Saturday, January 24, 2026

The Quiet Americans: Four CIA Spies at the Dawn of the Cold War--a Tragedy in Three Acts, Scott Anderson; copyright, September 1, 2020 -- Posted January 24, 2026

The Quiet Americans: Four CIA Spies at the Dawn of the Cold War--a Tragedy in Three Acts, Scott Anderson (b. 1959);  copyright, September 1, 2020 by Scott Anderson. 

Act 1: This Sad And Breathless Moment

  • WWII
  • 1944
  • Istanbul,  Turkey
  • Lanning "Packy" Macfarland -- the spy; the head of the Istanbul branch of the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), America's wartime intelligence agency.
  • Frank Wisner, also OSS, on the trail of Macfarland

Act 2: Hearts And Minds And Dirty Secrets

  • 1948
  • Czech engineer Jan Prosvic, Prague
  • Johnny: an agent of the US Army's Counter Intelligence Corps, or CIC
  • it had been just seven weeks since the communists seized power in Czechoslovakia
  • Prosvic needed to escape to the American sector; Johnny was there to help

Act 3: Crowding The Enemy 

  • 1952
  • FBI director J. Edgar Hoover sent a top secret memorandum to his counterpart at the CIA, Walter Bedell Smith
  • the memo concerned the CIA deputy director for plans, Frank Wisner
  • questions rising again: about Wisner's wartime association with Princess Tanda Caragea of Romania. 
  • began with a lengthy report out of Austria updating the situation of the exiled Princess Tanda. Caragea had led a most checkered life since the end of World War II, trading out husbands and lovers with some regularity as she flitted between various exile homes in Western Europe. Long rumored to have been a spy for a variety of intelligence agencies, both communist and non-, Tanda and her mother were now reputedly running an "intelligence shop" outof their latest exile home in the Austrian town of Dornbirn. 

Sunday, January 18, 2026

Pathogenesis: A History of the World in Eight Plagues, Jonathan Kennedy, c. 2023.

Pathogenesis: A History of the World in Eight Plagues, Jonathan Kennedy, c. 2023. 

Chapter 7: Industrial Plagues

The first pages sound a lot like the AI revolution in the US starting around 2024. 

Nice recap of slavery, weaving, move to urban centers. The explosion -- population, industrializatio --  in the 19th century is amazing. 

With the pivot to urbanization without the sanitary conditions needed, we had tuberculosis and then cholera.

*********************
Fourth (Sixth?) Industrial Revolution

From Another Million Dollar Way Blog:

One of the best histories / summaries of the 19th century British industrial revolution is chapter 7 in Pathogenesis: A History of the World in Eight Plagues, Jonathan Kennedy, c. 2023. When you read about that industrial revolution, it sounds just like what is currently going on in the states. More on this later, perhaps. 

The world's plagues in Britain during the 19th century industrial revolution: tuberculosis and cholera. And, of the two, cholera is the much bigger story.

 

Introduction

Chapter 1: Paleolithic Plagues  

Chapter 2: Neolithic Plagues   

Chapter 3: Ancient Plagues   

Chapter 4: Medieval Plagues   

Chapter 5: Colonial Plagues   

Chapter 6: Revolutionary Plagues   

Chapter 7: Industrial Plagues -- a great chapter, the "long nineteenth century -- 1789 (French Revolution to the beginning of the First World War, 125 years later. Goes along well with recent reading on steam engine revolution; weaving; 

Chapter 8: Plagues of Poverty -- nice observations about China and sub-Saharan Africa.

Conclusion

Acknowledgments

Notes

Index 

Thursday, January 15, 2026

Erie Canal

Connected the Hudson River to Lake Erie.

Completed 1825.

Circumvented Niagara Falls.

Route and lakes

  • the route:
    • origin: Cohoes, north of Troy, north of Albany.
    • via: Schenectady, Utica, Syracuse, Rochester,  
    • terminus: Niagara Falls / Buffalo (New York) -- Lake Erie (Lake Ontario is on north side of Niagara Falls)
  • the lakes: 
    • Lake Ontario, Lake Erie, Lake Huron (east side of Michigan), Lake Michigan (west side of Michigan), Lake Superior. 
    • Lake Michigan is the outlier: the other four are "in line." Lake Michigan is south of the line of the other "Great Lakes." 

