Monday, December 27, 2021

A Tiny Miscellany of Notes on Sources of Modern Russia

History With RCS, Russia: This is a tiny taste of that which we can learn

 

Eight tidbits:

~ Russians are greatly Slavic.
~ Varangian was a name given to Norse(Viking) who were active in the formation of the Kievan Rus.
~ Without Russians, the Allied forces may have lost WWII and WWI.
~There is strong evidence that modern humans were living on the banks of the Don by 35,000 BC.
~ There is good evidence that by 41,000 BC Denisovans and Neanderthals lived 'with' modern humans in Siberian Russia.
~ Tanis is an ancient name for the Don River.
~ Tanis was also the name of a city in the Don River delta on the sea of Azov. Tanis was a city long before the Milesians Greeks founded a trading center there in pre-Roman times.    
~ It may be well to remember that Russians were exploring what are now the US states of Alaska, Washington, Oregon, and much of California while others were exploring farther south in the name of the king of Spain.


A curious homo sapien might find it interesting to check out online terms
Varangian, Kievan Rus, Don River, Denisovans, Tanis City, Alaska, Milesian, and well beyond; or not.

I will write more when I know there is more interest. You can show your interest in "comments" below. You can make corrections to the content of this little post, ask questions there. If you do not want to be known, you my comment anonymously.




by Richard


 

Saturday, December 25, 2021

Ice Ages: we continue to gather and interpret information

Geological Time Forms an Important Part and Kind of Our History. We can call it the history of our Earth in a different language.

 

This talk on the geology of the last two Ice Ages can give you an interesting place to beginning your learning of geological happenings present, past and long past. You can even learn a bit about the science of gathering and interpreting information. Connect that which you know about mega fauna and dinosaurs with what you know of Ice Age.

Sunday, December 19, 2021

Isis

History With RCS: Now and then it is what it is

 

Isis is an asset and a source of divine power from the Old Kingdom of Egypt. She is the first daughter of Geb* and Nut.
She married her brother Osiris who I know here in Colombia. The Moors knew Isis before they knew Spain. Ave Maria!

 

 *Geb was first seen as a man, a man who cared for earth. His daughter and son later became highly venerated in ancient Egypt.

What has Isis become for us?

Should this piece be in Governance With RCS?

 


                                                                                RCS

 

 

Friday, December 17, 2021

A Taste of Our Recent History

History With RCS: War and military action, just a taste of recent history

             I said I would write more about U.S. war, but am finding it difficult to do so, because I find madness difficult to deal with and we seem to have gone war mad with a kind of blood lust. I do over-react from time to time; after all its just our history. 

I offer the following list as a short list of evidence of our history. I feel it right to say that none of the countries mentioned here have invaded US:
 

~  2001: War on terror in Afghanistan.

~ 2002: War on terror in Afghanistan and Yemen. 
~ 2003: War on terror in Afghanistan and Iraq.
~ 2004: War on terror in Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, and Yemen.
~ 2005: War on terror in Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, and Yemen.
~ 2006: War on terror in Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, and Yemen
~ 2007: War on terror in Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, Somalia, and Yemen.
2008: War on terror in  Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, and Yemen. 
2009: War on terror in Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, and Yemen,
2010: War on terror  in Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, and Yemen.
2011: War on terror in Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, Somalia,
and Yemen; Conflict in Libya (Libyan civil war)
2012: War on terror in Afghanistan, Pakistan,  Somalia, and Yemen.
2013: War on terror in Afghanistan Pakistan, Somalia, and Yemen.
2014: War on terror in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Somalia, and Yemen. War on ISIL in Iraq, Syria, Libya, and Nigeria.
2015: War on terror in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Somalia, and Yemen.
2016: War on terror in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Somalia, and Yemen; war on ISIL in Iraq, Syria, Libya, and Nigeria. War in Afghanistan.

This is crazy. I can't stand any more right now. I could write some background about the people of the countries mentioned here If anyone were interested.


There is a place to comment below.


Let me say that it seems to me that it is not possible to make war on drugs, crime, terror, polio, or peanut butter.   I believe war is made on people.   




by Richard Sheehan


 

Tuesday, November 23, 2021

Feragama Valley Notes

History With RCS: Introduction to the Silk Road: the new Silk Road, the Old Silk Road, and the ancient Silk Road             

            You have heard of the Silk Road. You may have hear of the New Silk Road, the Old Silk Road, and the ancient Silk Road. 
They are all a part of the Feragama Valley, and the Feragama Valley is part of big doings and happenings. These doings and happenings form the backstory of much of what is happening and being done beyond your National borders.

