Kimmo Huosionmaa
Knowledge is power, is the thing, what has begun the motto in the information philosophy. But who controls the knowledge is the person, who has power for everything. The persons, who write history are ruling the modernity and if the documents, what is written are faked, they are still powerful, especially, if the people would not be told that documents are faked.
In history, many kings, who have left their army on the battlefield are returned to the home and ruled with an iron hand their states. The thing is that there are many things in history, what is just disappeared, and one of the things are of course Germanian cities. Or has anyone found the mentions about the descriptions about the cities of Germans in the era of the Roman empire?
So the winners of the battle of Teutoburg lived in a tent inside some forests, what was very freezing in the winters, and if we would want to find any evidence about the cities what were outside the Roman borders, we will find the stories about Karthago, the Roman enemy number one. This Roman enemy number one is a very interesting case because Roman legions claimed to kill every person in that city. And this kind of things is very interesting because that kind of stories are meant for keeping the legionnaire's mouth shut when they returned home to Rome for giving their reports. So there was something, what Roman leaders didn't want ordinary people to know.
There is a similar thing in the Gallian campaign, what was done by Julius Caesar, and the story is about Alesia. Caesar claimed, that he killed million men army in that battle, but there is one thing, what makes this case mystery, and it is, that where the city of Alesia is actually located? When we are looking about the history of the Roman empire, we are facing the thing, that there were no cities anywhere in Britannia or Germania, and when somebody claims that the Roman camp Parisium was located in the place, where modern Paris stays, we must say that this camp was established by Romans.
And if the Londinium camp was the origin of the city of London, we must say that settlement was established by Romans in around AD. 43, and then we must remember one story, Julius Caesar claims that he conquered Britannia, and that man died in the year 44 BC, and this would put the question, "what part of Britannia Caesar conquer?". He lived 87 years before Emperor Claudius established the town of Londinium, and that means something was wrong in his stories. When we are thinking about the reason, why Caesar invaded in Britannia, we must think that there was something remarkable, that he got permission to begin the offensive, because waters were the limit for conquerors.
So for the permission must Caesar establish some benefits for the Roman empire and Senate, what was the supervisor in the internal affairs of Rome. And if the Britannians and Germanians lived in the tents there was no reason for the attack. So how Caesar argument the permission to attack to Britannia, and how he got ships in the border of the English Channel is interesting. Did he and his men built the ships or did they call the Roman fleet from the Mediterranean to carry him and his men in England? This is an interesting thing to think.
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