This is really cool.

The canal:

  • from the Atlantic Ocean
  • the Hudson River on the west side of NYC
  • up to the capital of New York state
  • several major cities grow along the canal in New York state
  • ends at Buffalo, NY (co-located with Niagara Falls
  • below Niagara Falls

Personal note, with relaitonship to Westfield, NJ: 

  • about a 2-hour drive from Westfield, NJ, to the Poconos, northeastern Pennsylvania, north of Allentown, PA.
  • from Harrisburg, PA, to Westfield, NJ, on I-78, about 2.5 hours. The route would have taken me through Allentown, just south of the Poconos.  

Pale Rider: The Spanish Flu of 1918 and How It Changed The World, Laura Spinney, c. 2017.

Pale Rider: The Spanish Flu of 1918 and How It Changed The World, Laura Spinney, c. 2017. 

Introduction: The Elephant In The Room 

Kaiser Wilhelm of Germany, November 9, 1918: À mort Guillaume! 

Same day: Guillaume Apollinaire lay on his deathbed -- the leading light of the French avant-garde movement, the man who invented the term "surrealist" and inspired such figures as Pablo Picasso and Marcel Duchamp, he had signed up to fight in 1914. Having survived a shrapnel wound to the head and the drilling of a hole into his skull, he died of Spanish flu at the age of thirty-eight, and was declared a mort pour la France."

His funeral: four days later, two days after the armistice was signed. 

Tears come to my eyes when I read that / transcribed that --  it reminds me of how much I've read over the years and how I love Europe, particularly Yorkshire. Oh, wow.

Spanish flu

  • infected one in three people on earth;
  • = 500 million human beings;
  • Fauci knew that; his detractors did not;
  • first recorded case, March 4, 1918 and the last sometime in March, 1920: it killed 50 - 100 million people or between 2.5 and 5 percent of the global population.
  • it surpassed the First World War (17 million dead); the Second World War (60 million dead) and possibly both put together. It was the greatest tidal wave of death since the Black Death, perhaps in the whole of human history.
  • broad in space; shallow in time, compared to a narrow (geographically), deep (in time, dragged on and on) war 
    • most deaths occurred in the 13 weeks between mid-September and mid-December, 1918
    • worldwide 

Page 9: a linear narrative won't do; what's needed is something closer to the way that women in southern Africa discuss an important even in the life of their community -- The Jewish text, the Talmud, is organized in a similar way. On each page, a colun of ancient text is surrounded by commentaries, then by commentaries on the commentaries, in ever-increasing circles, until the central idea has been woven throgh space and time, into the fabrice of communal memory. [Makes me think of Hunter S Thompson's Hell's Angels.] (There may be another reason why the African historian Terence Ranger proposed a feminised history of the Spanish flu: it was generally women who nursed the ill. They were the ones who registered the sights and sounds of the sickroom, who laid out the dead and took int he orphans. They were the link between the personal and the collective.) 

That is the theme of this book: p. 6. 

It still bothers me that Fauci was so denigrated / demeaned. 

Jinns, page 5: Jinns (or djinn/genies) are supernatural beings from Arabic/Islamic lore, created from smokeless fire, existing unseen alongside humans, possessing free will, and capable of good or evil, often depicted with powers like shapeshifting, inhabiting different realms, and influencing humanity, differing from Western "genies" by not being inherently wish-granting but by having complex roles in culture, religion, and folklore. 

It will be interesting read what Laura Spinney was writing in 2016 - 2017, years before Covid-9. 

"Part Eight, "Roscoe's Legacy," looks forward to a future battle -- the next flu pandemic --envisaging what ne weapons we will carry into it, and what is likely to be our Achilles heel. "Wow, how prescient. 

Page 8: It is often said that the First World War killed Romanticism and faith in progress, but if science facilitated inustrial-scale slaughter in the form of the war, it also failed to prevent it in the form of the Spanish flu.  

