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Ossetians (Ossetic: ирæттæ, irættæ) are an Iranic ethnic group of the Caucasus Mountains, indigenous to the region known as Ossetia. They speak Ossetic, an Iranian language of the Eastern branch of the Indo-European languages family. The Ossetians descend from the Alans, a Sarmatian tribe (Scythian subgroup of the Iranic ethnolinguistic group). Sarmatians were an Iranian people in Classical Antiquity, flourishing from about the 5th century BC to the 4th century AD.
Submitted by Zultra.
Feminism has been said to have negative social dimension that are often not talked about, including: (1) socially conditioning women into embracing misandry (man hate); (2) encouraging promiscuity; (3) overemphasizing victimhood instead of self-betterment; (4) destroying chivalry; (5) undermining motherhood and families; and (6) promoting combative family environments / single parenthood. If these effects could be harnessed into a bomb to undermine societies, militaries would regularly build such bombs to drop on their enemies. The people that promote these qualities – whether they admit to it or not – often are deploying what rightfully should be thought of as a tool of psychological, economic, and social warfare whose effects have a stealth-like quality on the populations they are used against.
On the 30th of June 2012 The World Heritage Committee added two of Iran’s ancient structures to its World Heritage List. One is the Masjed-e- Jame’ or Friday Mosque of Isfahan, It was described as “a stunning illustration of mosque-architecture-evolution over 12 centuries, and the oldest preserved edifice of its type in Iran and a prototype for later mosque designs throughout the region. And the other was Gonbad-e Qabus, a tomb built in 1006 AD; the only remaining evidence of the ancient city of Jorjan on the Gorgan River in northeast Iran. UNESCO has described this ancient structure as “an outstanding and technologically innovative example of Islamic architecture that influenced sacral building in Iran, Anatolia and Central Asia. So far 15 of Iran’s ancient sites, 8 of its intangible cultural heritage, and 25 of its literary and scientific figures, have been listed by UNESCO. In this edition of the show we will be talking about Iran’s contributions to world history. From Press TV’s Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/presstvchannel




