            Find out. Listen and look for: doings and happenings, personages and news in and around the Feragama Valley.  
The Silk Road which has become a tourist destination is part of it. Beginning to learn about the Feragama Valley cultures may change your vision of the present and likely futures. Understanding of this valley's cultures can help us all to a better understanding of the happenings and doings of our world today. Beginning to know the history of this area and
it's people helps us to understand the way of things more than one may believe just now.

        In Zoroastrian literature the valley is referred to as the 
Zoroastrian homeland. The history of that particular homeland goes back more than 4000 years before today and is touching us now. The cultures of people of the Valley goes back 10,000 years more.

        Russia took control of the Valley between 1855 and 1884.

The peoples of the Valley were in contact with Xi'an(China) from, at least 1100 BC through the Dark Ages of Europe, when Ai'an of present China was an important cultural and political center.

        For one who wants a quest in history, I say take hold of a thread from an early culture of the Indian sub-continent. A culture, in perhaps the north of India, had an important connection with the Valley. That thread can take you places few of today have gone; to places from which many of today can benefit.

        Thank you for the visit. Come back soon just to check things out or to make a real search of the site.

 

                             RCS

 


Thursday, November 18, 2021

The City of Mounds: St Louis. Old World Images (1848-1899) Pre Reset / C...

History With RCS: St. Louis City Please add some more history to this video. Use the "comments" section below this post. I am especially interested in pre Civil War history. Also any archaeology from in or around the city would be great. 

 

Sunday, November 14, 2021

The Calusa of Florida on Our minds

History With RCS archaeology: A great American Indian people who deserve more talk and understanding: the Calusa

        In the 1500s the Calusa still controlled much of  the southwest of Florida. They defended their land against the aggression  of other peoples including European explorers.  The Spaniards knew them as fierce. The Calooshahtchee River, with its mouth on the southwest of  Florida, was theirs.

        They lived mostly along the inland water ways and developed them for transportation and food production. The sea was also a source of food for them. They left middens of seashells large enough in size to compete with their great mounds and other earthworks. The fished with nets and tapped fish.

        The Calusa had a strong influence on the tribes around them. That influence may be because of their wide trading. They typically used dugouts for use at sea and along their inland waterways. They also built  and used larger vessels. They visited Cuba regularly and probably sailed much farther into the Caribbean.

        Their homes were built on platforms on pilings over the water. Their buildings had particularly handsome roofing of palmetto leaves. It is said that some of their 'houses' were large enough to easily accommodate 2000 persons!

        They were excellent wood workers and they also did some fine wood carving. They were excellent farmers, sailors, fishermen, and traders, They are probably responsible for the construction of what we have called bayous.

        The apex of their culture probably dates well before 100 BC. Their middens and and earth works have been dated to that time.

        We have much to learn from and about the Calusa. Please feel free to extend and correct our knowledge of them.

        When you want more, click on "comments" below and tell me so.



by R.C.S.


Wednesday, November 10, 2021

Pampas and Llanos: Grasslands of South America

History With RCS: In North America there are prairies and plains. In South America there are pampas and llanos. 

 

                There are lots of stories that come from all the American grasslands, but here is offered a taste of history.

                In the south of south America one often hears the the word pampas or la pampa. In the north of that continent, one more often hears the word llanos. These wide grasslands have their history and their prehistory.

                Only 10,000 years ago people were eating doedicurus not far from the present location of the great Argentinian capital of Buenos Aires near the edge of the pampa. In case you are not well acquainted with the doedicurus, they are a kind of glyptodont. You could call those doing that eating, American Indians.

                In the late 1500s, Spanish Americans began to settle in the pampa. By 1833 there were about 40 million head of 'wild' cattle on the Argentinian grasslands. These cattle were offspring of those brought and 'lost' by the earlier explorers and settlers. That sounds reminiscent of happenings in North America to me. During the increase in these herds on the Pampa there was a decrease in the numbers of Native Americans there. Between that increase and decrease one might imagine an interesting story or two, perhaps with mention of a gaucho or two.

                Heading to the North of the continent we could learn about the llaneros, the men and women of the llanos. Llaneros formed much of Bolivars cavalry. That cavalry di much  to overthrow Spanish rule over the continent in the 1920s. Descendants of those llaneros can still be found in the llanos of Colombia and Venezuela. A few of them now resist the dominion of "Yankee capital and imperialism." The attitude might be "Over my horse, only me, over me only my hat."

