and then a steppe to the right
Mar. 13th, 2006 03:04 amAn assortment of oddments:
1.) This news item from last year was brought back to mind by a comment exchange with
bellatrys about sauerkraut and kimchee: the ambiguous modern status of Huns in Hungary.
2.) A felted yurt Nativity set.
3.) Sometime last year, I ran across a really fascinating page by a Hungarian physicist/polymath with several essays about cultural coincidences(?) between the Magyars and the Japanese, such as this one. Evidently he's not the only person with that line of thought:
I mean, call me a sock with holes worn through it, cause I'll be darned. Dunno how much underlying truth there is to it (I suppose Cavalli-Sforza might have some interesting pertinent data, if I ever remember to track it down), but it's a dang good story.
1.) This news item from last year was brought back to mind by a comment exchange with
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
2.) A felted yurt Nativity set.
3.) Sometime last year, I ran across a really fascinating page by a Hungarian physicist/polymath with several essays about cultural coincidences(?) between the Magyars and the Japanese, such as this one. Evidently he's not the only person with that line of thought:
Northern China was originally a temperate and lush place full of forests, streams, and rainfall. It began to dry out, however, a few thousand years before the common era. This dessication, which eventually produced one of the largest deserts in the world, the Gobi, drove the original inhabitants south and east. These peoples pushed into Korea and displaced indigenous populations. Eventually, these new settlers were displaced by a new wave of immigrations from northern China and a large number of them crossed over into the Japanese islands. For this reason, the languages of the area north of China, the language of Korea, and Japanese are all in the same family of languages according to most linguists. Because Mongolian (spoken in the area north of China) is also part of this language family and because the Mongolians conquered the world far to the west, this means that the language family to which Japanese belongs is spoken across a geographical region from Japan to Europe. The westernmost language in this family is Magyar, spoken in Hungary, and the easternmost language in this family is Japanese.
I mean, call me a sock with holes worn through it, cause I'll be darned. Dunno how much underlying truth there is to it (I suppose Cavalli-Sforza might have some interesting pertinent data, if I ever remember to track it down), but it's a dang good story.