An Ancient Debate #Archeology #History Since the 19th century, #Slavic scholars have debated that Slavs had achieved literacy pre-Christ... https://artof4elements.com/entry/292/runes-as-the-oldest-inscription-among-slavs
An Ancient Debate #Archeology #History Since the 19th century, #Slavic scholars have debated that Slavs had achieved literacy pre-Christ... https://artof4elements.com/entry/292/runes-as-the-oldest-inscription-among-slavs
Malta Temple Culture 3,500 BC - 2,400 BC https://artof4elements.com/entry/293/mystery-of-lost-european-civilisation #Art, #Education, #Symbols and Signs
On the autumn morning just after the full moon of the Equinox month, in the year 1460 BC, an un-named volcano in Southern Italy that had been silent for decades, suddenly burst into life and exploded. By the end of the following day, the islands of Malta and Crete were buried under ash, rock and mud, carried by an 80 meters high tsunami wave, where they remained lost and forgotten for the next 4,500 years.
At the time of eruption, the temples were long abandoned by its builders, following a harsh climate change that increased storms and rains, removing layers after layers of carefully cultivated and for centuries fertilised land. The evidence of this catastrophic event was found on the skeleton of the last generation of Neolithic Temple Builders, around 2400 BC. In an attempt to keep the land from disappearing, many ancestors’ bones show the evidence of strained wrists.
A rich and bustling community of 2,000 people, at its peak, had built 66 temples during the period of 1,000 years. Now, a new exciting archaeological excavation at Tas-Silġ in Marsaxlokk, sheds further light about Neolithic Temple Builders of Malta.
Learning from a Scientific Paper, March 2021, Runes from Lány (Czech Republic) - The oldest inscription among Slavs. An Ancient Debate #archeology #Slavic Since the 19th century, Slavonic scholars had theorized that Slavs had achieved literacy pre-ChristArt, Education, Symbols and Signs, Spirituality
An Ancient Debate #Archeology #Slavic #History. Since the 19th century, Slavonic scholars had theorized that Slavs had achieved literacy pre-Christ.
A Czech archaeologist, Alena Slamova, was routinely cleaning the excavations from a dig when her sharp eye noticed unusual scratching on the surface of one fragment. So she has decided to examine it further with her colleagues, not dispose of it.