                Among the early noted horsemen to explore the llanos were German "conquistadors" were men like Nicolas Federman, Nikolaus Federmann, who's patrons had loaned vast sums of money to Spanish royalty in the early 1500s. Makes me wonder what Spanish nobility did with the wealth they gained from there "new world" colonies. Start a European Rebirth? The sponsors of the three German groups sent to South America gained little wealth from their ventures. Still, Spaniards were able to pay debts and Germans profited a bit from the starting and running the first commercial airline in South America.

                About 270 years after the first Germans were allowed to explore the llanos, the Spanish allowed another prominent foreigner into their South American llanos. That person was baron Alexander von Humboldt. I believe at the time he was not yet baron, but does deserve the title. Every educated American and European knows that name; there may be exceptions. The baron was a Prussian naturalist and much more. He became the father of modern geography and --except for Napoleon-- the best known European of his time.

                I believe that Humboldt told this story of his time in the llanos: At one camp his host was so disturbed early one night, that the baron to felt the disturbance. Unknown to either of them, in the dry packed earth directly below the hosts hamaca, a very large alligator-like animal was hibernating through the dry season. Just as his host was composed for sleep, something disturbed the crocodilian. To the surprise of all, it erupted noisily from the earth. However it soon left, with an evident air of disgust, to find a more peaceful resting place. The camp too was soon resting peacefully.

                Thank you for reading.



                                                                            RCS

 


Tuesday, October 26, 2021

Revolting

 History With RCS: Bonaparte had a good appreciation of the Republicanism of his day.

 

                Napoleon Bonaparte, a leading republican of Europe, was willing to become Emperor of France. Republican France welcomed Napoleon as Emperor! There may be a lesson or two to be learned from that bit of history.

                Napoleon did bring reforms to Europe in the fields of science, education and in a variety of cultural areas. Those works of his could be called republican.

                The legal system called the  the Napoleonic Code influenced most of the West and much of the East. It is extent in the U.S. state of Louisiana.

                Napoleon was a warrior, a leader of armies. Some say he won a war against Russia. To attack Russia he left home with about a half a million men, the largest army ever assembled in Europe until that time. He returned home with about 20,000 men and "the shirt on his back."

                He met his Waterloo in a battle against Prussia and GB in which Prussia saved Britain's bacon.

                After Waterloo Great Britain, Spain, Prussia, Russia, Austria and others  joined one another for suppressing liberal movements throughout Europe.

Lessons may begin with questions like:
Why do the histories of many revolutions seem revolting?
Why might a republican be willing to become an Emperor?
Why ought the citizens of a republic be responsible?
Where is your revolution headed?

Friday, October 22, 2021

Notions of Thai Beginnings

History With RCS and archaeology: Modern Thailand is famous South East Asian constitutional monarchy and tourist destination. This little piece will be mostly a few bits about the prehistory of the area.

                I do get notions when I think about Thailand, but intend to be factual here.

                Grain farming began in the Thai area before 9,000 BC; That's more than 11,000 years ago! At nearly the same time betel, bean, pea, pepper, and cucumber were grown. So the story begins not long after Noah's flood.

                There is strong evidence that the Spirit Cave near Mae Hong Son Province of NW Thailand was occupied from about 9,000 BC to about 5,500 BC.

                Bronze ( a wonderful metal created by ancient metallurgists and alchemists) appeared in Thailand in the 5th millennium BC. A very advanced metal working culture was widespread and flourishing before 1,500 BC and included iron.

                Early Thai peoples included Lao, Lanna, and Shan.

                The Buddhist kingdom of Sukhothai was founded in 1238 AD and is often considered the first Thai state. Than brings us well into the historic period. I'd guess that by about 1440 AD people in all of South East Asia and some beyond spoke of Thailand.

                I have given mostly facts and a few dates. However, as you might imagine, ever history has, at least, one story. You might have to dig a bit to get to it.

                In the 13th century a Thai kingdom existed in the northern highlands, centered on Chaing Saen, a predecessor of Lanna. Could Lanna be a place to begin finding the stories of Thailand?

                Thanks for Reading.



                    RCS


            

 

Wednesday, October 13, 2021

History, U.S. Wars

History With RCS: U. S. wars.

 

            There are a lot of them! Check our timeline blogs.

            We had no major wars from 1935 to 1940. 1897 was also a year with no major wars. I do not of any others. Including these years with no war we have averaged well over a war a year since 1776! 

            From 1899 to 1934 we had mostly just Banana Wars. Some of our tiny neighboring countries of Central America may object to my use of the word "just." We stepped on their labor movements hard. Those Banana Wars were among the most traumatic happenings in the entire history of  the people of the Central American Republics.

