A fine overview of early European racial anthropology, first published in a time before political correctness and leftist hatred suppressed the science. Taylor, the Canon of York, provides a... More > comprehensive summary of the vexed issue of the origins of the Indo-European peoples. He points out that there is no “Aryan race” per se, but rather a collection of Aryan languages—and shows that language alone cannot be a final indicator of racial origins. Taylor’s book was the first major English-language work to reject the Ex oriente lux theory of Indo-European origins in favor of a birthplace in southern Russia.
Using a thorough evaluation of cranial, archaeological and cultural evidence, he presents his conclusion. Often attacked and dismissed by contemporaries, modern DNA has proven many of Taylor’s theories to be completely accurate.
Isaac Taylor (1829–1901) was a philologist, toponymist, and Anglican canon of York, England, from 1885 until his death.< Less
A fine overview of early European racial anthropology, first published in a time before political correctness and leftist hatred suppressed the science. Taylor, the Canon of York, provides a... More > comprehensive summary of the vexed issue of the origins of the Indo-European peoples. He points out that there is no “Aryan race” per se, but rather a collection of Aryan languages—and shows that language alone cannot be a final indicator of racial origins. Taylor’s book was the first major English-language work to reject the Ex oriente lux theory of Indo-European origins in favor of a birthplace in southern Russia.
Using a thorough evaluation of cranial, archaeological and cultural evidence, he presents his conclusion. Often attacked and dismissed by contemporaries, modern DNA has proven many of Taylor’s theories to be completely accurate.
Isaac Taylor (1829–1901) was a philologist, toponymist, and Anglican canon of York, England, from 1885 until his death.< Less
Produced by the US Communist Party-supporting Italian-American Gino Bardi in 1938, this work attempted to refute the sudden anti-Semitic and racial turn taken by Mussolini in 1938. Bardi points out... More > Mussolini had earlier been very pro-Jewish and had spoken out strongly against racial ideologies, and had claimed that Jews were completely integrated into Italy.
This booklet nonetheless provides a short but valuable summary of the history of Italian Jews dating back to Casear’s time right up to the early days of Fascism—which, as Bardi points out—many leading Italian Jews supported, including, Margherita Sarfatti, Mussolini’s mistress.
After listing the penalties (the expulsion of Jews from the schools, the expropriation of their property, their exclusion from public life) inflicted upon the Jews since the promulgation of Mussolini’s anti-Semitic Decrees, Bardi warned his Italian American audience that it was in their interests to reject fascism in Italy and America. An exact reproduction of the original.< Less
This is the story of a German teenager and how she survived Nazi Germany. She was just a regular child and was thrust into the chaos that occurred in Germany during the 1930s and 1940s and continues... More > into the 1960s< Less
This is the story of a German teenager and how she survived Nazi Germany. She was just a regular child and was thrust into the chaos that occurred in Germany during the 1930s and 1940s and continues... More > into the 1960s< Less