swovo” in Polish “słowo” which belongs to the same family of words as “Słowianin” or man of Slavic identity. The Slavs in Europe called people of other languages, which they could not understand “Niemcy”: derived from a word “niemowa” (nye mo-vah) or speechless, mute, of dumb. The word “Niemcy” (nyem-tsi) in all modern Slavic languages means “Germany.”

The English "fist" and German Faust end with the letters "st" because of the ancient Slavic ending of the word pięść, based on "five fingers in a fist" from the word pięć, meaning "five." The Slavic word pług (pwoog), meaning "horizontal cutting tool," is similar to the word meaning "skid"; płoza became "plow" in English and Phlug in German. The Slavic-Western Lechitic word bierka or birka became the French biere, German bier, and English "beer."

St. Cyryl or Canstatine (827-869) and St. Metody or Michael (815-885), Greek brothers of a Slavic mother, were born in Thessaloniki and were "Apostles to the Slavs" in the ninth century. Pope John Paul II declared then copatrons of Europe with Saint Benedict of Nursia. They created the Glagolitic alphabet, which included the Slavic nasal vowels "a" and "e" preserved uniquely in the Polish language among all other modern Slavic languages. This contributes additional proof of the fact established by DNA studies, that the Poles and their ancestors lived in the basin of the Vistula River for millennia, first as members of the Balto-Slavic family and then as members of the Slavic family of nations.

For several hundred years the Polish language served eastern Slavs as a conduit for learning about the Western Latin culture. The Russian dynasty, the Romanovs, used Polish as the language of the court. For centuries the Polish language served as the language of diplomacy and civility between the Baltic and the Black Sea.

The antiquity of Polish expressions is evident in the fact that the word "wall" in Polish is sciana, meaning a vertically cut dirt wall, cut below ground level, in dugout dwellings. Similarly, floor in Polish is podloga or lower surface, and ceiling is powala or roofing thrown over a dugout. The name of stairs in Polish indicates going down, or schody. Since groundwater could accumulate below the floors of ancient dugouts, the crawlspace could provide a source of groundwater. In Polish the verb lazic or "to crawl" was possibly the origin for the word "washroom," or in Polish lazienka.

The structure of the Polish language is similar to classical Latin and Greek. The adaptation of the Latin alphabet to Polish sounds consisted of one definite process, rather than,was the case with the English language, which is a mixed language with simplified grammar inherited from the adaptation of the Latin alphabet to Anglo-Saxon and to French, which was used by the Norman conquerors of Britain. While the structure of English is Germanic, modern English inherited two separate adaptations of sounds to the Latin alphabet: one from the Anglo-Saxon language, the other from the French language.

The French language started to develop as a result of the Roman conquest of the Gaul and the obligation of Burgund and Frank slaves to learn Latin; these slaves were sold to work on Roman plantations in Gaul where Roman Legions were stationed. The resulting French language of today is pronounced in a way much less similar to the Latin language than is the Spanish language. In the Germanic family of languages only the Germans borrowed the Slavic diminutive and augmentative forms during the 1000 years of the German conquest of western Slavic lands. Diminutives and augmentatives do not commonly occur in other Germanic languages.

The historic role of the horse and the wheel in the formation of Proto-Indo-European languages, as shown in linguistic and DNA studies and as described in the book The Horse, the Wheel, and Language: How Bronze-Age Riders From the Eurasian Steppes Shaped the Modern World, possibly explains the great cavalry tradition in the Slavic half of Europe.

www.pogonowski.com
26 luty 2011

Iwo Cyprian Pogonowski 

  

Komentarze

 

Tacyt w I wieku, w swoim dziele nieszczesliwie zatytulowanym Germania, umiejscawial nad Wisla zwiazek plemion o nazwie Lugii, uwazanych dzis za nieslowianskie, podczas gdy o slowianskosci tych plemion swiadczy sama lacinska nazwa Lugii, ktora po lacinie wymawia sie "ludzi". Tak wiec juz w I wieku naszej ery mielismy nad Wisla do czyniernia ze Zwiazkiem Ludzi.

2011-02-26
latarnik

  

Archiwum

Jak stracili wladze
wrzesień 6, 2005
przeslala Elzbieta
Papież wie, po co przyjeżdża do Polski
sierpień 18, 2002
PAP
Kto - komu i czemu służy
lipiec 2, 2008
Artur Łoboda
Milczenie za 400 milionów złotych
lipiec 14, 2002
PAP
Medycyna jako przemysł i rola reklam koncernów farmaceutycznych w mediach dla nakręcania koniunktury
maj 8, 2005
Adam Sandauer
Prawo do ludzkiej godności
październik 23, 2003
Ewa Polak-Pałkiewicz
21 postulatów Solidarności które wynegocjowano strajkami sierpnia roku 1980
sierpień 28, 2005
Adam Sandauer
Fiasko walki o kontrolę ropy naftowej Iraku?
maj 9, 2007
Iwo Cyprian Pogonowski
Religie
maj 23, 2004
List do prezydenta Krakowa Jacka Majchrowskiego
lipiec 24, 2005
Artur Łoboda
True fact złodziej story
styczeń 30, 2008
Andrzej Reymann
Firmy Busha i Cheneya miały filie w rajach podatkowych
sierpień 1, 2002
PAP
Co wszyscy powinnismy wiedziec
październik 9, 2007
....
BILANS MAJˇTKU POLSKIEGO
luty 24, 2004
Statuetka dla Polańskiego Złoty Liebling
grudzień 4, 2006
Sebastian Pasławski
Kryzys w Rosji sprzyja Chinom. Ale w jaki sposób?
sierpień 19, 2008
tłumacz
"Oni" już się wybrali
listopad 10, 2003
Zbyt kosztowna,
czerwiec 4, 2007
. (bez podpisu)
Prowokacja była głośna, wyjaśnienie ciche
listopad 7, 2004
Artur Łoboda
Nowe referendum
listopad 25, 2003
Niedziela
 


Kontakt

Fundacja Promocji Kultury
Copyright © 2002 - 2024 Polskie Niezależne Media