            When taking a close look at historic happenings it seems that we have hated the people of Haiti the most and for the longest time.  Still, that we have invaded Mexico 13 times since 1875 does not seem loving, nor even a good neighbor policy.

            I have not posted much about our wars on Mago Bill. I do remember posting on one of our early Indian Wars some time ago. I have another war post in draft, but I am returning to the states on business until October 19th. If you would like to read more opinion and facts about our wars on Mago Bill tell me so in the "Comment Section" at the foot of this post or of any other Mago Bill post.

            I the comments window you can also help me by correcting my errors or by telling use about American wars you have checked out. I would be interested in finding about that pert of our Revolutionary War which took place in  Gibraltar: or what part Mysore played in that same war: why Sweden was our ally in the First Barbary War; or about the German Coast Uprising in the Territory of Orleans: or why the US invaded Canada; and like that.


by Richard 
 


Wednesday, September 22, 2021

Mago Bill Inspired History

History With RCS: Inspired by Mago Bill               

              Mago Bill is a nickname which I choose to give my paternal great grand father. I have used the name Mago Bill on several blogs because it names a source of inspiration for me. It has inspired me to write a variety of history posts for you; most recently here, and my Ireland and the Irish Blog. Nearly all of these inspired post are of history, prehistory, and a bit more.

                This blog is new and does not have a Mago Bill title. However, because Mago inspires: this history blog, a number history and prehistory timelines, because my vision of him inspires many of my thoughts on history, and much of my historic and prehistoric research, it seems appropriate to mention him here.

                My sister, the family genealogist, discovered ample documentation of his existence and that the name he most often used in the United States was M.William Sheehan. Soon we discovered evidence that the "M" was for Mago; a name even more unusually in the US then than it is now.

                In Ireland Mago, as a given name, has had several periods of some popularity. For me, William became Bill. Thus the name Mago Bill came to personify my inspiration for several blogs and much research.

                Spanish speaking friends of mine told me that the Spanish word "mago" means magician in English. Some of the same friends tell me that the Three Kings or Three Wise Men, we are told brought gifts to the baby Jesus, were called magos and that each one may be called mago.

                I have learned that the name Mago was an important family name among Carthaginian Phoenicians while Rome was young. Later some of the family Mago were close to Hannibal, a name you may recognize. 

                Carthaginian traders and navigators came to Ireland to trade for tin and other goods. They they brought so much knowledge and talk of the name Mago with them that it so impressed some individuals, that they named their male offspring Mago.

                "Mago" has more history to be told and I may very well tell some of it here on this history blog. You may have already found that this blog contains prehistory, archaeology, geological history, and a bit more, in addition to my idea of normal history.

                 Thank you for your visit and for reading this Page. For your pleasure, make some time to review the Posts on this blog.

                For now, bye.

 

 

                                            RCS

 

 

Friday, September 3, 2021

Amateurs Can Inform Us

Amateur archaeology on the California desert.

Blackrock Well in the California Desert. There are still mountain sheep in them there hills. A nice variety of petroglyphs are shown. Amateurs can show us much and teach us a few things. The people who made the glyphs are surely experienced some climate change too. The atlatl may have come to the are very, very long ago. Some knowledgeable attempts have been made to interpret them. If you know anything about the  glyphs of Southern California, please comment about them here. The gentleman presenting this video has a lot of similar videos on YouTube. check them out.

The Looting Of Ameican Prehistoric Sites

 History of mound robbing and looting in the U.S. Bad archaeology at the Spiro Mounds Complex in Oklahoma. The history of this site looting has been largely recovered thanks to the people of the great state of Oklahoma (Way down yonder in the Indian nation). This site was such a treasure trove that it was call the King Tuts Tomb of the Arkansas Valley.

 

Thursday, September 2, 2021

Mound Builders of the Middle Archaic Period of North America

 History With RCS: Great Piles of Dirt            

 

                By 1776 most mounds looked like great piles of dirt. Even so, they drew the attention of Washington, Jefferson, and others. In much earlier days when Spanish explorers first saw them they drew stronger attention and wonder. In those days a considerable number of of mounds were used and maintained by the people of the land. Later, when French traders and trappers saw those mounds of the Mississippi river drainage area more mounds were neglected and grown over with grass. By the time Dutch, English, and other settlers were arriving, the culture of the native people and been greatly disrupted and damaged. Nearly all mounds were grown over with brush and trees. most of the mounds and other earth works had been abandoned.