Part One: The Unwalled City

1. Coughs and Sneezes

Begins: 412 BC, Perinthus, a port city on the Sea of Marmara in what was then northern Greece. The Perinthians reported other symptoms too, sore throat, aches, difficulty swallowing, paralysis of the legs, an inability to see at night. A doctor called hippocrates jotted them all down, and the "Cough of Perinthus" became the first written description -- probably -- of influenza.  

2. The Monads of Leibniz 

Wednesday, January 14, 2026

Centers Of Civilization

See this postProto by Laura Spinney. 

AI prompt:

If western civilization as we know it (farmering, domestication, wheel, language) began on the west coast of the Black Sea (the Kurgan Theory), where were other centers of humanity at that time, around 5000 BCE?

AI Prompt: Laura Spinney's book Proto  seems to be a direct "knock-off" of David W Anthony's The Horse, The Wheel, And And Language. Is that a fair statement?

 *******************************
Before All Of That


 

Sunday, January 11, 2026

Capitalism and Its Critics, A History: From the Industrial Revolution to AI, John Cassidy, c. 2025. Incredibly good book.


Capitalism and Its Critics, A History: From the Industrial Revolution to AI, John Cassidy, c. 2025. Incredibly good book. 

Highly recommended. 

 Introduction

Mercantile capitalism vs industrial capitalism 

Chapter 1: William Bolts and the East India Company

Cromford Mill, 1771 -- the beginning of the Industrial Revolution.

East India Company founded December 31, 1600. 

  • Williams Shakespeare: 1564 - 1616
  • Sir Henry Neville, died, 1615
    • Between 1598 and 1602, Shakespeare wrote several major plays, including comedies like Much Ado About Nothing (1598), As You Like It (1599), Twelfth Night (1601), and the comedy-problem play All's Well That Ends Well (1601-1602), along with the great tragedy Hamlet (1599-1601) and histories like Henry V (1599) and Henry IV, Part 2 (1598) 

1776: William Bolts, East India Company, US Revolutionary War

Chapter 2: Adam Smith on Colonial Capitalism and Slavery

A really, really good chapter.

Adam Smith's The Wealth of Nations, published in 1776, the year the thirteen colonies declared their independence. 

Sugar, slavery and Adam Smith 

mercantile capitalism vs industrial capitalism 

Mercantile capitalism focused on trade, controlling routes, and accumulating wealth through buying cheap and selling dear (arbitrage), often with state support for monopolies, while industrial capitalism shifted focus to mass production, mechanization, factories, wage labor, and profit from selling manufactured goods, emphasizing private enterprise and reinvesting in production efficiency. The core difference is trade vs. production, moving wealth from merchants and states to industrialists and private owners of capital.  

Mercantile Capitalism (c. 15th–18th Century)  

  • Focus: Commerce, trade routes, colonies, accumulating bullion (gold/silver). 
  • Wealth Source: Profit from buying and selling goods (arbitrage), tariffs, and monopolies. 
  • Role of State: Strong government intervention, protectionism, granting monopolies (e.g., East India Company). 
  • Labor: Often relied on coerced labor (slavery) in colonies. 
  • Key Activity: Merchants controlled capital and distribution.  

Industrial Capitalism (c. Late 18th–19th Century)  

  • Focus: Manufacturing, mechanization, factory system, mass production. 
  • Wealth Source: Profit from selling mass-produced goods, reinvesting in technology. 
  • Role of State: Decreased intervention (compared to mercantilism), favoring private initiative and open markets. 
  • Labor: Emergence of wage labor and industrial working class. 
  • Key Activity: Industrialists owned means of production (factories) and drove output.  

Key Transition

  • The shift involved capital moving from circulation (trade) to production, driven by technological innovation (Industrial Revolution) and new social structures, making production and industrial growth the primary engines of wealth, replacing state-backed trade monopolies.  

 

Chapter 3: The logic of the Luddites

Brontë country, River Spen at Liversedge in West Yorkshire; April 12, 1812. 

 

Chapter 4: William Thompson's Utilitarian Socialism

Born, 1775, Irish port of Cork. Manchester cotton mills, abuse of women and children. 

