Idk who needs to hear this but Gypsycrusader is white, cry abt it
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Forwarded from ๐ฌ๐๐๐ ๐ณ๐๐๐๐๐๐๐
INTEL SLAVA O INTEL PAJEEET?
"Saar! Fidati dei professionisti della Tradizzzione, saar!"
๐ฌ๐๐๐ ๐ณ๐๐๐๐๐๐๐
"Saar! Fidati dei professionisti della Tradizzzione, saar!"
๐ฌ๐๐๐ ๐ณ๐๐๐๐๐๐๐
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Piercing or no piercing?
Anonymous Poll
4%
Piercing
81%
No piercing
10%
Doesn't matter to me
5%
It depends
can someone post and take this coal off the front of the channel thanks
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Forwarded from Johan Oosthuizen Research
The Israelite Population in the Roman Province of Judaea during the 1st Century AD
https://www.academia.edu/145245296/
Abstract (click to expand):
Manuscript may be subject to future updates.
@J_Oosthuizen
Hightlights:
โข Archaeological estimates suggest 6.4-21.8% of the population of Roman-period Judaea retained at least partial Israelite ancestry.
โข In spite of this, archaeological estimates suggest as much as 95% of the population of Judaea may have adhered to Judaean customs and religion.
โข Archaeological estimates using stricter definitions of "pure" Israelite descent yield a narrower range of 3.5-13.4%.
โข Archaeological estimates suggest over 50% of the population of Roman-period Judaea was of Idumaean origin.
โข Key Conclusion: There is a profound gap between ethnic ancestry and religious-cultural identity in late Second Temple- and Roman-period Judaea, which has significant implications for narratives concerning Jewish diaspora groups.
https://www.academia.edu/145245296/
Abstract (click to expand):
This study investigates the proportion of the Israelite-descended population within the Roman province of Judaea during the 1st century AD. Using archaeological data, biblio-historical texts, and demographic modelling, the paper reconstructs long-term population trajectories from the Persian period (5th century BC) through the Hasmonean and early Roman periods. Population baselines are established for Yehud (12,000-30,000 in 432 BC), Samaria (43,000 in 432 BC), and Idumaea (100,000-200,000 in 177 BC), with growth projected under worldwide and regional rates (0.12%-0.21% per annum). The ethnic composition of Samaria before the Assyrian deportation campaigns is assessed through settlement archaeology, pig-avoidance patterns, architectural markers, and Biblio-historical testimonies. Some of these are also used to assess the Assyrian deportations and Hasmonean conversions. Results suggest that, of an estimated total provincial population of c. 552,000 by the mid-1st century AD, approximately 35,000-120,000 individuals (6.4-21.8%) retained at least partial Israelite ancestry, whilst as much as 95% of the population of Judaea may have adhered to Judaean customs and religion (being thus considered Judaean). Stricter definitions of "pure" descent yield a narrower range of 19,000-74,000 (3.5-13.4%). Biblical figures, if taken at face value, produce higher proportions (17.5-29.9%), though archaeological modelling, and Biblio-historical context, suggests that the Biblical figures for the people who returned to Jerusalem from exile in Babylonia, are merely snapshots that don't account for the later expulsions of foreigners, their offspring, and those who cohabited with them, under the regimes of Ezra and Nehemiah, as described later in the Biblical record. All the preceding figures are to some degree overestimates. This research highlights the gap between ethnic ancestry and religious-cultural identity in late Second Temple-and Roman-period Judaea. This has profound implications for the narratives surrounding the ethnogenesis and historical claims of various Jewish diaspora groups.
Manuscript may be subject to future updates.
@J_Oosthuizen
Hightlights:
โข Archaeological estimates suggest 6.4-21.8% of the population of Roman-period Judaea retained at least partial Israelite ancestry.
โข In spite of this, archaeological estimates suggest as much as 95% of the population of Judaea may have adhered to Judaean customs and religion.
โข Archaeological estimates using stricter definitions of "pure" Israelite descent yield a narrower range of 3.5-13.4%.
โข Archaeological estimates suggest over 50% of the population of Roman-period Judaea was of Idumaean origin.
โข Key Conclusion: There is a profound gap between ethnic ancestry and religious-cultural identity in late Second Temple- and Roman-period Judaea, which has significant implications for narratives concerning Jewish diaspora groups.
โ4
Johan Oosthuizen Research
The Israelite Population in the Roman Province of Judaea during the 1st Century AD https://www.academia.edu/145245296/ Abstract (click to expand): This study investigates the proportion of the Israelite-descended population within the Roman province ofโฆ
Do you think the people who call themselves JEWS today actually have any significant/meaningful ancestry from the ANCIENT ISRAELITES?
Anonymous Poll
35%
No, they instead have large Edomite and other Canaanite ancestry
19%
No, they are instead Khazar converts
6%
No, they are instead Polish converts
11%
No, they are instead of some other source
28%
Yes
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Forwarded from Tupi Report ๐ง๐ท โข #FreeVenezuela
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Do you use Telegram most on phone or PC?
Anonymous Poll
44%
Phone only
2%
PC only
36%
Mostly phone but also PC
9%
Mostly PC but also phone
8%
Equally on both
The most annoying and rude White tourists I met abroad wereโฆ
Anonymous Poll
29%
Americans
2%
Australians
20%
Brits
15%
Russians/Ukrainians
2%
Germans
22%
French ๐คข๐คข
10%
Others (write in comments)
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Forwarded from The Saxon-Israelites
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HD version
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