            Abandoned, but not forgotten. Native peoples had memories and stories of them and some the new comers had curiosity about them. A few, but perhaps to many, of those new-comers mined the mounds for saleable material and items. The interest in the remains of those earthworks and mounds has grown in recent decades. Historians and archaeologists have taken an interest. Tourists and others visit those remains. They are mentioned in a few text books. Modern archaeologists continue to develop our knowledge of the earthen  mounds on our land with their research.

                Historians are still learning from the writings of Spanish explorers, conquerors, and colonists. We still have more to learn from observers traveling with people like Hernando de Soto on his 1540 through 1542 traverse of what is now the U.S. Southeast. And also from the many other Spanish explorers, colonists, and others observing North America in the 1500s. 

                We have more to learn from the journals of French voyageurs and priests. Artists can be a source of information. One French painter was observing Indian activity in northeast Florida before 1590. A caption on one of his paintings reads in translation, "Sometimes the deceased king of the province is buried with great solemnity, and the cup from which he was accustomed to drink is placed on a tumulus with many arrows set about it."  His interpretation of what he probably saw may be somewhat ironic and with less than perfect understanding of the situation, but his words and painting may still inform us.

                One may suspect that there is still information to be found about this period in North America, in European Archives. In those archives productive information about the native population of the area from the very early days of European exploration and occupation may be found. 

                From such early writings, we find that priests and others visiting the Mississippi river area by about 1679 were grown over with brush and large trees. Even so, they found some of them still impressive. Notable among them were those found at the present site of Saint Louis city, Missouri. The ones at Natchez city were still occupied by native people and the French found it necessary to drive them out by force.

                As I continue to learn more from the work of archaeologists in the area, I have come to learn of peoples named by them such as: Adena, Hopewell, Kame transitional, Red Ocher, Old Copper, Fort Ancient, Poverty Point, and Watson break. I learned that culture, trade and interactions in general of some of them extended from Labrador to the tip of Florida and beyond. Those interactions from the beginning of the Mississippi near the Great Lakes to its delta at on the Gulf of Mexico, from the western extremes of the Missouri river to the eastern extremes of the Ohio river. from the Great Lakes to the mouth of the Saint Laurence river.

                These forerunners of what have been called the civilized tribes, were found in the areas noted above and also thrived along the Gulf  coast to perhaps as far as the present boarder with Mexico and east to the west coast of Florida and then up east coast of the present state. Some had sea going vessels to take them to Cuba and farther south into the Caribbean. We are learning a lot and have much more to learn of these and perhaps to their descendants of today. It might be profitable to begin with their use of wetland and their agricultural practices.

                I found that these mound builder culture people had lived and learned in North America for 5,000 years and perhaps twice that long.

                Many tribes of North American Indians are closely related to the people I am writing about here. American Indians have culture memories of them preserved in chants and stories. Among these Americans are preserved  details  and attitudes of a culture which had diminished greatly by 400 BC. There is still that of value which we can all learn from and about the experience of the people of that culture.

                We seem to be looking at a wide spread, long lasting cultural tradition. That culture seems to have lasted for thousands of years and adapting successfully to climate and other major changes on Earth. They lived and thrived before and through time of mega-fauna. I remember being a "stomp dance" in the U.S. at which I heard a chant which feature the atlatl and its use. Later I spoke with a person who knew about that song/chant. He said it was about hunting a large animal which seems to have been a giant ground sloth. I understand that this giant sloth was one of the giant animals to become extinct. I like the evidence that a tribal people, not long out of their oral tradition, kept their history in song and still sang it while I was a young man.

                The Kame people may be of a tradition different from the one on which I have intended to focus, but they did become mound builders. A kame is a sort of long slender berm of earth left by a retreating glacier.  A people used them as a place to bury their dead. As time went on the people came to remain in the same area for longer periods of time. In time they ran out of natural kame and so began to create their own. As time went on their kame came to look more mound-like.

                I mentioned a Red Ocher people earlier. They came from a different tradition and we have much yet to learn about them. They were early in the New World. They were a sea going people of some sophistication. Evidence of their culture is found along the western shores of Europe! It it is also found on the eastern shores of North America and down the the Saint Laurence river to the Great Lakes. Their markers are advanced fishing gear and for the hunting of sea mammals. Another marker is their abundant use of red ocher, most noted in their burial sites. Could they have been the source of reskins, the original red Indians?

                More than once I heard an old aunt of mine say that an excellent place to start is at the beginning and that a good place to stop is when it is over. However, for me this story is not over it continues today. I have looked far back into the past and have little hope of finding a beginning. Still I will continue to look as far as I can into the far reaches of time.