 

Chapter 5: Anna Wheeler and the Forgotten Half of Humanity

Begins with the story of William Thompson, working on his first book in the early 1820s, met anna Wheeler, a learned and well-connected Irish widow.  

 

Chapter 6: Flora Tristan and the Universal Workers' Union

1838, 30 years old, writer living in Paris; visited London with Anna Wheeler.  

 

Chapter 7: Thomas Carlyle on Mammon and the Cash Nexus

Born in the Lowlands of Scotland. 

Chapter 8: Friedrich Engels and The Communist Manifesto

1840, Manchester was Britain's second largest city; adjoining town of Salford. 

1842: Friedrich Engels, 22 year old, arrived in Salford to work at a cotton thread facgtory that his father co-owned.  

Chapter 9: Karl Marx's Capitalist Laws of Motion

August 24, 1849, 31-y/o Karl Marx traveled from Paris to London, where he was live for the rest of his life.

 

Chapter 10: Henry George's Moral Crusade

 Begins with the story of Leland Stanford, a cofounder of the Central Pacific Railroad, tapped a symbolic golden spike into a final piece of track that lnked his firm's line running east from Sacramento to the Union Pacific Railroad's line running west fomr Omaha; Promontory Summit, Utah, about 70 miles northwest of Salt Lake City. 

 

Chapter 11: Thorstein Veblen and the Captains of Industry

About the time of Mark Twain. Coined a number of economic terms:

  • "conspicuous consumption"
  • "the leisure class"  

 

Chapter 12: John Hobson's theory of Imperialism

1899 

 

Chapter 13: Rosa Luxembourg on Capitalism, Colonialism, and War

Born in 1871, Poland. Russian agitator during the revolution that saw the assassination of Tsar Alexander II in March, 1881.  

 

Chapter 14: Nikolai Kondraliev and the Dynamics of Capitalist

1917: St Petersburg; Tsar Nicholas II abdicated. Party of Socialist Revolutionaries -- unlike Stalin ... said economic vision of the future was based on expanding Russia's self-governing village communities of peasant households. May, 1917, Viktor Chernov, a veteran SR, became minister of agriculture ... one of Chernov's advisers was a young economist named Nikolai Dmitrievich Kondratiev.  

 

Chapter 15: John Maynard Keynes's Blueprint for Managed Capitalism

JMK has shot to international fame with his 1919 polemic The Economic Consequences of the Peace.  

 

Chapter 16: Karl Polanyi's Warnings About Capitalism and Democracy

Vienna, Budapest 

 

Chapter 17: Two Skeptics of Keynesianism: Paul Sweezy and Michal Kalecki

The three decades after WWII -- the Golden Age of industrial capitalism.

Again, "Keynesian managed capitalism."

Keynesian economics, named after John Maynard Keynes, argues that government intervention through fiscal and monetary policies can stabilize economies, especially during downturns, by managing aggregate demand (total spending) to combat recessions and control inflation, using tools like public spending and interest rates to boost employment and output when private demand falters. Key ideas include that demand drives output, economies can get stuck below full employment due to insufficient spending, and government spending can "prime the pump" to boost the economy, as seen during the New Deal era.

Cleanest opposite to Keynesian economics is the Austrian School of Economics with Monetarism as teh most influential practical counterweight in policy. -- ChatGPT.

Monetarism is an economic theory, championed by Milton Friedman, that asserts the money supply is the primary driver of economic growth and inflation, arguing that central banks should control its growth rate for stable prices, not discretionary intervention, as it posits markets are inherently stable and government involvement often causes instability. Key to monetarism is the Quantity Theory of Money (M x V = P x Q_, which links money supply (M) and velocity (V) to price levels (P) and output (Q). 

 

 

 

Chapter 18: Joan Robinson and the "Bastard Keynesians"

1921, scholarship to Girton College, Cambridge, the first women's Oxbridge college where she switched to economics -- Joan Violet Maurice, b. 1903. 

