Herodotus, Neuroi, the Nurzec river, and Nur, Poland

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According to Herodotus (approx 450 BCE) the Neuri ( Νέυροι ) were a tribe living North of the Tyres ( Dneister river ), and the furthest nation beyond the Scythian farmers along the course of the river Hypanis (Bug river). The Bug river flows into the Naura ( Baltic name for the Narew ) river. Herodotus also mentions the wild white horses nearby that grazed by a great lake, which scholars today suggest are the Podlesie marshes by the Bialowieza Forest. Yotvingian Tarpans from the Bialowieza Forest seasonally faded to near white in Winter. In 500 BCE, Eastern Europe climate was much cooler and wetter. The town in Poland named Nur ( Νυρ ) { 52° 40' 0" N, 22° 18' 0" E } lays along the Upper Bug River, near the Bialowieza Forest. There is also the Nurzec river not very far away, in same old West Baltic language region. Traditionally, Baltic ethnonyms are derived from hydronyms. The local hydronym may possibly have been derived from a verbal root * " niur- ", meaning " murky ". The local Balts would then be called the " Niurai ". If the verbal root was * " nur- ", meaning " to immerse ", then the locals would be known as " Nurai ".

Jaćwięgi są wśród nas

Sudowite 11:50, 16 January 2010 (UTC)Reply