                 So, for now, in will start at about 4,000 BC with the "Mound Builders" of North America and from there work back toward the present and forward into the past. Here I will end at the beginning, with the Watson Break people.

                We often think of the past as a sort of line extending back into the past in a year by year, decade by decade, century by century, millennium by millennium order. People of other cultures seem to remember it as like a lake of happenings, doings, lessons and learnings of the past quite well. I do try to use chronological order, but have some "primitive" tendencies. Check my timeline blogs for a better chronology.

                Watson Break site in Louisiana is my archaeological starting point. This look into this Middle Archaic Mound site of North America is arbitrary, but is a fairly solid place to begin. The Mounds at this large site are more securely dated them most similar mounds thanks to the work by Sanders and others. It has also been less seriously disturbed than many others. So, from this period in North America I can move toward toward the moving target of the future and into the past with no end in sight.             

                The Watson Break site is in the U.S. state of Louisiana, located at the edge of a Holocene floodplain of the Ouachita river. It's in northeast Louisiana and about 20 miles south of Monroe, Louisiana. In southern Louisiana is where the Mississippi river enters the Gulf of Mexico. so, from Watson Break one could explore mound sites up the Mississippi and up both Ohio river and Missouri river and then further up the Mississippi to very near the Great Lakes and even through the Lakes to the St. Lawrence river to the Atlantic ocean. And, in that process visit Kame and Red Ocher sites. The rivers were roads for many and for some the Ocean a highway.

            We could then explore down the Mississippi from near Watson Break to the Gulf of Mexico and out and west along the Gulf coast. We could also choose to travel east from the delta and around the Florida peninsula and up the Atlantic coast a ways. Up and down the river and along the coast we can find Mound Builder sites or sites of their relatives.

                In 1997 the archaeologist Joe Sanders and an interdisciplinary team of scientists published important findings about Watson Break in Science. They presented solid evidence that Middle Archaic "hunter-gathers constructed monumental earthworks at WB and lived there on a seasonal basis. This Middle Archaic period is often measure from about 8,000 BC to about 1,000 BC.

                These Watson Break mounds are among the oldest of their kind and the more elaborate. Copper items were around there which very likely have their origin in the Great Lakes area and probably arrived before 2,000 BC. An item found their which I find strikingly noble and well proportioned human hand fashioned from mica. Mica is delicate and subject to damage. It is also fireproof and translucent.

                Other sites identified as closely related to WB tradition have been found mostly in in Louisiana, but others have been found elsewhere, notably in the adjacent state of Mississippi. One such mound was located in downtown Pascagoula in  Lincoln county, Mississippi. It has been dated to between 3,600 BC and 3,300 BC by radiocarbon dating. There is another site in Lowndes county, Miss. It has been dated to between 4,600 and 3,800 BC.

                    Enough of Watson  Break for now. But from here at WB we might be able to take up a thread that that we can follow back to a time of "Noah's Flood." Archaeologist are clarifying our history more and more. This ramble could lead to exploring to before "the flood." and forward to our future.

                We have lightly touched a time nearly 10,000 BC an and forward and up to about. There is a lot to fill in, but we've made a start. You can add to the story in the "comments" section just below. Click on "comments."

                I have begun building prehistory timeline blogs which you can access from this blog. Check out the dates from this piece there or on other online sites.

                More to come.

                Thank you for reading!



                                                                                                                    RCS

Tuesday, August 24, 2021

'A World Archaeology

History With RCS: Ice Age Islands: Early humans and long-term climate change.   



 A world archaeology leads to our much greater understanding.                                            rcs                

Friday, August 6, 2021

History and Historians: First Thoughts

             My first thought was that history not presented by a historian is a story.  Then think that any true story is a history! Then again, some historians are falsifiers and each has her bias. I felt the need to begin somewhere! 

            My next thought is, that which happened this morning is history. That is, it is history when someone tells me about what he has witnessed or, when I witness it and then tell you about it. it seems that history is told about that which has happened or been done. The quality of the witness and teller must be important.

            History is beginning to seem important. It can be about all that has been done, made, or happened, and all that we have noted about our experience! By attending to such telling, one may nor only learn about our about what happened, but also about how it happened or was done, and also why and a lot what can be very interesting information. Even when history is seen, as just a good story, it can be a joyful learning experience.

            Ah, let me add that dates can be important to history, but not necessary to to it. Chronological order can be very useful in historical accounts.

            History is about human experience. I Believe that my experience can be my great teacher. I can also learn a lot through accounts of the experience of others. Good history is a useful interpretation of the experiences of others. Historians record and publish the doings and happening of societies and cultures and individuals. We are free to learn from their work. We may come to more useful understanding of many affairs.