 

Chapter 19: J. C. Kumarappa and the Economics of Permanence

India, 1929; J. C. Kumarappa, 37 years old; Mumbai (Bombay at the time) 

 

Chapter20: Eric Williams on Slavery and Capitalism

1935, Eric Williams, Trinidad, the Caribbean 

 

 

Chapter 21: The Rise and Fall of Dependency Theory in Latin America 
-- "The periphery of the economic system."

 

Chapter 22: Milton Friedman and the Rise of Neoliberalism

"... the Keynesian model of managed capitalism was still ascendant in Western countries..." -- April 23, 1964. 

 

Chapter 23: Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen and the Limits to Growth

 

Chapter 24: Silvia Federici and Wages for Housework

Brooklyn, NY: New York Wages for Housework Committee 

 

Chapter 25: Theorists of Thatcherism: Stuart Hall vs Friedrich Hayek

 

 

Chapter 26: Parsing Globalization: Samir Amin, Dani Rodrik, and Joseph Stiglitz

 

Chapter 27: Thomas Piketty and Rising Inequality

2014: Thomas Piketty, a 43-y/o professor at the Paris School of Economics who had recently published a seven-hundred page book, Capital in the 21st Century, in which he traced the long-term dynamics of inequality and warned that the prospect of recent trends continuing was "potentially terrifying."

 

Chapter 28: The End of Capitalism, or the Beginning?

**************************
Chapter 28: The Sahel

The Sahel is a vast, semi-arid transitional zone in Africa, south of the Sahara Desert, stretching from the Atlantic to the Red Sea, known for its grasslands, diverse cultures, and historical empires, but now facing severe challenges from climate change, drought, poverty, political instability, and violent extremism, impacting millions who rely on agriculture and herding for survival.  

It includes parts of Senegal, Mauritania, Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger, Nigeria, Chad, Sudan, and Eritrea, among others. 

 

 

 

Keynesian economics, named after John Maynard Keynes, argues that government intervention through fiscal and monetary policies can stabilize economies, especially during downturns, by managing aggregate demand (total spending) to combat recessions and control inflation, using tools like public spending and interest rates to boost employment and output when private demand falters. Key ideas include that demand drives output, economies can get stuck below full employment due to insufficient spending, and government spending can "prime the pump" to boost the economy, as seen during the New Deal era.

The French Art of Living Well: Finding Joie de Vivre in the Everyday World, Cathy Yandell, c. 2023.

The French Art of Living Well: Finding Joie de Vivre in the Everyday World, Cathy Yandell, c. 2023. I bought this on a whim while visiting the Kimbell Fine Arts Museum, Ft Worth, TX, January 10, 2026.  

 It brought back a lot of memories of the many visits we took to Paris between 1983 - 1986 and 1989 - 1992. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Saturday, January 10, 2026

Proto: How One Ancient Language Went Global, Laura Spinney, c. 2025.

See "centers of civilization." Link here.

Proto: How One Ancient Language Went Global, Laura Spinney, c. 2025. Bloomsbury Publishing.

This is where I first saw mention of this book: link here. The lede:

This is one of the three best books I read in 2025 (the others being Orbital and Playground).  As the title indicates, this book elucidates in extensive but clear detail how one early proto-language radiated from the area north of the Black Sea outward toward what is now Europe and southeast into what is now the Indian subcontinent.

An analysis like this requires more than just linguistic skills.  Understanding the processes involved requires familiarity also with the anthropology of the movements of people, their occupations, their trading networks, their social behaviors, and also an understanding of archaeological findings, including DNA extracted from ancient bones. The author, Laura Spinney, is not a professional linguist, anthropologist, or archaeologist.  Instead (and presumably for the better), she is a professional science writer, able to compress immense volumes of information into a form suitable for the general public.  After reading this book, I immediately placed a request at our library for her previous work - Pale Rider: the Spanish Flu of 1918 and How It Changed The World.

Link here to interview with Laura Spinney. This interview was recorded in 2020, during the Covid-19 pandemic. I would love to see Ms Spinney write a similar book on Covid-19. 

Influenza:

 Proto. Notes.

