Historical Fragments
Posted: Thu Mar 04, 2021 6:01 pm
Starter for 10, for a thread about small historical findings that don't deserve their own thread:
Etruscan paintings.
Etruscan paintings.
Interesting! From my Burgess translation:Ferrus wrote: ↑Fri Mar 05, 2021 1:37 pmWhilst reading the Song of Roland I stumbled across what some think is the first reference to the name California in the 11th century (!).
https://newpsalmanazar.wordpress.com/ta ... of-roland/
The location is unknown still. In any case Montalvo seems to have been inspired by the mystery to create his mythical land in the sequel to Don Quixote's favourite Amadis the Gaul which of course then took a life of its own with the conquistadores.MoneyJungle wrote: ↑Sat Mar 06, 2021 9:29 amInteresting! From my Burgess translation:Ferrus wrote: ↑Fri Mar 05, 2021 1:37 pmWhilst reading the Song of Roland I stumbled across what some think is the first reference to the name California in the 11th century (!).
https://newpsalmanazar.wordpress.com/ta ... of-roland/
‘Beloved Roland, valiant man, noble youth,
When I am in my chapel in Aix,
My vassals will come and ask me for news.
The news I shall give will be terrible and cruel;
My nephew, who conquered so much for me, is dead.
The Saxons will rise up against me,
And the Hungarians, Bulgars and so many heathen peoples,
Romans, Apulians and all those from Palermo
And Africans and those from Califerne: <————————
Then my troubles and my suffering will commence.
Who will lead my armies with such might,
Now the he is dead who has always been our captain?
O, fair land of France, how bereft you are!
My grief is so great that I no longer wish to live.’
He begins to tear at his white beard;
With both hands he pulls the hair from his head.
A hundred thousand Franks fall to the ground in a faint.
I infer that it’s somewhere on the African continent outside of the traditional Roman province of Africa (although I think the whole continent was colloquially Africa, especially by the 1100s) but I guess we’ll never know unless someone stumbles onto some old documents. Maybe it’s a place the author thought existed in Charlemagne’s time or even a fiction for musicality. Fascinating read, SoR.
Indeed which is why most etymologies of California trace it to the same Arabic word as caliph, which us a surprising etymology.Buttrock as zen wrote: ↑Sat Mar 06, 2021 3:26 pmMy guess is that Califerne somehow derives from Caliphate, referring to the abbasids. The scope of the passage begins in Europe and expands outward and southward. The main muslims in Roland are the Saracens but the Abbasid caliphate existed around the time both of the events in the story and the writing of the text, though they were centered in the Middle East.
Here's another good article about it:Roger Mexico wrote: ↑Wed Mar 10, 2021 4:30 am100th anniversary of the Kronstadt rebellion.
https://roarmag.org/essays/seventeen-dr ... X8UcUVIw_g