From: "Stephan Nikolov" Subject: Re: Caucasoid Turks/Bulgars Date: 26 Apr 1999 00:00:00 GMT Message-ID: <7g2a8k$qka$1@news.ox.ac.uk> Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit References: <369E3BE1.5C45@sbu.ac.uk> <77li2j$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$qkl@cpca3.uea.ac.uk> <3718c0d8.988421@news.yale.edu> <7fhjus$h91@cpca3.uea.ac.uk> <371e5362.14471999@news.yale.edu> <371fb5a6.150957194@news.yale.edu> <3720e880.6538676@news.uunet.lu> <3720eff4.6569025@news.yale.edu> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" X-MimeOLE: Produced By Microsoft MimeOLE V4.72.3155.0 X-Complaints-To: newsmaster@ox.ac.uk X-Trace: news.ox.ac.uk 925150292 27274 163.1.171.102 (26 Apr 1999 18:11:32 GMT) Organization: Ste Peter's College, Oxford Mime-Version: 1.0 NNTP-Posting-Date: 26 Apr 1999 18:11:32 GMT Newsgroups: sci.archaeology,sci.anthropology,sci.lang Cluster User wrote in message <3720eff4.6569025@news.yale.edu>... >>As an aside, the other Slavic word for kings, kral (I believe) is >>also, I have been told, a loan, from Charlemagne's name -unless >>this is a legend. > >I believe menges metions this. > Not only Menges, but Karl -- Corolus -- korol -- kral is a wellknown etymology. SN