Be amazed!
Read this thesis, an inspired research into a social history of the real Dragons surname. When Robin Pavitt realised his paternal Y-DNA haplogroup linked his family history with the Sarmatians, he felt mysteriously personally compelled to rediscover these warrior people.
Surprisingly discovering that he also is descended from a Harriman family, he became dedicated to resolving a historical mystery surrounding his amazing revelations, commencing with the names of many towns and villages throughout Britain that are prefixed Har and Ma; and then discovering that the Germanic name Harriman is linked with the Sarmatian Dragons’.
Explained is the reasoning for the ‘Germanic’ name of ‘Harriman’, which to the Ancients was the title for the ‘Priestly Warrior Caste’.
Through the study of recorded and acknowledged histories and his in depth and lengthy study into (‘Indo’/ ‘Germanic’)-European languages, the research takes a further
unexpected direction when Robin observes a linguistic picture portrayed in grammatical abbreviations which are composing the Romanised languages.
In part two Robin explains how these abbreviations are a cōdex created by our ancient ancestors for characterising their religious understanding of natural phenomena.
All of these languages carry the universally common understanding of life and Robin explains
how this is expressed through the comparison of parallel abbreviations found in the prefixes,+ combining forms and + suffixes of the Romanised written words, in which Hari and Ma are omnipotent: Old English, English, Old High German, Old Norse, German, Dutch, Sanskrit, Sandhi, Tocharian, Italian, Latin, Church Latin, Welsh, Scottish, Goth, Greek, Gaelic, Uralic, Altaic, Ugric, Hungarian, Finnish, Slovenian, Irish, Nepalese, Danish, Norwegian, Tibetan, Czech, Hindi, Urdu, Panjabi, Turkish, Polish, Georgian, Lithuanian, Slavonic, Ukraine, Russian, Armenian, Azerbhjan, Hittite, Celtic, Frankish, French, Spanish, Swahili, Portuguese, Tamil, Croatian, Indonesian, Japanese, Arabic, Aramaic, Biblical Hebrew, Chinese, Dravidian, Hurrian and Basque.