            Historians interpret and record in accord with their own world-views and perspectives. Most publish as they see it. Some record it as they would have us see it.. Many naturally embrace truth and realty with their own views and perspectives. Some learn to. Most are honest most of the time, some are not. One relies on one's own analysis and judgement in interpreting their work. All historians whom I know of are human and each human has her own history and writes from that perspective.We can benefit from honing our own judgement.

            I believe that you can be a historian. When you value evidence, know a true story, and have a realistic imagination you may become a very good one. However, many will call you a story teller, rather than a historian, unless you use good documentation.

            Historians often examine happenings, doings, changes, and may discover processes.

            History is not a science. It has an immense number of variables and practically no laboratories. For many it has become an exacting art and craft. It has become humanities great memory of important experience. It is an important part of that which supports our culture.

            Historians do have the advantage of hindsight. The may ask an try to answer such questions as: How did we get here? and How did that happen? At times they may sus pend judgement and try to place themselves in the context of a given moment. They have considered that man may be the measure of man.

            I most enjoy history when it is told as a story. I also like historical writing which is the result of an effort to honestly and factually presents the workings of a process.

            As you continue to explore you will find that there are a great many kinds of history, presented in a variety of ways. More and more of it is written or produced in  a non academic way for the general public. History is of many kinds and sorts. There is history of motorcycles and motherhood, science and economics, comedy and pop music.

            As I think about it, there seems to be lot to this history business. There is a lot to learn about the doing of it; a lot to learn about historical research; a lot to learn about its presentation; a lot to learn about the kind of history one really enjoys; a lot.

            More to come, more history, more prehistory, more archaeology and even what one might call geological history. 

            For those who like dates, I have begun a set of history timeline blogs.



                                                        RCS

















            

Tuesday, June 22, 2021

Native Americans of 400 AD and Earlier

History With RCS: People of the the Hopewell tradition were ancestral to many modern Indian Nations.    


                 They may also represent an important tradition extending back in what seems a continuous line, to a time of the mega Fauna. They may even have used the atlatl as early as that. They had certainly maintained a recognizable way of living extending hundreds of years into the past.

                The Hopewell people, like many other Native American people, were matrilineal. In such cultures a man and a woman may have joined under the name of the woman's family. The children of such union may have had the responsibilities and privileges of the female line. If I, as a male, were a member of the culture, my "surname" would become that of my wife's mother, grand mother, and great grandmother. My children would bear that name. I might become known for the doings of my wife's family. 

                I am far from sure of the ways matrilineality effected their culture. However even the little we can learn may help us to better consider how Patrilineality may effect a culture. 

                The Hopewell have been called Mound Builders and came from a long line of such builders. They built more than complex mounds; they built a variety of interesting earthworks. They also made tools and artworks of stone, mica, copper, bone, wood, and much else.

                A work of theirs is called the Newark Earthworks and is located near Newark and Heath, Ohio in what is now the U.S.A. Three sections of this work have been identified and called: the Great Circle, the Octagonal, and the Wright Earthworks. As you may guess the complex was built by people we call Hopewell, The work was done between 100 BC and 500 AD. The Hopewell may have begun a decline as early as 400 AD. The Great Circle has called the biggest earthwork circle in the world or in the U.S. It is very big. It is believed to have been used as a place of ceremony, social gatherings, trade, worship, and honoring the dead. 

                Scholars have demonstrated that the Octagonal Earthwork was used as a lunar observatory for tracking the moon's orbit during its 18.6 year cycle.

                Trade: Evidence of their work and commerce has been found from south Florida and near the mouth of the Mississippi to the Great Lakes, and from the Rocky mountains to the Appalachian mountains. and some say, to the Atlantic coast of North America. Much of such evidence is concentrated in the drainage areas of the Mississippi, Ohio, and Missouri rivers.


                After 1500 Europeans were becoming aware of the earthworks of the Hopewell and Adena people. First the Spanish and latter the French commented on some of the mounds being abandoned and over grown with grass, brush, and trees. The English and American colonists became curious of mounds at an even latter date, They dug into them. They found goods; goods of many kinds from pottery to gold. Some of their finds were wonders. Including skeletal remains of persons of a bigger of a size than any of the finders.

                Some of the finders were interested in that which could be sold. Others wondered who the builders could be. Certainly not the few sad Indians they saw around them. The Indians they saw around them were the children who's families had been diseased and cruelly exploited  by Europeans for over 300 years. What you see is what you get. They were not seeing the "noble redman." We are still learning about who those builders were. We still have much to learn. Most of the evidence points tot  the Native people living near us today.

