The Iranian Origin of Croats - Philology
http://www.iranchamber.com/his... is unfortunate that Dr. Sahib Singh Verma, Union Labour Minister, was not allowed to attend the recent World Jat Conference in Belgrade ("Sahib Singh wanted to visit Serbia to meet fellow Jats, PM put his foot down and spiked his bonding-in-Belgrade plans", Indian Express, 21/9/2003). Sad indeed, because there actually do exist strong connections between Jats, Serbs and Croats. Several historians view these communities as sharing a common ethnic origin as is evident from a study of the following submissions.Philology: Croats as HrvatisLet us commence our investigation with the Croats. The science of linguistics provides several connections with Iran. Thus, the Croats of Croatia call themselves "Hrvati" and their country "Hrvatska", whence the Croatian domain name on the internet is .hr. The name "Hrvati" is derived from the Avestan province "Harahvaiti" (Greek: "Arachosia"). The scientific philological argument for the identification of the Croats with the Haravatis is given in (Sakac 1955, pp. 33-36; Sakac 1949, 1937) As Dvornik notes, "P.S.Sakac thinks that he discovered the name 'Croats' in Darius' inscriptions from the sixth century B.C. There an old Persian province and people are mentioned, called Harahvaitai, Harahvatis, Horohoati..." (Dvornik 1956, p.26) Further, the Roman leader Ammanius Marcellinus mentioned that two cities arose in ancient Persia called Habroatis and Chroates. In this regard, Prof. Mandic writes, "The Croats of the Don, then had to come in ancient times from Iran. On a stone inscription of the King Darius (522-486 B.C.) the nation of the Haruavat-is appears among the 23 subject nations. The Persian sacred books of the Avesti (Vendidad) call that nation the Harahvaiti. The provinces settled by that nation encompassed in those times the southern half of modern south Afghanistan, the whole of Baluchistan and the eastern part of modern Iran. In that ancient province ought we to look for the paleo-fatherland of the modern Croats." (Mandic 1970, Chapter 1) Furthermore, the name of the Croatian capital, Zagreb, is related to the Zagros mountain range of Iran. The Dinara mountains in Dalmatia and the Dinar currency may be connected to Mount Dinar (Dene) of Iran. The name Serbia is similar to the Seropi or Surappi River in Elam. Moreover, certain authorities note that the name of the Carpathian mountains is derived from Croatia: "Here the Iranian Croats mingled with the numerous local Slavic tribes and adopted the Slavic language from them. Meanwhile after the collapse of the Hunnic Empire the Croats organized the local Slavs into a state and gave them their national name. Before the invasion of the Avars ca. 560 the White or Western Croats created along with the Antes a great state extending north of the Carpathians from the upper Elbe to the upper Dniester. (35: Niederle, 263-266; Dvornik, The Slavs, 277-297) R. Heinzel is of the opinion that the Carpathians of the old Germanic Hervarsaga took their name from the Croats who called them the Harvate mountains i.e. Croatian mountains. (36: Heinzel, 499; Dvornik, op. cit., 284, sq.)" (Mandic 1970, Ch.1) Indeed, philologists trace the migration of the Croats from Harahvati (Arachosia, Sarasvati) in the following manner using fossil place-names along the path of migration: * Harahvaiti and Harauvati in Iran and Afghanistan * Hurravat and Hurrvuhe in Armenia and Georgia * Horoouathos in Azova and the Black Sea * Present day Croats Horvati and Hrvati along the AdriaticIt is important to note that the Avesta - the sacred scriptures of the ancient Aryan Zoroastrians - mentions the lands settled by the Iranic peoples. Hapta-Hindawa (ie. the Punjab, "Sapta-Sindhu" in Prakrit) is mentioned in the Avesta amongst the Irano-Aryan lands. Even today, the Punjab is the primary home of the Jats. Since the Croats are named after the Harahvaiti or Sarasvati River, and the Jats are the present-day inhabitants of the lost Harahvaiti, it would appear that Jats and Croats would be very closely related indeed.
Channel: Education
Uploaded: April 17, 2008 at 4:23 am
Author: CroAryan
Length: 03:12
Rating: 4.56
Views: 1347
Tags: aryan cravat croatia croats dinaric horovatos hrvati hrvatska iran iranic origins race sarmat sarmati sarmatians tie
Video Comments
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ORTHODOXPRIDE (July 29, 2008 at 6:40 pm)
Actually those nations you listed Serbs, Bosnians, Croats, Bulgarians, FYROM are not full Slavic countries. We share other genes than just Slavic..read a book. As for Persia, the people USE to be Aryan now they are vry mixed with Arabic blood.
mojtala (July 27, 2008 at 5:41 pm)
looool. poor guy. Your reference for complicated historical matters is a cheap hollywood movie. poor guy!
Hesam0000 (July 27, 2008 at 9:18 am)
Mojtala,Ottomans controlled eastern Europe at one time and Persia controlled the whole land of Turkey at other times so there has been so many mixings of races throughout history that every one of us has at least 3 to 6 different bloodlines.There's no hate between people but the hate that comes from ignorance and stupidity.The religious/racist characters usually use religion or race to separate and control the people and for that purpose they use hate as a weapon to fight the other sides.
mojtala (July 27, 2008 at 9:04 am)
Please do not forget that Turks controlled the slavic region for several centuries. Todays croats, Bosniaks, serbs, Macedonians or whatever else over tehre have all some turkish blood and thus siblings with each other. I do not understand the hate they have against their own brothers and sisters.
bolestanmajmun83 (July 5, 2008 at 10:16 am)
bog i hrvati for ever
Hesam0000 (May 9, 2008 at 6:20 am)
It's all Hollywood. Spartas didn't own half of the world, we did, Persia, Persia Persia :)300 Sparta + Persians = - 0 - SpartaYes, some of us have some Arab blood mixed, we're mostly Aryans, Persians and Medes mixed with 10% Mongol and Arab. And some of you have Anglo, Roman, Macedonian, greek, spanish, gypsy, and about 10-12 other mixes :)
ORTHODOXPRIDE (May 9, 2008 at 1:40 am)
oh yes hesam, and i think persian girls are too romantic, thats why you have arab blood too :)just one number300300300300300300300300SPARTA*SPARTA*SPARTA :)Greetings
Hesam0000 (May 8, 2008 at 7:13 pm)
There is no offense in loving and making cute babies, one is the nicest human trait, and other is usually the fruit of it. But it's true, from 500BC to just 300-400 years ago Persians have conquered from India to South & Eastern Europe, to today's Palestine/Israel/Lebanon and to Egypt North africa, and in each region they stayed a generation or more so it's natural to see mixed blood even as far as Egypt. Michael Jordan could have Persian blood & North African anscestors :)
CroOzzie (May 8, 2008 at 11:20 am)
I could be offended by that, but wtf I like it. I see myself doing that..damn! maybe I have got Persian blood!
zenjirou (April 17, 2008 at 4:00 pm)
With that logic, it is correct to say Croats and Iranic peoples have common ancestry which originated in Harawati/Saraswati area. They are not Iranian in origin, but have common ancestry. Unless there is something that links them to Persia Proper,. Something specific to Iran. |
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