woensdag 31 mei 2017

Strijders leed

Jaarlijks wordt er in de V.S. Memorial Day gehouden  op de laatste maandag in mei  om de slachtoffers van oorlogen te herdenken.
Sinds de revolutie eind 18e eeuw  zijn er totaal tenminste  604.544 mannen gedood. Daar ontbreekt natuurlijk het aantal blijvend invaliden of post traumatische stress slachtoffers/overlevers en  vooral de door hen gedode mensen en dieren. Dat gaat om een onnoemlijk leed dat steeds wordt doorgegeven. En wat te denken van de eerste en tweede generatie kinderen van overlevende vaders die hun verdrongen oorlogen ervaringen weer bij even doorgeven aan hun kinderen.

Onderschat worden de karmische gevolgen die deze strijddoden meenemen in andere incarnaties en de plekken op aarde waar zielendelen  zijn gebleven/gehecht door deze strijd. Als het om slachtvelden gaat betreft het ook slachtveldwezens die steeds weer om bloedoffers vragen. Zo is het nabije oosten weer een gebied dat bloedoffers vraagt en enkele decennia geleden was dat het Balkan gebied.

Daar is nog veel te lossen, op te lossen en in het bewustzijn te brengen.

Het is niet zo aangenaam te weten dat de huidige VS president  Trump een incarnatie is van een kruisvaarder, die zijn strijdmentaliteit weer neerzet in deze tijd.  Hij gebruikt nog steeds zijn rechterhand om te imponeren! Oude wonden etteren door en door op deze planeet waar herhaling alom is!

Het is zeer zinvol je eigen strijdverleden te onderzoeken en op te lossen als je nu in vrede leeft.

Overigens vrouwen zijn ook niet geheel vrij van smet. Vooral in de nadagen van het matriarchaat hebben zij vele mannen gedood!



Here are the total battle deaths from America’s wars, according to the Department of Veterans Affairs. (These numbers do not include those who died in theater but not in battle.)

- AMERICAN REVOLUTION (1775-1783)                                                        4,435

- WAR OF 1812 (1812-1815)                                                                                2,260

- INDIAN WARS (APPROXIMATELY 1817-1898)                                         1,000

- MEXICAN-AMERICAN WAR (1846-1848)                                                   1,733

- CIVIL WAR (1861-1865)
       - Union                                                                                                           140,414 
       - Confederate                                                                                                   74,524

- SPANISH-AMERICAN WAR (1898)                                                                    385

- WORLD WAR II (1941 –1945)                                                                      291,557


-  KOREAN WAR (1950-1953)                                                                           33,739


- VIETNAM WAR (1964-1975)                                                                          47,434

- PERSIAN GULF WAR (DESERT SHIELD/DESERT STORM)
   (1990-1991)                                                                                                              148

- GLOBAL WAR ON TERRORISM (2001 TO PRESENT )                            6,915

   subtotal; 604.544 persons/man with a name, a family, with people which they loved, etc


Bron; http://www.latimes.com/nation/la-na-memorial-day-20170529-htmlstory.html

dinsdag 30 mei 2017

vuur transform


Aarde neem het op
als het zwaard zijn richting veranderd
van zwaaiend boven het hoofd en horizontaal om zich heen
en het menselijk vuur rust vindt in de transformerende aarde
krijgt de strijder een andere taak
en rust de zwaardpunt in de aarde en wordt de knop een waardige ankh
waar azoth woont
geen begin of einde

gelijk Parsifal de lans heeft getransformeerd en het laat rusten in de aarde




Woodcut from Astronomica et Astrologica, 1567. 

"De tempel ligt in het hart, niet in het gebouw; het ornaat bestaat in het geloof, niet in het gewaad; de altaren en de zegen bestaan in de liefde, in de handen. De handen zijn gemaakt om te werken, niet om te zegenen."

Paracelsus De septem punctis idolatriae christianae, ed. Goldammer, deel III, p. 54

maandag 29 mei 2017

Wetenschap geeft nieuw beeld van het verleden van Europa!

Migratie is van alle tijden. Doch nieuwe inzichten in archeologie en DNA onderzoek brengen verrassende inzichten in de grote en kleine West-Europese volksverhuizingen.
In onderstaand artikel  van Science gaat  over de grote lijnen van drie invasies maar in de werkelijkheid is er zo veel groot als klein gemigreerd dat volkeren mengpopulaties zijn.

