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El euskera, el latín del paleolítico europeo

No hace mucho, leyendo un libro sobre la prehistoria europea, tuve conocimiento de la teoría que expone el autor, hoy generalmente aceptada por los expertos internacionales en la matería. Me pareció sorprendente la conclusión a la que llegaban cientificos de diferentes materias; lingüistica, arqueológía y genética. Según los descubrimientos realizados el pueblo vasco actual es el resto de una cultura humana, Cro-Magnon que pobló el actual País Vasco y parte la cornisa cantábrica hace aproximadamente 30.000 años. Y el euskera el producto de la evolución del idioma, o los idiomas, que hablaron aquellos humanos. http://old.kaosenlared.net/noticia/euskera-latin-paleolitico-europeo
http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/caribbeanhistory/ The history of the British Caribbean is explored in this exhibition through government documents, photographs and maps dating from the 17th century to the 1920s and discovered during a cataloguing project at The National Archives of the United Kingdom.

Caribbean Histories Revealed | Introduction

http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/caribbeanhistory/slavery-negotiating-freedom.htm

Caribbean Histories Revealed | Slavery and negotiating freedom

More images below Between 1662 and 1807 Britain shipped 3.1 million Africans across the Atlantic Ocean in the Transatlantic Slave Trade . Africans were forcibly brought to British owned colonies in the Caribbean and sold as slaves to work on plantations . Those engaged in the trade were driven by the huge financial gain to be made, both in the Caribbean and at home in Britain. Enslaved people constantly rebelled against slavery right up until emancipation in 1834.
http://www.tropical-paradise.net/cap-juluca.html

Cap Juluca the rainbow god. Cap juluca Anguilla

Petroglyph found in the fascinating Cavern is Cap Juluca - "The Rainbow God". This emblem carved into the limestone column facing east is essentially an arc with solar orb flanked by chevron lines. Archaeological research in Anguilla began in 1979, when a team from the US Virgin Islands did a survey and found nineteen sites having Amerindian potential. The Anguilla Archaeological and Historical Society, founded in 1981, organized field trips to monitor these and locate additional sites, and collected cultural artifacts whenever areas were impacted by development projects. Within a short time, the known Amerindian sites on Anguilla and the offshore keys (Dog Island and Scrub Island) expanded to more than forty, including the remains of entire villages, small habitations, cultivated areas, outposts and caves.