From pages 16 - 17, historical linguists would eventually tease out twelve main branches of the Indo-European language family: Anatolian, Tocharian, Greek, Armenian, Albanian, Italic, Celtic, Germani, Slavic, Baltic, Indic and Iranic. 

To write them in a list like that is to do violence to them, though, because each one hides not one but many worlds of human odyssey and thought.

 Anatolian, a clutch of long-dead languages oce spoken on the Turkish peninsula and including that of the great Hittite Empire, is considered the oldest branch, though it was one of the last to be recognized. 

Tocharian is another prodigal child, one no one expected to welcome into the fold, though the evidence that it belongs there is overwhelming. As a dead langauge, or rather two, it was once spoken in the Silk Road trading posts of what is now northwest China, making it the family's easternmost branch.

The Indic and Irani branches are considered so closely related, by most linguists, that they are usually combined into one: Indo-Iranian. By far the largest in terms of both geographical range and number of speakers, this branch also includes the lesser-known Nuristani languages that are spoken in remote valleys of the Hindu Kush. The Irani branch comprises extinct Avestan, Zarathustra's mother tongue, and Sogdian, spoken by the merchants who plied the early medieval Silk Roads -- the trade routes that connected Europe and China -- but also Farsi (Modern Persian), Pashto and Kurdish. Their dead cousin Sanskrit, the language of the earliest Indian and Hindu scriptures, the Vedas, might be the most prolific of all the Indo-European languages. Among its many living offstpring are Hindi, Urdu, Romani and the Sinhalese language spoken in Sri Lanka.

Greek, Albanian and Armenian are origial enough that each one has a branch to itself. Their very orphan nature hints at a bevy of ghost languages, a clamour of long-dead relatives that might have travelled through time with them before expiring one by one and leavin gonly these three. 

The two surviving Baltic languages, Latvian and Lithuanian, have history entwined with the languages of the Slavs, judging by the closeness. But the Slavi tongues tell a tale of their own, falling out into western (including Polish and Czech), southern (such as Bulgarian and Slovenian) and eastern (notably Ukrainian and Russian) sub-branches.

At the other end of Europe, the Celtic languages divide north-south. Irish, Scots Gaelic and Manx took a different path from Welsh and Cornish, which show more affinity with Breton and extinct Gaulish across the channel. Italic embraces Latin and its brood, from Portuguese to Romanian, but also Latin's dead sisters Umbrian and Oscan. Oscan was the language of the Sabines, whose women, legend has it, were raped by Rome's founder and his gang. Last but not least, German spans the languages of Scandinavia along with English, Dutch and German, but also extinct Gothic, which was one spoken as far east Crimea and southern Russia.  

Those were the twelve.

Though it may seem like it, the Indo-European domination of Europe was never complete. Finnish, Estonian and Hungarian belong to the Uralic language family, while Basque survives as a rare pearl of an anachronism: an island of something older in a sea of Indo-European. In the first millennium CE, conquering Visigoths tried to update the Basques, and every Visigoth king trumpeted domuit Vascones. The expression, in the Latin language that the initially Germanic-speaking Visigoths took up as they moved west, means "he tamed the Basques." Except he didn't. 

Indo-European and Uralic are two separate families but some suggest there is a "super-family" that embraces both.

So, the theme for this book: 

"No sooner had the link between Indic and European languages been demonstrated than people began to wonder where their common ancestor had been spoken. Locating the Indo-European homeland has been the Holy Grail for many iintellectuals and many not-so intellectuals for two hundred and fifty years. Enlightenment thinkers rushed to claim India as the birthplace of the Indo-European languages, believing Sanskrit to be the most archaic of them. You could be forgiven for thinking that anywhere would do, for some of those champions of rational enquiry, as long as it wasn't biblical. The North Pole was a candidate, as was the lost city of Atlantis, vanished uder the Black Sea. Practically every land bordering that sea has been on the table at one time or other. Some of them still are."   


