Previously, historians claimed that Armenians settled on Armenian highlands after coming from the west from Fracia

The Behistun inscription – Urartian – Armenian word similarities

Previously, historians claimed that Armenians settled on Armenian highlands after coming from the west from Fracia (this is northeastern Greece and Bulgaria).

But today, the latest genetic data has clearly shown that the movement was in reverse from East to West. That is, the Fracians were formed from Armenia. And the Armenian haplogroup R1b became the main characteristic marker for all Western Europe.

History says – from Asia Minor, a people came to Europe after expelling the former wild local black inhabitants who lived there, bringing with them culture: agriculture, livestock, crafts, metal smelting, iron, wagons, cities and their own…. R1b gaplogroup.

In the oldest chronicle of the British, on the first page, it is written that they came from Armenia. The same is said in the Bavarian chronicle.

And in the Basques, the leader of their people who moved to the Pyrenees was called Ay-tor, which in Armenian literally means – grandson of an Armenian.

The role and importance of Armenians in the history of our civilization has yet to be understood. But objective indicators will already do it, since people are all biased and pull the blanket on themselves.

The Russians are especially guilty of this. They are more flattering than Turks in this regard, and how Turks constantly try to diminish the role of Armenians in history. Russian youngster always bake themselves and try to jump above their head. Almost all of their definitions about Armenians are false at first.

For example, judge for yourself, the Byzantine emperors, who the whole world calls the “Armenian dynasty”, only Turks and Russians in their intellectual mutual soity call the “Macedonian dynasty”. And this is despite the fact that they were baptized by the Armenian dynasty, giving Volodechka a written beauty, so-called Anna Armenian.

Oh the ungrateful !

Paron Frederic

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail