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It is an interesting theory but as the author said it is not conclusive. There are other possible theories and possible explanations. Northern Albania is not like the pleasant hills and plains of Gaul\France. In the rugged Pyrenees a pre-Roman language did survive for example (Basque language). And while Latin was the official language of Northern Albania, its contact with Western Latin was overshadowed by more lengthy contact with the East Roman Vlachs in medieval times (could also explain why the Albanian language is closer to Eastern Romance languages without necessarily mean they migrated somewhere from the Danube region).
YDNA: R1b-L21 > DF13 > S1051 > FGC17906 > FGC17907 > FGC17866
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Here is a thread by Dna8 you might find helpful about our marine vocabulary
https://www.theapricity.com/forum/sh...=1#post5867306
Last edited by Hulu; 12-15-2021 at 09:40 PM.
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You should be more polite, First Albanologist was a Croat. It's a fact Albanians lacks maritime vocabulary and Albanians are first time mentioned pretty late which means they lived in inaccesible mountains of deep Balkans and came closer to the sea later. We have ancient cities too so I don't see your point. But they weren't built by Croats.
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Where my Dardanian plebs at.
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what. no.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albano..._Albanologists
I gotta say Feichy, you are not far from Serbs when it comes to opinions about our history.
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I like Albanians, but I won't buy BS about pure Illyrians origins. It's not true at all.
And yes, you should watch your mouth.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milan_%C5%A0ufflay
"Milan Šufflay (8 November 1879 – 19 February 1931) was a Croatian historian and politician. He was one of the founders of Albanology .
On the request of the Albanian government and the Academy of Sciences in Vienna, he continued the work of Jireček and Thalloczy, editing the 3rd book of Codex albanicus, an archival collection. In 1931, he finally obtained a passport and travelled to Albania to sign a contract to work on Acta Albaniae.
Members of the regime organisation, Young Yugoslavia, under royal protection, ambushed him at his doorstep in Zagreb and broke his skull with a hammer, killing him. Then, they broke into his apartment and took the manuscript of the third book of Codex albanicus."
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