Možno poznáte fórum SLAVORUM.
www.slavorum.com/forum/index.php?topic=3816.0
Mladí (hlavne Ruskí) sa tam snažia na niečo prísť.Sú však prepchaní gebírovštinou, neznalosťou a predsudkami zo svojich domovov. Napr , takto riešia Srbov
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Well current theories support that idea. Procopius and Jordanes mention the Antes, who inhabited the left (north) bank of the lower Danube. They remarked that they looked and sounded 'identical' (i.e. very similar) to the Sclavanoi, who dwelt along the middle Danube. The word Antes is considered by some linguists to be an Iranic name. They suggest that the Antes were one of the Sarmato-Alanic tribes that in the 4th century inhabited the region between the Caucasus and Ukrainian steppes, perhaps between the Prut and lower Dneister rivers in what is now modern Moldova and southwestern Ukraine (look at the map M423).
Serbs are thought to be first mentioned by Tacitus in 50 AD, Pliny the Elder in 77 AD (Naturalis Historia) and Ptolemy in his Geography 2nd century AD, associated with the Sarmatian tribe of Serboi (Sarmato-Alanians like Antes) of the North Caucasus and Lower Volga. In the 10th century, Byzantine emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogennetos (912-959) mentioned in his book De Ceremoniis two tribes named Krevatades (Krevatas) and Sarban (Sarbani), which some researches identified as Croats and Serbs. These tribes were located in the Caucasus near the river Terek, between Alania and Tsanaria. The Sarban tribe in the Caucasus in the 10th century was also recorded by an Arab geographer.
Theory about Iranian origin of the Serbs assumes that ancient Serbi / Serboi from north Caucasus were a Sarmatian (Alanian) tribe (namely a part of the Antes). The theory subsequently assumes that Alanian Serbi were subdued by the Huns in the 4th century and that they, as part of the Hunnic army, migrated to the western edge of the Hunnic Empire (in the area of Central Europe near the river Elbe, later designated as White Serbia in what is now Saxony (eastern Germany) and western Poland (Lusatian Serbia). After Hunnic leader Attila died (in 453), Alanian Serbi presumably became independent and ruled in the east of the river Saale (in modern day Germany) over local Slavic population. Over time, they, it is argued, intermarried with the local Slavic population of the region, adopted Slavic language, and transferred their name to the Slavs. According to Tadeuš Sulimirski, similar event could occur in the Balkans or Serbs who settled in the Balkans were Slavs who came from the north and who were ruled by already slavicized Sarmatian Alans (namely the Serboi a tribe of the Antes)
This is the current academical theory of the ethnogenesis of the Serbs, which corresponds with the general ethnogenesis of the Slavs (from Sarmatian-Scythian ancestors), everything else is considered mumbo-jumbo.
Ale samozrejme -dajú sa tam nájsť a čriepky zaujímavých info.S tím súvisiaca mapka .