                For now, I will say that it has seemed reasonable to believe that the Hopewell people experienced a peak in their culture from about 200 BC to about 400 AD. They were proceeded by an interesting and long lived culture called the Adena. Like the Hopewell they traded from the Gulf of Mexico to a bit beyond the Great Lakes and all along the Mississippi Drainage system, including the Ohio and Missouri rivers. There is much evidence that the Adena were active from about 1,000 BC to about 200 BC.

                Experienced ones say that we have much of value to learn from the signs left by our Native predecessors, if we would dig carefully.


                                                                                            RCS




 

Ancient Mining

  How do miners become alchemists? Suggestive evidence does make one think a bit. We have a lot to learn. We can learn from anyone. Still most of what they say may be poorly thought out. He may be even more poorly educated than we are. 

When DID ancients begin systematically taking metals from the stone? Was it in the Stone Age?

Evidence of block cave mining is certainly old, but the evidence is only of several hundred years. There is much research to be done.



selected by Richard
for Mago Bill

Back to the Adena Culture

History With RCS, archaeology: People of the the Hopewell tradition were ancestral to many modern Indian Nations. 


                They may also represent an important tradition extending back in what seems a continuous line, to a time of the mega Fauna. They may even have used the atlatl as early as that. They had certainly maintained a recognizable way of living extending hundreds of years into the past.

                 The Hopewell people, like many other Native American people, were matrilineal. In such cultures a man and a woman may have joined under the name of the woman's family. The children of such union may have had the responsibilities and privileges of the female line. If I, as a male, were a member of the culture, my "surname" would become that of my wife's mother, grand mother, and great grandmother. My children would bear that name. I might become known for the doings of my wife's family. 

                I am far from sure of the ways matrilineality effected their culture. However even the little we can learn may help us to better consider how Patrilineality may effect a culture. 

                The Hopewell have been called Mound Builders and came from a long line of such builders. They built more than complex mounds; they built a variety of interesting earthworks. They also made tools and artworks of stone, mica, copper, bone, wood, and much else.

                A work of theirs is called the Newark Earthworks and is located near Newark and Heath, Ohio in what is now the U.S.A. Three sections of this work have been identified and called: the Great Circle, the Octagonal, and the Wright Earthworks. As you may guess the complex was built by people we call Hopewell, The work was done between 100 BC and 500 AD. The Hopewell may have begun a decline as early as 400 AD. The Great Circle has called the biggest earthwork circle in the world or in the U.S. It is very big. It is believed to have been used as a place of ceremony, social gatherings, trade, worship, and honoring the dead. 

                Scholars have demonstrated that the Octagonal Earthwork was used as a lunar observatory for tracking the moon's orbit during its 18.6 year cycle.

                Trade: Evidence of their work and commerce has been found from south Florida and near the mouth of the Mississippi to the Great Lakes, and from the Rocky mountains to the Appalachian mountains. and some say, to the Atlantic coast of North America. Much of such evidence is concentrated in the drainage areas of the Mississippi, Ohio, and Missouri rivers.

                After 1492 Europeans were becoming aware of the earthworks of the Hopewell and Adena people. First the Spanish and latter the French commented on some of the mounds being abandoned and over grown with grass, brush, and trees. The English and American colonists became curious of mounds at an even latter date, They dug into them. They found goods; goods of many kinds from pottery to gold. Some of their finds were wonders. Including skeletal remains of persons of a bigger of a size than any of the finders.

                Some of the finders were interested in that which could be sold. Others wondered who the builders could be. Certainly not the few sad Indians they saw around them. The Indians they saw around them were the children who's families had been diseased and cruelly exploited  by Europeans for over 300 years. What you see is what you get. They were not seeing the "noble redman." We are still learning about who those builders were. We still have much to learn. Most of the evidence points tot  the Native people living near us today.

                For now, I will say that it has seemed reasonable to believe that the Hopewell people experienced a peak in their culture from about 200 BC to about 400 AD. They were proceeded by an interesting and long lived culture called the Adena. Like the Hopewell they traded from the Gulf of Mexico to a bit beyond the Great Lakes and all along the Mississippi Drainage system, including the Ohio and Missouri rivers. There is much evidence that the Adena were active from about 1,000 BC to about 200 BC.

                I hope to post about the Adena When I believe there is interest among my readers.

                Experienced ones say that we have much of value to learn from the signs left by our Native predecessors, when we would dig carefully.


RCS




 

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