Skenedeberg was a Serb his wife and children the city of Skadar was the Serbian capital for 1200 years Albanians live on the throne Serbian histuria their genes are from Asia the language is similar to Chechenska
they tried to conquer japan too. unfortunately, they were just not too good with sailing. they should just stick with riding horses and shooting big arrows.
Hibernia in Latin translated from Roman is "land of eternal winter", it's fair to say that rome didn't conquer ireland because it was hard but the irish climate was unbearable
Pennsylvania also was home to major axe manufacturers, such as Plumb in Philadelphia, Warren Axe and Tool in Warren, American Axe and Tool Co in Pittsburgh, and Mann Edge Tool Co in Lewistown. Also, the state was responsible for the discovery of oil, major supplies of coal, timber, chocolate, and steel production. Pa also fought a war with Maryland over their respective borders which led to the Mason Dixon line.
I'm a 60-year Florida native and, I got a question. Why aren't you telling about the bog people that lived here 15,000 years ago? You know the ones with blue eyes and blonde hair
India is a british creation where as Sri lanka is a nation state of sinhalese people even the word ceylon derived from sinhale which means land of sinhalese
The Roman scholars who wrote about Ireland had never set foot on the island. Their writings were probably strategic to dissuade Rome for embarking on another futile, costly war at a time the "empire" was fracturing. Let's not forget that Gaelic Ireland, pre and post 4AD was governed by four provincial kings subject to a high king. The island was rich in gold, tin, copper, and fertile land. The wealthy Gaelic kings had long traded with the Iberian Peninsula and mainland Europe. Rome was not a mystery. Gaelic chiefs were kept informed of Roman governance in the lands conquered, wars and opposition. Before plotting an invasion, Roman generals would have considered the cost of such an expedition, in money and lives. Ireland was heavily forested. Battle tactics used by Gaelic chiefs in tribal wars usually comprised hit and run guerrilla manoeuvres followed by the use of light and heavy calvary to subdue the enemy. The Roman armies were trained to fight in open terrain and in formations. As was the case when Rome fought Germanic tribes, their legions would have been annihilated in Ireland by Gaelic forces better equipped to fight in tight forested spaces and combine guerilla warfare with horse. Provincial kings in Ireland at this time were in constant friction with each other, each vying for the high kingship. Their soldiers were battle hardened, more than a match for Rome's mercenaries, who were seldom paid and routinely deserting. The main reason Rome didn't invade Ireland was cost and trouble brewing as the empire was failing. BTW, pre and post 4AD, Ireland's kings were sending "missions" across Europe to build churches, monasteries and colleges of learning (Europe's first universities) from Madrid to Kiev, from Bern to Aalborg, and Paris to Frankfurt. So not as "backward" as those scared Roman fiction writers might have one think.
Technically, Rome did take Scotland, but unlike further south the only big centres of population were hillfort which were difficult to take, so the didn't have centres of population to administer from. So it would of been an entirely military occupation and not a political one
It is true that the Celts, their language, their culture, their identity, their sovereignty over the land, and their power became extinct, but their blood, their lineage, their people, and their genes still exist to this day, and the lineage of the Celtic people is the R1b haplogroup, and when we take a look at the distribution of this haplogroup on the map now, it completely matches the spread of the Celts in ancient times, and when we take a look at Iberia, we find Their ancestry is high, but their culture is completely extinct and they adopted the Latin identity, which comes from the Hubblegroup J2, as well as the Germanic I1, but we see a large presence of the Hubblegroup Celtic R in Britain.