New Search

If you are not happy with the results below please do another search

86 search results for: Duchesne

50

The Roman Variant of Indo-European Social Organization: Militarization, Aristocratic Government, and Openness to Conquered Peoples. Part 1

A Critical History of Early Rome:  From Prehistory to the First Punic War Gary Forsythe Berkeley: University of California Press, 2005  Gary Forsythe, associate professor of history at Texas Tech University, has written a critical history of the early Roman republic — critical in the sense that he casts grave doubts about a considerable amount […]

51

Rep. Steve King gets shamelessly racist — or not

Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa) caused a major liberal media meltdown by tweeting positively about anti-Islamic Dutch politician Geert Wilders and repeating his comments in an interview with CNN’s Chris Cuomo, “We Can’t Restore Our Civilization With Somebody Else’s Babies.” Wilders understands that culture and demographics are our destiny. We can’t restore our civilization with somebody else’s […]

53

Folk-Right Versus Multiculturalism

To most Westerners today, the words ‘nation’, ‘nationality’ and ‘law’ seem only to mean the state, citizenship and legislation enacted by the state. But there are other meanings to these words, which were their primary and even sole meanings in the past. The nation was once the ethnic group, the tribe at large — nationality […]

54

A Review of “The Mighty Dead” by Adam Nicolson, Part 3 — Indo-European Population Genetics

Part 1 Part 2 Indo-European genetics A major weakness of The Mighty Dead is a lack of any discussion of findings from population genetic studies. In her 2015 book Ancestral Journeys: The Peopling of Europe from the First Venturers to the Vikings, Jean Manco notes that while it has been widely assumed that the shift […]

55

A Review of “The Mighty Dead” by Adam Nicolson — Part 2

Part 1 Homer was central to the Ancient Greeks’ conception of themselves and their origins. At their most holy and self-conscious moment, the quadrennial festival of the Panathenaia, the Athenians  “gathered for total immersion in the Homeric stories, drinking up the tales from which most of their great tragedies drew their plots and characters, thinking […]

56

A Review of “The Mighty Dead: Why Homer Matters” by Adam Nicolson, Part 1

The Mighty Dead: Why Homer Matters is an example of that non-fiction genre so reviled by the anti-White establishment: books that celebrate the European past and the rich and world-transforming culture that emerged from it. Foundational to this culture are the Homeric epics, the Iliad and the Odyssey, which have long been pillars of the […]