> Undeciphered
Alphabets
One
of the results of the strange attitude of western historians, not to locate
Turks before the middle ages is dating the Orkhun inscriptions in Mongolia
to 8th century AD, which according to Kazim Mirsan must be dated approximately to 5th century
BC. If Mirsan's argument is correct there must be a shift arund 1000 years, which
seems quite serious.
Kazim
Mirsan decipheres many inscriptions found in eastern Europe including Etruscan
inscriptions, with the help of Turkish alphabet of central Asia and Proto-Turkish
language.
The
Etruscan 'cippus' found to north of Perugia is one of the longer texts that
is read in Proto-Turkish, as a metaphysical interpratation
of the burial ceremony of a 'han'. One of the inscriptions found more to the
east, in Istanbul, the Erenköy inscription, with the same alphabet is
read as a memorial of presidency.
both from: Kazim MIRSAN, Proto-Turkce Yazitlar,
Ankara 1970, 108 p. in Turkish
Mirsan's readings
also include inscriptions from ancient Greece which is the subject of his
only book in a language other than Turkish:
Kazim MIRSAN, Deschiffrierung der Proto-Griechischen Inschriften, Ankara,
74 p.
According
to Mirsan
Proto-Turkish language worked with "article"s like Indo-European
languages, and modern Turkish was developed to work with suffixes instead,
to become more efficient and grammatically logical.
Mirsan
continued his research into earlier inscriptions, even to prehistoric cave
art. The symbols at the top of the Kimberley cave in southwest Australia
is also deciphered by the help of the Proto-Turkish alphabet, as: "3
OG's coming to our solar system taking man from Mars to Earth."
from:
Kazim MIRSAN, Prototürk Bilginlerine Göre Astrofizik, Ankara,
1990, 336 p. in Turkish
The start of alphabetical writing was the subject of his conference given at Paris-Sorbonne in 1993. The prehistoric proto-alphabetic inscriptions are largely related to extraterresterials.