 

Geography:
two big seas: B and C --- Black and Caspian (at one time, joined)
two "M" seas: Marmara (very, very small; 
Bosporus Strait: from B to M; sometimes called the Istanbul Strait; opposite Turkey -- Bulgaria
Dardanelles (Canakkale Strait): a long, long, long strait, from Sea of M to Mediterranean Sea:
Odessa: northwest corner of Black Sea
Istanbul: southwest corner of Black Sea

Chapter 1 centers around Varna, west coast of Black Sea, between Odessa to the north and Istanbul to the south.

Four rivers, north to south, that drain into the Black Sea's west coast:
Dnieper (actually the very north, but on the west; key city: Kyiv
Dniester: just south of Odessa; both Dnieper and Dniester on north side of Carpathian Mountains
Moscow: well north of the Black Sea, about midway west-east; between the Volga River (east) and the Dneiper River (west) -- Moscow 1/3rd of the way to the Dneiper; 2/3rds of the way to the Volga River
Danube: middle of the west coast of the Black Sea

North of the Black Sea, three major rivers:
Dneiper -- west of Moscow, feeds into the Black Sea
Don -- south of Moscow, feeds into Sea of Azov which is small lake just north of the Black Sea
rises in a town just southeast of Moscow
Volga-Don Canal: Moscow became the "Port of Five Seas";
White Sea; Baltic Sea; Caspian Sea; Sea of Azov; and Black Sea.
Volga -- east of Moscow, feeds into the Caspian Sea


 

 Introduction

 

Chapter 1: Genesis -- Lingua obscura

The "Kurgan Theory" -- The horse, the wheel, and language. Wiki. David W Anthony.

Chapter centers on Varna (now inside Bulgaria), west coast of Black Sea, about 1/2-way between northwest and southwest corners of Black Sea;
Varna: among other things, oldest gold treasure in the world; discovered 4500 BC
Deluge Theory: 1997 -- William Ryan and Walter Pitman
author discusses migration pattern between 8,000 BC and 4500 BC

farming: 10,000 BC in the Fertile Crescent;
farming in the Balkans between 6000 BC and 5000 BC
4500 BC seems to be an important milestone

Harmangia: among the first farmers to settle this area, around 5500 BC -- p. 43; well before Varna.
Harmangia culture lasted for a 1,000 years.
Neolithic culture west of Black Sea, Bulgaria and to the north

Around 4500 BCE, the region near the Black Sea (specifically the Pontic-Caspian Steppe) became crucial as a source of massive migrations, notably the Yamnaya culture, who spread farming, new technologies (like wagons), and ultimately, Indo-European languages into Western Europe, causing huge genetic shifts and shaping modern European populations. This period marks the beginning of major post-Neolithic population movements from the East into Europe, interacting with existing farming communities.

Varna
gold, using fleeces, page 46
4500 BC, Varna region, the birth of the Copper Age (out of the Stone Age)
Copper Age societies in SE Europe reaching their zeniths by 4500 BCE
in the process of smelting gold, came pure copper
p. 46

Kurgans, small earthen mounds, overlaid burial grounds; p. 48. Kurgan and Kurgan culture.

The lingua franca for trading: unknown. p. 51.

But most agree that the ancestor to the Indo-European family of languages began here. This would be exactly the midpoint between India (the East) and western Europe (the West). 

Two saves of migration
one across Strait of Bosporus (Istanbul)
one across the Aegean Sea to the south

All of a sudden those in this area, the beginning of the Copper Age, disappeared -- completely disappeared, about 4400 BC.

Amazing: between 4500 BE and 4400 BC. Happened very, very quickly. Page 52.

Tel Karanova, page 52.

Beginning on page 52 and extending several pages: the disappearance of Karanova, Varan, site of Copper Age beginnings.

Then the Mesopotamian villages began to appear; first "modern" cities, page 56.

First wheeled vehicle: between 4000 and 3500 BC -- page 52. Perhaps the oxen domesticated by now

Goat: second animal domesticated by humans. First, of course, the dog, 15000 years ago; the goat, 10,000 years ago, preceding farming.  After the goat, came sheep (9000 BC), and then pigs (8300 BC, middle East), and then finally castrated cattle --> oxen (8,000 BC, from wild aurochs). 

[3500 BC -- the horse, Central Asia.]