De oude verhalen over ‘zuivere’ volkeren die stamtrouw bleven zal afgewisseld zijn in opgaan, vergaan met invasieve culturen. Mogelijk zitten we nu weer in een tijd van zuidelijke en zuidoostelijke menging. En passend in de oude bewegingsrichting vanuit het zuidoosten.
En de oude landsmythen worden ontkracht.  Zeer interessante feiten die in de nabije toekomst een geheel ander licht laten schijnen op voorgeslachten!
En een kans om de huidige invasie te bezien met historische blik.  Genetisch mengen is de oude oplossing.

Wie durft het aan om het Friese volk als cultuurgroep eens onder ogen te nemen?
Daar zijn historische feiten en mythische feiten als in het Oera Lindaboek.
Wie weet wat dat brengt!

Nu het artikel met een aantal van zijn belangrijkste alinea’s

“In fact, the German people have no unique genetic heritage to protect. They—and all other Europeans—are already a mishmash, the children of repeated ancient migrations, according to scientists who study ancient human origins. New studies show that almost all indigenous Europeans descend from at least three major migrations in the past 15,000 years, including two from the Middle East. Those migrants swept across Europe, mingled with previous immigrants, and then remixed to create the peoples of today.

His team studied DNA from 51 Europeans and Asians who lived 7000 to 45,000 years ago. They found that most of the DNA in living Europeans originated in three major migrations,
- starting with hunter-gatherers who came from the Middle East as the glaciers retreated 19,000 to 14,000 years ago.

- In a second migration about 9000 years ago, farmers from northwestern Anatolia, in what is now Greece and Turkey, moved in.

That massive wave of farmers washed across the continent. Ancient DNA records their arrival in Germany, where they are linked with the Linear Pottery culture, 6900 to 7500 years ago. A 7000-year-old woman from Stuttgart, Germany, for example, has the farmers' genetic signatures, setting her apart from eight hunter-gatherers who lived just 1000 years earlier in Luxembourg and Sweden. Among people living today, Sardinians retain the most DNA from those early farmers, whose genes suggest that they had brown eyes and dark hair.

The farmers moved in family groups and stuck to themselves awhile before mixing with local hunter-gatherers, according to a study in 2015 that used ancient DNA to calculate the ratio of men to women in the farming groups.

- That's a stark contrast to the third major migration, which began about 5000 years ago when herders swept in from the steppe north of the Black Sea in what is now Russia. Those Yamnaya pastoralists herded cattle and sheep, and some rode newly domesticated horses, says archaeologist David Anthony of Hartwick College in Oneonta, New York (Science, 24 July 2015, p. 362).

In the journal Antiquity last month, Kristiansen and paleogeneticist Eske Willerslev at the University of Copenhagen reported that the sex ratios of the earliest Yamnaya burials in central Europe suggest that the new arrivals were mostly men. Arriving with few women, those tall strangers were apparently eager to woo or abduct the local farmers' daughters. Not long after the Yamnaya invasion, their skeletons were buried with those of women who had lived on farms as children, according to the strontium and nitrogen isotopes in their bones, says Price, who analyzed them.

The unions between the Yamnaya and the descendants of Anatolian farmers catalyzed the creation of the famous Corded Ware culture, known for its distinctive pottery impressed with cordlike patterns, Kristiansen says. According to DNA analysis, those people may have inherited Yamnaya genes that made them taller; they may also have had a then-rare mutation that enabled them to digest lactose in milk, which quickly spread.

It was a winning combination. The Corded Ware people had many offspring who spread rapidly across Europe. They were among the ancestors of the Bell Beaker culture of central Europe, known by the vessels they used to drink wine, according to a study by Kristiansen and Reich published this month. “This big wave of Yamnaya migration washed all the way to the shores of Ireland,” says population geneticist Dan Bradley of Trinity College in Dublin. Bell Beaker pots and DNA appeared about 4000 years ago in burials on Rathlin Island, off the coast of Northern Ireland, his group reported this year.

This new picture means that the Hermann of lore was himself a composite of post–ice age hunter-gatherers, Anatolian farmers, and Yamnaya herders. So are most other Europeans—including the ancient Romans whose empire Arminius fought.

