. |
Image I
How to track bloodlines without DNA?
This writing is hypothetical, and I don't know is it true. Maybe it's fiction but it's interesting to think. I will use the "Holy Grail" as an example of protected merchandise, and I don't know if that thing is real. Bloodlines are more than genetics. Bloodlines are myths and tales that generations tell to their descendants but also merchandise what might combine in those tales and myths what is traveling in families through generations.
The minority languages and the merchandise that are traveling in families through generations are the things used to track the bloodlines. If we are thinking that the ruler of the empire has given some merchandise to the family, that thing would have very big emotional value. And this is the reason why that merchandise has a very big value in some families. But the merchandise is helping to track things like old ceremonial merchandise.
When the original owners of the merchandise what might have Pagan origin would face Christianity, they might hide that thing. The attempt to sell that thing can cause death and they cannot melt those things, because the origin of the gold might cause questions. There is a wild theory, that that merchandise has paint in the paintings.
. |
Could some crosses put in some places for the mark that persons should meet in that point, and maybe some of those brotherhoods wait and wait, but nobody comes. And generations will change. The original members of the hypothetical group knew that they cannot live forever.
So they formed the chain, and the person who hides that thing might use a mark like a sword to tell that this particular person knows the location of the relics like Holy Grail. And then there would be the man, who has a helmet, then the man who has a shield until there would be the people who have ordinary clothes like Scotch squares.
This kind of line would create because those guards wanted to believe that their time will rise sometimes. The idea is that some families might have a tradition, that someday they would go to a certain place and make something special. That tradition might be the chain from the beginning of Christianity just after the Roman Empire has fallen. The tale might go in those families through the generations, and maybe they will follow that. Who knows the truth. But there are tales of what origins might be deep inside the history.
Image I: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f2/Stone_cross%2C_Leiasundet%2C_Kvits%C3%B8y_Rogaland.jpg
The minority languages.
The minority languages are also very interesting. Things like Frisian languages are interesting because they exist even today, Why those languages are still spoken? Why the emperors of Germany and the King of the Netherlands didn't put those languages disappear? Did some king want to learn that kind of language? The fact is that the minority languages are making the cultural environment richer in Europe and also in other places.
Those minority languages are making Europe rich, and the fact is that they are still in use in many places. But the question is why those languages didn't melt in the major language in the great nationalism era in the late 19th century and the early 20th century.
As you might notice, I use Frisian as an example. Many other minority languages are in everyday use, and those languages have the position of minority languages. The most well-known of those languages are Welsh language and Cornish in British islands, and Sámi languages, which is spoken in northern Finland, Sweden, and Norway.
Cornish language: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cornish_language
Sámi languages: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S%C3%A1mi_languages
Welsh language: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Welsh_language
https://curiosityanddarkmatter.home.blog/2020/12/07/how-to-track-bloodlines-without-dna/
Comments
Post a Comment