Q********a 发帖数: 851 | 8 白人难道在南非建立起强大的文明了?
6. Other evidence showing links with China
(a) Principal
(i) The Navajo elders could, 70 years ago, converse in Chinese with
missionaries from S W China. Many visitors to website www.gavinmenzies.net
have commented on the striking physical similarities between Navajo and
Chinese.
(ii) Ethel Stewart provides a convincing case that the Navajo were
Chinese fleeing Genghis Khan. They came in Chinese ships via Alaska.
(iii) Linguistics: · Our attention was drawn by one reader to the following
extract:
“… The Tartar Chinese speak the dialect of the Apaches. The Apaches bear a
striking resemblance to the Tartar. In about the year 1885, W. B. Horton,
who had served as County Superintendent of Schools, at Tucson, was appointed
Post Trader at Camp Apache, and went to San Francisco to purchase his stock
, where he hired a Chinese cook. His kitchen adjoined his sleeping apartment
, and one evening while in his room he heard in the kitchen some Indians
talking. Wondering what they were doing there at that hour of the night, he
opened the door and found his cook conversing with an Apache. He asked his
cook where he had acquired the Indian language. The cook said: “He speak
all same me. I Tartar Chinese; he speak same me, little different, not much.
” At Williams, in Navajo County, is another Tartar Chinaman, Gee Jim, who
converses freely with the Apaches in his native language. From these facts
it would seem that the Apache is of Tartar origin. From the fact that the
Apache language was practically the same as that of the Tartar Chinese,
colour is given to the theory advanced by Bancroft in his “Native Races,”
Volume 5, p. 33, et seq., that Western America was “originally peopled by
the Chinese, or, at least, that the greater part of the new world
civilization may be attributed to these people…” Reference Source: The
University of Arizona Library “Books of the South West” Chapter 1, Indians
of Arizona:
http://southwest.library.arizona.edu/hav7/body.1_div.1.html
(b) Secondary links with China
Local legends telling of pre-Columbian visitors from the West. Certain
linguistics. Accounts of European historians (Acosta, Grotius). Wrecks of
probable junks – Sacramento and Coronado/Mafeo and Frois. Accounts
Europeans found Chinese plants (Cherokee rose, hibiscus (Rosa sinensis)),
rice, 26-chromosome cotton; Europeans found Chinese animals – hens (
Melanotic silkie, frizzle fowl), Chinese ship dogs (Acosta), carvings of
horses. ‘Tiguex’ (name of Navajo) appeared on European maps before
Europeans reached these (Cantino 1502, Waldseemueller 1507). Antonio Galv
227;o reports Chinese claims to be ‘Lords of Mexico’ pre-European voyages.
Garcia reports Chinese merchants in ports of Quatulco and Panuco. Asiatic
shipwrecks on coast (Hugo Grotius). Foreign ships carved by Indian people of
Tiguex. Statuettes of Buddha – Grand Canyon, Granby dam, Colorado, Chinese
Statuette.
To read an in depth comparison of Chinese and Navajo peoples, by Margaret
Cattey, please click here.
A reader had a conversation with a Navajo guide in 1996, who told him about
the history of the Navajo tribe and the monument valley. He also mentioned
that in 1995 or 1996 some tourists by accident found 2 Japanese skeletons
which were uncovered by erosion. The bodies were immediately covered up
again by angry elders and nothing has since been told of the story – Enrico
Altmann
http://www.gavinmenzies.net/Evidence/19-dna-evidence-of-navajo-
http://www.gavinmenzies.net/
【在 C****a 的大作中提到】 : 那他们为什么没有建立起来像中国这么强大的文明呢
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