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#1 |
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Location: Athens Greece
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Tom
I am not “nationalistic” enough to fight your ideas. Actually I agree with a lot of them. But I still believe that Alexander was an exceptional leader. Few points on it: 1. He was brave enough to fight in the first line of his army, leading cavalry charges deep in the enemy lines. 2. He never killed or torture captives and actually he gave all respect to Darius family and the Persians nobles. 3. He respected foreigner religions and he wanted to learn about them. 4. He encouraged his bachelor soldiers to marry Persian women to unite the nations. He was punishing hard rappers and robbers. 5. I have travel in some Asian countries and the name Ishkander or Shikander is still alive and kicking. I have heard from natives nice stories about him that are not known not even in Greece. |
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#2 |
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Location: Houston, TX, USA
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I don't know that I'm saying he wasn't an exceptional leader as much as I'm proposing that exceptional leaders and their exceptional movements are a product of (at least more than vice-versa) exceptional social circumstances. In other words, something made the Macedonians get up and conquer and I don't buy that it was only the (perhaps laudable, perhaps despicable; I suppose it's a cultural/spiritual question) ambition of Alexander and his father.
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#3 |
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Tom is subscribing to the Marxist view of history, whereby everything is driven by suprahuman (economic) necessity and the individual leader is just somebody who was there at the right place and in the right time. A marionette of objective historical forces, so to speak.
Most of us, especially in the post-Cold War days, would only chuckle.... There is no doubt that Alexander was Greek, that he was a formidable leader, and that he actively initiated a chain of events that re-shaped the world. I suggest we stop here and now the silly argument " my ancestor was greater than your (his, their, her etc)...". There is already another internet place where such arguments are hotly debated, with Alexander being the villain and barbarian who destroyed a mighty, cultured, humanistic and generally idyllic Persian culture. Nothing good comes from these arguments, guys, except mutual accusations of cultural insensitivity. Can we concentrate on the swords? Do Yataghan and Kora descend from the Greek Macedonian Kopis? Was there a reverse migration of the recurved blade back to Asia Minor? Sosun Pattah, anyone? Where does Falcatta fit here? Why does my beloved Laz Bicaq (Black Sea Yataghan) have a configuration resembling Egyptian Khopesh? |
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#4 |
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Location: Athens Greece
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I copied this photo from the old forum. Thanks to Artzi we had a graphical explanation of the evolution of kopis.
The full topic is here: http://www.vikingsword.com/ubb/Forum1/HTML/002313.html Alexander was not my ancestor, I was born in south Greece ![]() ![]() |
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#5 | |
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![]() Quote:
a good question, though one raised previously with no success. At least we found out a little more about these fascinating swords. Last edited by tom hyle; 23rd March 2005 at 12:47 PM. |
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#6 |
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This is a fascinating topic and an interesting thread. However, I have some requests.
First, let's everyone keep this discussion civil. Some posts have been close to the edge in my estimation. Tom, it would make it much easier to understand your posts (and points) if you were to avoid writing within another's quoted post. Try parsing the quotes, or just post your response seperately. We'll get it. Thanks, Andrew |
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#7 |
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You're right, of course.
![]() I'm not really capable of responding to multiple complex points if I'm not looking at them, so while the quotes serve as a guide to the readers of what I'm talking about, they moreso serve as a guide for me, without which I might be much less cogent. I'll try to cut 'em down to basics; don't want to take up all the memory space, if there is such a thing, of this website with repitition. I could probably edit them out entirely once I've written my replies. I've intended no incivility; I just consider some things hard to swallow; hard to believe just because they've been passed down/stamped with official approval, and hard to accept the way others seem to swallow them whole. I've been around winners and losers. I've seen approval and felt disaproval of those who claim authority, and by no means have I found these things to be universally based on merit. I'll say a general thing, if I may on the subject of merit and meritocracy, which I think bears some relevance in broad social terms. Every stratified Human society has been a meritocracy. No one ever said let's put the simple minded or unethical in charge. The only disagreement (and it's vast) is how to determine/identify/define merit.......and the methods are rarely salutary, IMHO. Therefore, quoting an "expert" to me, or numbers of them, is rarely a very meaningful way to communicate with me: I've been around experts, too ( ![]() I do seem to find it difficult to be civil in the face of mockery; please argue with me using reason, rather than sarcasm or societie's (to me) meaningless judgements, if possible. And I'll try to find a more respectful word for what seems far out unlikely to me than silly.......... Last edited by tom hyle; 23rd March 2005 at 11:54 AM. |
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#8 | ||||
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Location: Athens Greece
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![]() Quote:
machaira=big knife machairi=knife kopis={not used but is the etymological root of the following} kopidi=chisel kovo=chop down, cut out (verb) kopsimo=cut falcata={not used, maybe the root of the following} faltseta=a curved folding knife (an older word, my father used) faltsokovo=bevel Quote:
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What Tartastan has to do here???? It is thousand miles north east. Also Tartars is a very late population that never established in the area. |
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