Message from @Fitzydog
Discord ID: 572973002837196822
We only became a monarchy after 1815
That's cool
literally waifu grips
How to I become Green?
@HungBunny I love adapting old maps into DnD/Pathfinder Maps.
That's cool
I wanna play dnd but I havnt found nerds that aren't too arrogant/and or spergy
@HungBunny D&D fun?
just go on roll20, there are plenty of nerds wanting to play there
I want to play, but I hate DMing
so then look for a game that's looking for players
the bag thing is weird. I don't know much about it tbh, or what it could symbolize
I havnt read about this stuff in ages but I think it's something akin to the origin of the free masons
A large collection of traders built gobekli tepe is my guess
idk, probably not.
They'd be the most travelled, the most wise and most learnt
Graham says pre agriculture but I don't remember much about how he explains that
I dont see hunter gatherers building that
What's interesting, is about 1500-2000 years after Gobekli Tepe was built, the Yamnaya just on the north side of the Caucuses spread out to create the Indo-European peoples
@HungBunny Well that's my point
They weren't 'hunter gatherers'
The cow wasn't domesticated *quite yet*, but it dates to around the same time as Gobkli tepe
And building fences is hard. So why not herd them like goats?
Just follow your cattle wherever they travel. Eventually you see that the cows stop in the same places to-and-fro
You build a camp site, and then start preparing it for your journey next season
True
It couldnt have just gone from hunter-gatherer to agriculture
Would've been many steps along the way
idk, I haven't seen anyone talk about Aurochs and gobekli tepe in the same context yet.
Or postulating ancient herding techniques
Another explanation could be highly religious hunter-gatherers but that seems less likely
Have you heard about the Eye of the Sahara Atlantis theory?
Nah. I'm fairly certain they were more sedentary than hunter-gatherers, but more mobile than a purely agrarian society.
They were the first cowboys lol
Yeah, I've heard about it
It's all so interesting. We could've been around for so much longer then we thought
Look more into the Yamnaya and the Indo-European expansion
If you haven't already
They might have been a 'Mongol invasion' that was lost to oral istory