It is surprising to see how scientists have missed the tracks to discover the seat of ancient Romans, or the Ramanaka people of the ancient world by their DNA study. It is most unfortunate to read such research results which may mislead future scholars. Prof Ana Rodrigues of the French National Centre for Scientific Research and Prof Camilla Speller of the University of York suggest that the Romans may have hunted whales on an industrial scale, and this finding has been flashed by BBC News report.
The study suggests these slower-moving whales may have once travelled the Mediterranean Sea as well, where they would have been easily accessible to the fishermen of the Roman Empire.
Four archaeological sites around the Strait of Gibraltar and one on the coast of northwest Spain have been linked to Roman fish-salting and the making of Roman fish sauce.
Roman Empire and settlements of Ramanaka people should be seen through Ptolemy’s maps only. Numerous books and articles have written by scholars crossing across different disciplines. But unfortunately they do not know that birthplace of Rama, the God incarnated of the epic the Ramayana, identifies the ancient Rome; Rama was a Ramanaka his mother Kausalya identifies the seat of Roman Empire at Caesarea.
There are many interesting puranic descriptions that fixes the Roman empire on the west, the end of the world. Scholars are not aware of the fact that ancient Rome was visited by Alexander.
© All rights reserved, 2022, Akhil Kumar Sahoo. Design : Maskin Coder India