scholarly journals Santo Domingo de Silos, redentor de cautivos, y unas gallinas de Berbería

Aldaba ◽  
2019 ◽  
pp. 211
Author(s):  
Miguel C. Vivancos

Santo Domingo de Silos (muerto en 1073) fue invocado como redentor de cautivos cristianos, que estaban en manos de los moros. Algunos de sus milagros suceden en el norte de África. Uno de ellos, reelaborado desde el siglo XV, explica la presencia en Silos de unas gallinas de raza especial. El milagro del moro y el arca fue atribuido también a la Virgen en algunos santuarios marianos.St Dominic of Silos (†1073) was invoked as the rescuer of Christian captives held in Muslim lands. Some of his miracles take place in North Africa. One of which, re-elaborated since the fiteenth century, explains how a special breed of hen came to be kept in Silos. The miracle of the Muslim and the treasure-chest was also attributed to the Virgin in some Marian sanctuary-collections.

2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (14) ◽  
pp. 318-336
Author(s):  
Antonio Arnaiz-Villena ◽  
Fabio Suárez-Trujillo ◽  
Valentín Ruiz-del-Valle ◽  
Adrián López-Nares ◽  
Felipe Jorge Pais-Pais

Rock Iberian-Guanche inscriptions have been found in all Canary Islands including La Palma: they consist of incise (with few exceptions) lineal scripts which have been done by using the Iberian semi-syllabary that was used in Iberia and France during the 1st millennium BC until few centuries AD .This confirms First Canarian Inhabitants navigation among Islands. In this paper we analyze three of these rock inscriptions found in westernmost La Palma Island: hypotheses of transcription and translation show that they are short funerary and religious text, like of those found widespread through easternmost Lanzarote, Fuerteventura and also Tenerife Islands. They frequently name “Aka” (dead), “Ama” (mother godness) and “Bake” (peace), and methodology is mostly based in phonology and semantics similarities between Basque language and prehistoric Iberian-Tartessian semi-syllabary transcriptions. These Iberian-Guanche scripts are widespread in La Palma usually together with spiral and circular typical Atlantic motifs which are similar to these of Megalithic British Isles, Brittany (France) and Western Iberia. Sometimes linear incise Iberian-Guanche inscriptions are above the circular ones (more recent) but they are also found underneath (less recent). The idea that this prehistoric Iberian semi-syllabary was originated in Africa and/or Canary Islands is not discarded. It is discussed in the frame of Saharian people migration to  Mediterranean, Atlantic (i.e.: Canary Islands) and other areas, when hyperarid climate rapidly established. On the other hand, an Atlantic gene and possibly linguistic and cultural pool is shared among people from British Isles, Brittany (France), Iberia (Spain, Portugal), North Africa and Canary Islands. Keywords: La Palma, Iberian-Guanche, Latin, Inscriptions, Iberian, Celts, Sahara, Africa, Garafia, Santo Domingo, Canary Islands, Lybic British, Brittons, Basque, Irish, Lybic Canarian, Palmeses, Benahoaritas, Awaritas, Tricias, Prehistory, Guache, Tartessian.


2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Malbert A. Montilla ◽  
Daile M. Soto ◽  
Estephany Cordero ◽  
Cesar A. Caamano

1918 ◽  
Vol 85 (2208supp) ◽  
pp. 260-262
Author(s):  
Alexander E. Outerbridge
Keyword(s):  

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