The Iranian History Chronicle

 



11/18/2007

Rewriting the Iranian History

In the name of love,

This is the date this project actually started! I had to venture into VBA in order to get this task done. The scope of this work is not yet clear. Updates will follow. But intention is to get the computer to answer several questions related to inconsistencies in our history.

Iranian people and their culture, history and religion have been under constant pressure by foreign enemies who are after exploting the nation and plundering its wealth, alongside extremists, despot rulers, deeply rooted mafia from within. In this context additions, deletions and corrections will be made as much as possible while creating a system that will be used for cross checking world history.
 

12/07/2007: A milestone! 100th record added.

12/25/2007: Routine creating The Chronicle (this page) created.

Record 165, we still have more story than history. If there's not an exact date then it is a tale more than a fact.

12/26/2007: The history of sarcasm and lies

Most of our history is based on Greek textbooks of the time such as that Ctesias of Cnidus, one of the most unreliable writers from Antiquity calling names. For instance king Dariush II was titled Nothus which means bas-tard. Some others were given names with -anus suffix such as Codomanus and Sogdianus .

Now who in the world would dare call the king of the kings such names? Except for those like Taliban who destroyed one in the world statues of Buddha in Bamyan valley in 2001. Third Christian millennium, living in times when people want t destroy evidences of historical events!.

1/15/2008: Rec:212 Cross-Checking wars

Scoticism, a British traditional lifestyle . There are certainly records, tablets, documents in British and Russian collections and archives that can shed light to a great part of our history, but being mean is contagious and today's Iranians do not really contribute to their past, present and future either. "A nation without a past does not have a future"

2/17/2008: Online Sources for further reading