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10-02-2004, 08:08 PM | #11 |
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I thank you, also. My one-volume OED is old and the type has somehow gotten smaller over the years.
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10-03-2004, 12:05 AM | #12 |
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Is this all there is to say about this?
It appears that the people who try to make the Japheth - Jupiter link are trying to trace the Indo-european Caucasian "race" to this Japheth, one of the sons of Noah. |
10-03-2004, 01:14 AM | #13 | |
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Japheth is actually a borrowing from Greek, Iapetos, the founder of the human (Greek) race after the flood. The table of nations in Genesis is heavily influenced by Greek thought. spin |
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10-03-2004, 05:00 AM | #14 | |
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spin spin spin |
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10-03-2004, 08:53 AM | #15 | |
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Isn't the Iapetos-Japheth link also claimed by those making the Japheth-Jupiter link? They claim the etymological descent went like this. Japheth-Iapetos-Jupiter. I realize you say Jupiter is Etruscan in origin... Don’t some argue against a Japheth-Iapetos connection as well? Is the myth of Iapetos earlier than Japheth? There also is a Sumerian "Japetosthes" and a Hindu "Prajapati." As a side bar, I also came across this intersting site about the connection between Noah and the Ziusudra myth. http://www.flood-myth.com/ |
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10-03-2004, 09:13 AM | #16 |
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Based upon the link, wouldn't it be more likely that the Greek 'Iapetos,' the Hebrew 'Japheth' and the Hindu 'Prajapati' came from the Sumerian 'Japetosthes?'
I am a novice here and, as previously stated, a little gullible, so don't take this as anything other than a request for info. |
10-03-2004, 11:04 AM | #17 | |
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Second, I haven't found a source to provide an etymology for Prajapati, to allow me to assume that "Pra-" is some sort of prefix. However, it wouldn't be too strange if Greek and Sanskrit religious notions came from the same source, they are two manifestations of the same language family and share a common ancestral heritage. The word deus ("god") in Latin is from the same source as dios (divine) and theos (god) in Greek and deva (divine) in Sanskrit, also manifested in dyaus-pitar (=Jupiter) in Sanskrit. The term Dioscuri in Latin comes from the Greek dios kouroi (divine boys, ie sons of Zeus), one of whom is called "Kastor" ("he who excels"). The divine twins in Sanskrit have a different name ("Ashvins" = possessing horses, as the Dioscuri did) but they are the protectors of the Kshatriya (from a verb "to rule"), you can see the consonantal similarity as well. Interestingly enough, two other Indo-European groups the Hittites and the Mitanni once signed a treay which invoked the gods Vishnu, Indra, Varuna and the Nasatyas (another descriptive name for the Ashvins = Dioscuri), all gods known from Sanskrit, yet also accepted by the treaty signers, ie they were not borrowed, but were part of a common heritage. One can't expect too much similarity though, they lived apart for so long they incorporated later experiences into their beliefs and older ideas disappeared into the layers of time. The Iranians (Persians, Medes and Parthians) shared a lot with the Hindu, but good gods in India referred to as Devas were bad in Iran, while bad ones called Asuras were bad in India and as Ahuras in Iran they were good! So the Prajapati connection is possible, because of a common heritage, though not demonstrated, Japetosthes seems unconvincing unless someone provided a real source for the info. spin |
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10-03-2004, 11:16 AM | #18 | |
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Like I said earlier, I am trying to verify AcharyaS' etymological claims, so yes, my reference to both Prajapati and Japetosthes comes from her book. You do not trust her work? (I have noticed that she is not well regarded) But you agree with the mythists? Yes? Who would you suggest as a good read, more trustworthy? |
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10-03-2004, 11:26 AM | #19 | |||
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10-03-2004, 02:37 PM | #20 | |
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