Fight The Poison
Celtiberia Lyrics


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Ian Stuart Throughout time, there's been crimes, throughout our histor…


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Comments from YouTube:

M. Meursault

Another great video. Thanks for the upload, i'm really enjoying these profiles of 'lesser' generals.

Papagei Taucher

This Sertorius guy seems to be an interesting person

Thersites the Historian

Absolutely. Sertorius is one of the most intriguing figures from the Late Republic, which is saying a lot!

Fuzzy Dunlop

Okay, so regarding the inhabitants of the Nur mountains - as in so many topics regarding Southern Turkey and Northern Syria, seemingly-ancient realities have modern political ramifications. Judging from the preponderance of monasteries a few centuries AFTER the time in this video, and the sizable population (relative to others) in present-day Turkey I think the people of the Nur here might be Armenians - but that seems a little weird to me given Rome's previous interactions with other Armenian groups. They may have arrived in force later, but if so - why so many goddamn monasteries later on?

I know one of the reasons the Turks got so goddamn antsy about the Kurds in Northern Syria is the Kurdish presence in the 'Afrin canton' which is near this region - the worry being that the Kurds had been very successful in winning other groups to their cause (the most sizable being Arab) and if they were to succeed in doing so across the border into Turkey itself - specifically in the region of the Nur mountains - then the little 'Rojava' experiment could find itself access to the sea. It's far-fetched but the Turks were worried enough to begin their extra-territorial incursions from that area into Afrin. I believe there is now a relatively-sizable population of Armenians and 'hidden' Armenians in that region - (note how the Syrian Kurds officially apologized for the Armenian Genocide a few years back) - in addition to a smaller Kurdish minority in that area (it's hard to verify because maps tend to either be pro Kurdish - and show a huge pop in that region next to the sea - or Turkish-backed and show nothing but Turks).

Considering this - considering the Kurds don't tend to move a whole lot in history - it could be a proto-Kurdish group. It fits the MO to a T - lives in the mountains, raids their neighbors - sounds Kurdish to me. Were Isaurians a thing around this time period? Whichever group it could be (likely one that feeds into a more modern people, but isn't necessarily) I find it unlikely it could be Arabs - how would anyone be able to tell back then? I find it more likely it'd be one of the many number of nebulous 'mountain peoples' who lived in that region and eventually solidified into groups like the Isaurians and eventually the modern Kurds - but who knows? This is all conjecture, obviously.

dgetzin

I’m Afranius no longer alive.

Stayros Paparunas

1st view...i ll see later,u are a library..thx a lot.

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