Re: Was their a god at Ephesus, male counterpart to the Goddess
- From: "Agamemnon" <agamemnon@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 26 Nov 2007 15:59:59 -0000
"Martin Edwards" <big_mart_98@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
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Agamemnon wrote:
Are you taking the piss?
"Alan Crozier" <name1.name2@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
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<sanlosinst@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
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On Nov 25, 2:58 am, "Agamemnon" <agamem...@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:the
Maeones was also known as Mannus or Germanus and was the fouder of
toGerman race, being the son of Tuitshe (in modern German Deuche due
Grimm's Law) the son of Jannus the king of Italy in 1628 BC.
Can you give me a source text, text date and linguistic origin for the
name Tuitshe? It seems very unlikely that Tuitshe could be the word
that developed into German _Deutsch_.
You're right. Of course it's more than unlikely. The form used in
Tacitus is Tuisto and it already shows the effect of Grimm's Law. It's
almost certainly from the same root as "two" and "twin". It's a
well-known Indo-European tradition to trace the origin of a tribe back
to a twin deity (Romulus and Remus, Yama Ymir, etc.).
Poppy***. The Germans did not trace their origins back to any twin
deities. They traced it back to the Assyrians and to Shem. The name
Tuitche the oldest God of the Germans is a corruption of Adad-Shemshi
which is also corrupted to Shem. Both Tuitche and Shem date to 1600 BC
according to Biblical chronology and that of the Bavarian Chronicle and
The Travels of Noe into Europe which were are all based on pseudo-Berosus
History of the Chaldanes, which itself is based on Phrygian and Roman
sources obtained from the Hellenistic Greeks.
I am giving you the historical facts as documented by ancient historians.
.
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- Was their a god at Ephesus, male counterpart to the Goddess
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