No, Persian is an Indo-Iranian language, historical evidences just show that an Indo-Iranian language existed in Mitanni in the north of Syria and Iraq in the 2nd millennium BC.
I think the main issue is the contacts between Indo-European and Uralic language which could happen in the north of Caucasus, this clip talks about it: In Persian ab from proto-Indo-European *h₂ep- means "water" which is the same as the Sumerian word for water, but in Hittite there is watar...
It says the majority of CLV ancestry is from West Asian sources from the Mesopotamia-Caucasus (or Çayönü-Masis Blur-Aknashen) cline. In fact there is almost no difference between Heggarty et. al and this study, both of them say that the earliest Indo-European people were those who lived in the...
One of the oldest Hittite monuments: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Hittite_Priest-King_or_Deity.jpg
"A large basalt sculpture depicting a Hittite god or priest-king wearing a horned conical crown, false beard, and long robe. He holds a bowl in his right hand and once held something in...
It can be easily proved that Hittite culture originated in Iran, for example the earliest double-headed eagle which was a major Hittite symbol has been found in Iran: https://www.jaco-sj.com/jufile?ar_sfile=2375479
It is what the greatest Indo-European linguists in the world say, as you read here: https://www.academia.edu/105839899/Informal_review_of_Heggarty_et_al_2023_Indo_European_phylogeny_ "IE-CoR was prepared by an international team comprised of more than 80 linguists – experts in various IE groups...
It says "CLV ancestry first appears in the Chalcolithic population at Areni-1 in Armenia.", Areni is in the south of Armenia, it has nothing to do with Steppe.
Hypothesis A (East & west) is actually the same old Kurgan hypothesis by ignoring ancient DNA findings. A homeland in the south of Caucasus easily solves the problem.
In this study David Anthony and other followers of Kurgan hypothesis have actually confirmed that an early Indo-European language existed in the South of Caucasus and northwest of Iran from at least the 5th millennium BC. According to Heggarty et. al, not only Anatolian but also Indo-Iranian...
The only difference between this study and "The genetic history of the Southern Arc" is that it says the homeland of Indo-Anatolians was a little further north in the Caucasus.
A great news from India: https://scroll.in/latest/1066223/ncert-revises-class-12-history-textbook-to-cast-doubts-about-aryan-migration-theory
NCERT revises Class 12 history textbook to cast doubts about Aryan migration theory
The National Council for Education Research and Training has revised a...
One of the earliest known Celtic people in Britain was Cassi: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cassi, their leader was Cassivellaunus: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cassivellaunus
The Common Brittonic personal name Cassiuellaunos stems from the word uellaunos ('chief, commandant').[1] The meaning...
https://sg.news.yahoo.com/iranian-glass-beads-found-uks-062248007.html
The glass used to create beads discovered at a prehistoric settlement dubbed "Britain's Pompeii" was probably made in Iran, analysis has revealed.
The finds were among a wealth of well-preserved items unearthed at a...
Almost all recent studies have focused on CHG/Iranian ancestry as the main source of Indo-Europeans, haplogroup J2 relates to this ancestry, so we should consider it when we talk about the migrations of Indo-Europeans, as you read here: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.abm4247...
This study says "In the Picenes, two main Y haplogroups are observed, namely R1-M269/L23 (58% of the total) and J2-M172/M12 (25% of the total)", R1-M269/L23 clearly relates to non-IE Etruscans, what do you think about J2-M172/M12? It is really meaningless to say the main haplogroup of both IE...
Two samples from Novilara which are dated from about 650 BC are J2, look at it: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Picene_language
"The archaeological date is that of the site as a whole, somewhere in the window 800–650 BCE.[8] The style of the alphabet suggests the end of the 7th and the...
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