FinnAtLondon wrote:I would also point out that as in all "wars", the history is written by the winners, and I really do not believe in "dark ages in primitive EUROPE" before widespread christianisation.
The Roman Empire became christian under Emperor Konstantin very late, around 313. So the influences of roman culture, not christianity, shaped the european continent for centuries way before the life of a certain Jesus from Nazareth.
Why should I not believe that the greek and roman culture was a more progressive and more complex culture and society than the one of the Celts or the germanic tribes (not to be confused with "surperior")? Of course, many elements of those ancient societies were merged into the roman culture, but the roman imprintings on the continent represented a cultural quantum leap. See what happened on the continent after the breakdown of the Roman Empire...
I believe in falsifiable science and until it is proven wrong, I believe in important cultural impulses initiated by the Romans - and as far as I know this is undisputed, scientifically. Comparable to this, everybody knows that the orient or the early chinese dynasties once were culturally more advanced than the occident. Why should I negate such a fact?
Well, is this "fact" a fact you may ask. Well, you can't relativize everything. There are people out there that even relativize the holocaust of the jews...
From ancient Greece to the Roman Empire, to the spread of christianity, to the renaissance, to the enlightenment and french revolution to me being able to reflect on all of this and being an agnostic, I see a path dependency and I don't need a nihilistic muderer and neo-fascict like Varg Vikernes to explain to me how history works.
FinnAtLondon wrote:Wasn't literature originated in Persia = Iraq?
Well, Mesopotamia (today's Iraq) was the living space of one of the first ''high'' cultures, the one of the Sumerians (about 3.500 - 2.000 b.c.). But today's Iran is the equivalent of ancient Persia, not Iraq. Unlike Iran, Iraq is an arabic nation.