Huns and Slavs

The origin of the Huns, as well as that of the Slavs, has eluded scholars around the world ever since they first began to try to determine the origin of those respective peoples. This book settles definitively the question of the origin of the Huns and of the Slavs; and it likewise shows that the descendants of the Huns are today represented by more peoples than scholars have ever realized. It also solves definitively, as will be seen, the origin of the Hungarians, as well as of a number of other peoples. This book changes, in fact, our understanding of world history, and sets the record straight, permanently. Below is a preview of it containing all but the last four chapters.

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The Kangar

This book is not about the dagger, or short sword, called khangar, or khanjar, a choice weapon for many men throughout the ages, but about 犀利士the ancient tribe or people whose name for themselves – Kangar – means sword- or dagger-bearer, and became the name for the dagger itself. That is to say, the name of the dagger, wherever the khangar or khanjar or handžar is used, whether in Iraq, Oman, Yemen, Egypt, the Balkans, the Caucasus, Central Asia, or India, comes from the name of the people – the Kangar. The Kangar were, or rather are, aborigines of India, and they are one of the most ancient peoples in the world, with a history spanning many thousands of years and involving numerous countries. Of all the Kangar, the most well known lived in southern Mesopotamia in antiquity.  We call them Sumerians.

This book is, in the main, not a history proper, but an argument, or series of arguments, intended to demonstrate, in so far as it is possible, that the Sumerians were, in fact, the Kangar.  (May take a minute or so to load.)  

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