Page 56: shortly after appearnce of first megasites in the Ukraine, Mesopotamian villages (Uruk, southern Irak; Tell Brak, northern Syria) began to appear. Between 3800 and 3700.  

By 3500 BC, the "megasites" completely disappeared, p. 58.  

A reminder, Abraham of the Bible, middle Bronze Age, 2000 - 1800 BC. Born in Ur; God called him to found a great nation in Canaan. 

Chapter 2: Sacred Spring -- Proto-Indo-European

Begins with the geography of the steppe.

The Yamnaya culture.

Chapter 3: First Among Equals -- Anatolian

Page 97: Marija Gimbutas was the leading proponent of the theory (see below), discussed in the last chapter (chapter 2), that the steppe nomads had spread those languages.

The chapter begins with Bedřich Hrozný (6 May 1879 – 12 December 1952), also known as Friedrich Hrozny, was a Czech orientalist and linguist. He contributed to the decipherment of the ancient Hittite language, identified it as an Indo-European language, and laid the groundwork for the development of Hittitology. 

Cambridge, England: Lord Colin and Lady Jane Renfrew. Marija Gimbutas

"Old Europe." 

Old Europe is a term coined by the Lithuanian-American archaeologist Marija Gimbutas to describe what she perceived as a relatively homogeneous pre-Indo-European Neolithic and Copper Age culture or civilization in Southeast Europe, centeredd in the Lower Danube Valley.

Old Europe is also referred to in some literature as the Danube civilisation.

Chapter 4: Over The Range -- Tocharian

Back to 1906, Hungarian-born archaeologist Marc Aurel Stein had just discovered Niya, one of the oasis cities that once encircled the Taklamakan Desert like a strong of mala beads; it is now known as Xinjian, northwest China.

Besides the world's oldest printed text, the Diamond Sutra, and the Jade Gate -- the frontier post where caravans once entered China -- Stein would discover much of the Silk Roads on behalf of his adopted country, Britain. 

Directly east of the Caspian Sea; abuts the Gobi Desert on the east. Southwest of Mongolia; directly north of India. The "Stan" brothers to the west. 

Explanation for how the name "Tocharian" came to be. Page 123.

Okay, the eldest daughter of PIE was Anatolian.

The second eldest daughter of PIE was Tocharian (wrongly named, by the way), same page, page 123.

The language was translated / discovered by the German scholars (1908 and thereabouts) Emil Siet and Wilhelm Siegling.

Page 127: Indo-European family falls out into centrum and satem languages, depending on whether words like the one for a 'hundred' (centum in Latin, satem in  Avestan) are pronounced with a hard k or a soft sound at the front.

 Afanasievo culture: p. 131. 

 Chapter 5: Lark Rising -- Celtic, Germanic, Italic

This will be interesting -- Celtic, again. 

 Chapter 6: The Wandering Horse -- Indo-Iranian

 Begins with the ancient Indian ceremonies, the ashvamedha or horse sacrifice. 

Chapter 7: Northern Idyll -- Baltic and Slavic

Begins again with Marija Gimbutas, 1962, almost 20 years after fleeing her native Lithuania. In 1962 she published The Balts

Page 220: the Proto-Slavic homeland, between the headwaters of the Dniester and the Middle Dneiper; falls within the borders of modern Ukraine.  

 
Chapter 8: They Came From Steep Wilusa -- Albanian, Armenian, Greek

Begins with the Trojan War, The Iliad

Conclusion: Shibboleth 

A shibboleth is a word, phrase, or custom that identifies someone as an insider or outsider of a particular group, originating from the Biblical story where the inability to pronounce "sh" in "shibboleth" revealed Ephraimites as enemies. 

In modern usage, it's a linguistic or behavioral marker (like saying "petrol" vs. "gasoline") or a trite, outdated saying. It can also refer to the Shibboleth Consortium, an identity management system for web applications.

 

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Much of the book is, understandably, centered in Ukraine. Ironically, Ukraine is in the news now, 24/7, for the past three years -- going into the fourth year now. Russia is still losing 25,000 men / month, in the Ukraine-Russian War.