THE THREE-PART European mixture varies across the continent, with different ratios of each migration and trace amounts of other lineages. But those quirks rarely match the tales people tell about their ancestry. For example, the Basques of northern Spain, who have a distinct language, have long thought themselves a people apart. But last year, population geneticist Mattias Jakobsson of Uppsala University in Sweden reported that the DNA of modern Basques is most like that of the ancient farmers who populated northern Spain before the Yamnaya migration. In other words, Basques are part of the usual European mix, although they carry less Yamnaya DNA than other Europeans.

Farther north, the Irish Book of Invasions, written by an anonymous author in the 11th century, recounts that the “Sons of Míl Espáine … after many wanderings in Scythia and Egypt” eventually reached Spain and Ireland, creating a modern Irish people distinct from the British—and linked to the Spanish. That telling resonates with a later yarn about ships from the Spanish Armada, wrecked on the shores of Ireland and the Scottish Orkney Islands in 1588, Bradley says: “Good-looking, dark-haired Spaniards washed ashore” and had children with Gaelic and Orkney Islands women, creating a strain of Black Irish with dark hair, eyes, and skin.

Although it's a great story, Bradley says, it “just didn't happen.” In two studies, researchers have found only “a very small ancient Spanish contribution” to British and Irish DNA, says human geneticist Walter Bodmer of the University of Oxford in the United Kingdom, co-leader of a landmark 2015 study of British genetics.

The Irish also cherish another origin story, of the Celtic roots they are said to share with the Scots and Welsh. In the Celtic Revival of the 19th and 20th centuries, writers such as William Butler Yeats drew from stories in the Book of Invasions and medieval texts. Those writings described a migration of Gaels, or groups of Celts from the mainland who clung to their identity in the face of later waves of Roman, Germanic, and Nordic peoples.

But try as they might, researchers so far haven't found anyone, living or dead, with a distinct Celtic genome. The ancient Celts got their name from Greeks who used “Celt” as a label for barbarian outsiders—the diverse Celtic-speaking tribes who, starting in the late Bronze Age, occupied territory from Portugal to Turkey. “It's a hard question who the Celts are,” says population geneticist Stephan Schiffels of the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History in Jena, Germany.

Bodmer's team traced the ancestry of 2039 people whose families have lived in the same parts of Scotland, Northern Ireland, and Wales since the 19th century. These people form at least nine genetic and geographic clusters, showing that after their ancestors arrived in those regions, they put down roots and married their neighbors. But the clusters themselves are of diverse origin, with close ties to people now in Germany, Belgium, and France. “‘Celtic’ is a cultural definition,” Bodmer says. “It has nothing to do with hordes of people coming from somewhere else and replacing people.”

English myths fare no better. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle recounts that in 449 C.E., two Germanic tribespeople, Hengist and Horsa, sailed from what is now the Netherlands to southeast England, starting a fierce conflict. As more Angles, Saxons, and Jutes arrived, violence broke out with the local Britons and ended in “rivers of blood,” according to accounts by medieval monks. Scholars have debated just how bloody that invasion was, and whether it was a mass migration or a small delegation of elite kings and their warriors.

An answer came in 2016 from a study of the ancient DNA of Anglo-Saxons and indigenous Britons, who were buried side by side in the fifth and sixth centuries in a cemetery near Cambridge, U.K. They lived and died together and even interbred, as shown by one person who had a mix of DNA from both Britons and Anglo-Saxons, and a genetic Briton who was buried with a large cruciform Anglo-Saxon brooch. Although the stories stress violence, the groups “were mixing very quickly,” says Duncan Sayer, an archaeologist at the University of Central Lancashire in Preston, U.K., who co-wrote the study.

The team went on to show that 25% to 40% of the ancestry of modern Britons is Anglo-Saxon. Even people in Wales and Scotland—thought to be Celtic strongholds—get about 30% of their DNA from Anglo-Saxons, says co-author Chris Tyler-Smith of the Wellcome Trust's Sanger Institute in Hinxton, U.K.

“Ethnic groups in the past and present create an ‘imagined past’ of the longtime and ‘pure’ origins of their group,” Maeir says. But that created past often has “little true relation to the historical processes” that actually created the group, he says.”

Hele artikel lezen op:  http://science.sciencemag.org/content/356/6339/678.full