mother móðir māter mḗtēr mātár mati mācer móteris mayr
same sem sama singuli hama samu samlith
knee ǵénu kniu gónu jā́nu zānūk gjuni keni
wolf wl̥kwos wulfs lupus lúkos vŕ̥kaḥ vǝhrka vlĭkŭ ulk walkw
milk hmelǵ miluks mulgeō amélgō mā́ršti marǝzait mŭlzu melg
new néwo niujis novus néos náva novŭ naujas newydd nor
wheel kwekwlo hvēl kúklos cakrá kolo kellin cylch kugullas
give ghabh giban habeō gábhastiḥ gabać gabtun gaibid
Articles
Research
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Archeology
Theory
Indo-European migrations [GALLERY]
The Indo-Europeans, or their language and culture, spread from their "homeland" into western Europe, central Asia and India. The Kurgan hypothesis describes the initial spread of Proto-Indo-European during the 5th and 4th millennia BC. Knowledge of them comes chiefly from the linguistic reconstruction, along with material evidence from archaeology and archaeogenetics. According to some archaeologists, PIE speakers cannot be assumed to have been a single, identifiable people...
Ancient Iranian Art [GALLERY]
To understand Iran, its related societies and people, one must first attempt to acquire an understanding of their culture. It is in the study of this area that the Iranian people's identity optimally expresses itself. As prominent Iranologist Richard Nelson Frye writes, in the first sentence of his latest book on Persia, "Iran's prize possession has been its culture.”
Hittite Artifacts [GALLERY]
By 1700 B.C., people speaking Hittite—an Indo-European language—had founded a capital at Bogazköy (ancient Hattusha) and, under a series of powerful kings, established a state in central Anatolia. The Hittite army attacked and partly destroyed Babylon in 1595 B.C., and in 1285 B.C. fought a battle against the Egyptian king Ramesses II at Qadesh in Syria.
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