From: "H.M.Hubey" Subject: Re: Caucasoid Turks/Bulgars Date: 16 Feb 1999 00:00:00 GMT Message-ID: <36CA45A1.FE304E2B@montclair.edu> Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit References: <369E3BE1.5C45@sbu.ac.uk> <77li2j$qi0$1@whisper.globalserve.net> <369F52FE.2B6@sbu.ac.uk> <77rc86$auj$1@brokaw.wa.com> <36A444B3.F3B70F1C@alum.mit.edu.-> <7827sb$269$1@nnrp1.dejanews.com> <36A52D70.9E372DD2@alum.mit.edu.-> <36A556AB.9927BD29@montclair.edu> <36a63533.58309714@news.yale.edu> <7866ud$i9m$1@nnrp1.dejanews.com> <36cdb21e.883120019@news.wxs.nl> <36A7FCC8.79790A6B@earthlink.net> <36d77e23.1000882888@news.wxs.nl> <36a8d455.81661202@news.yale.edu> <78pl3c$84o@cpca3.uea.ac.uk> <36b0dc2f.3434839@news.yale.edu> <78v30o$vl6@cpca3.uea.ac.uk> <36b34d7c.60430113@news.yale.edu> <794e84$4iq@cpca3.uea.ac.uk> <3744d12a.1873763068@news.wxs.nl> <796m95$eq2@cpca3.uea.ac.uk> <375c0ea6.1954957123@news.wxs.nl> <79fo99$qkl@cpca3.uea.ac.uk> <79skrj$u81@cpca3.uea.ac.uk> <79vl9f$dub@cpca3.uea.ac.uk> <7a05ai$45s$1@nnrp1.dejanews.com> <36c4bdd2.67559906@news.yale.edu> <7acch1$f2k$1@news.ox.ac.uk> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii X-Complaints-To: abuse@rcn.com X-Trace: b6FUSErZ3M2OmIc8HjNHrOOKSWYeBAddkAYZPxnI3PM= Organization: Montclair State University Mime-Version: 1.0 Reply-To: hubeyh@montclair.edu NNTP-Posting-Date: 17 Feb 1999 04:24:31 GMT Newsgroups: sci.archaeology,sci.anthropology,sci.lang Stephan Nikolov wrote: > > > The emphasis is on either doe or wolf, as I read it. But the either case has > much broader pattern. I am very reluctant to go for "origins". The sources > (liguistic data as well, as I can see from this discusian) are far from > This wolf obsession existed in the steppes around the time Herodotus wrote. He mentions people who allegedly turn to wolves. He talks about people born bald. And he talks about people who are apparently smoking marijuana. The marijuana had to come from the south. If the Etruscans came from Anatolia and some of the sumer substrates who made it to the steppes were related to etruscans, the source of the wolf legends in Roman, Turkic, etc is from there. Herodotus says that the Trojans went to the Balkans. These "turs" could be related to Etruscans, Turukkians (in Anatolia) also. If some wolf story/legend could be found more to the south, it would be important. But the post about Meroitic, Uralic and Altaic morphological matchings also point in a certain direction. -- Best Regards, Mark -==-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= hubeyh@montclair.edu =-=-=-= http://www.csam.montclair.edu/~hubey =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=