Doug Weller (talk | contribs) →Original research & other issues in the gallery: just noticed Drmies has been editing - racial stuff should be relegated to a minor section unless we can get a section on the use of nose types in racial anthropology |
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:: [[User:Dougweller|Dougweller]] - Haddon recognized the Armenoid race? did he? Ohh really? You see, all of the 19th century anthropologists didn't, that's why they confused nordics with the actual Dinarics.~Give me the example of some anthropologist '''since 1950s''' (since the time Czekanowski and a few others who continied his research recognized and proved the existance of Armenoid race as an important race of Europe), who said that Nordics have hook-noses, and only then I will agree than not all anthropologists claimed so. I'm waiting impatiently. [[User:Yatzhek|Yatzhek]] ([[User talk:Yatzhek|talk]]) 15:19, 5 June 2014 (UTC) |
:: [[User:Dougweller|Dougweller]] - Haddon recognized the Armenoid race? did he? Ohh really? You see, all of the 19th century anthropologists didn't, that's why they confused nordics with the actual Dinarics.~Give me the example of some anthropologist '''since 1950s''' (since the time Czekanowski and a few others who continied his research recognized and proved the existance of Armenoid race as an important race of Europe), who said that Nordics have hook-noses, and only then I will agree than not all anthropologists claimed so. I'm waiting impatiently. [[User:Yatzhek|Yatzhek]] ([[User talk:Yatzhek|talk]]) 15:19, 5 June 2014 (UTC) |
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{{ec}}Sorry Drmies, just noticed that you've been editing this article. Great - it's always been a sad little thing. Yatzhek, I don't seem to have said anything about Armenoids - if you were being sarcasting maybe it would help if you just wrote exactly what you are trying to get across. Although frankly this hold 'dinaric', 'armenoid', 'teutonic' thing has been one of the problems with the article and should be relegated to a minor section of its own - slightly larger if we can get a decent writeup of the uses of nose types in racial anthropology. [[User:Dougweller|Dougweller]] ([[User talk:Dougweller|talk]]) 15:28, 5 June 2014 (UTC) |
Revision as of 15:28, 5 June 2014
Aquiline
Aquiline nose redirects here, but I always heard "aquiline" features to mean very fine, sharp, but not potruding (i.e. not hooknose, roman nose), like "aquiline cheekbones" to be high cheekbones. Though I suppose the etymology of beaklike takes over. Nagelfar 04:09, 8 February 2007 (UTC)
- This page needs to be edited down to a handful of sentences and then merged with Nose, if not altogether deleted, due to the fact that it is merely a slang term with denotions of eugenics and discredited pseudosciences such as phrenology. The author(s) included a long paragraph by a discredited 19th century scientist named Samual George Morton, of which only five words ("the nose large and aquiline") pertain to the article itself. As Wikipedia's own article on Morton says, and as most medical/science students are taught,
Samuel George Morton is often thought of as the originator of "American School" ethnography, a school of thought in antebellum American science that claimed the difference between humans was one of species rather than variety and is generally seen as the origin of scientific racism.
- The paragraphs in this article are drawn out to unnecessary lengths so as to provide the appearance of substance; particularly the Buddhism one, which uses 53 words to say that statues of Buddha should have long noses. No reference is given.
- So-called hooknose snakes have upturned "noses," not downturned "noses" as raptors do, thus meaning they don't even have hooknoses as the author of this article describes, thus making their inclusion truly puzzling. I use quotation marks because neither snakes nor birds even have noses in the sense of the ones humans/primates have. Snakes "smell" by using their tongues and the Vomeronasal organ inside their mouths; a snake's "nostril" holes are used only for breathing. Some venomous types use their additional larger "nostrils" (actually glands called pits) to sense heat, not odors.
- The fact that such noteworthy intellectuals as Ashlee Simpson and Paris Hilton have recently had rhinoplasties does not even mean that they had, or have, so-called "hooknoses." Nor does the fact that a fictitious half-man/half-ungulate creature living under a bridge in Kentucky supposedly has one, though Wiki's article on it makes no mention of a hooknose, nor has it of course ever been photographed. It bears pointing out that factors allowing the genetic merging of ungulate and human DNA apparently intrigue the pseudoscience-oriented author(s) of this hooknose article.
- Overall, no tangible factors make the term "hooknose" worthy of its own entry in a fact-based 21st century encyclopedia, other than as a disambiguation page redirecting to an entry such as Pseudoscience. This is a textbook example of an unneccessary article manufactured out of several disparate and unrelated sources by using a smoke and mirrors technique. Why not just merge it into Nose and let real scientists/doctors hash it out, rather than secluding it in its own peripheral entry based on pop culture/hearsay/non-science? Hooknoses are an "I know it when I see it" type of thing, with no set way of being measured. If it were quantifiable by a certain mathematical formula, then it would possibly qualify for inclusion here. (For example, if a nose is downturned by an angle of precicely x degrees or more in relation to its main slope.) But no such formula exists. It is a purely arbitrary, colloquial term, with a different definition to everyone. For example, everyone has a different definition of "fat," but there is a medical definition of obesity, calculated using a Body mass index formula. There is no such formula for noses. Additionally, the link given to www.newadvent.org/cathen/12620b.htm does not count as a reliable source, as it is a religious, non-scientific organization making dubious and unreferenced claims. For the record, I am white, agnostic, and have a small to medium nose with no "hook." I was attacked and called a vandal by user Sandstein after flagging this page for deletion, and thus I felt it necessary to respond.
Chris77xyz 06:05, 9 April 2007 (UTC)
--Polylerus 21:53, 16 April 2007 (UTC) Hello, I do agree with these comments and appreciate them. My intent in creating this article was to simply include information about past and popular conceptions of what a hooknose is -including the theories of past anthropologists. I was simply citing past sources (which doesn't mean that I agree with them necessarily). No, the CE is not a scientific source, but that just confirms that popular/religious conceptions of what a hooknose is -or which ethnic groups possess them- does not always correspond with the scientific standpoint.
And no, I am not "pseudoscience-oriented," nor do I agree with the pseudoscience behind the claims that certain ethnic groups possess certain ethnic traits.
BTW, the article on that fictional creature did state at one point that it had a hooknose. I assume that it has been modified since that time.
We should probably do a merge.
"Roman Nose" and prejudice
It would be great for this article to include some mention of the cultural effects and/or influences of the aquiline nose. For example, how had the "Roman nose" come out in art/literature, etc, and how has the Roman nose been used as a tool of prejudice in culture? I was reminded of this topic by a brief discussion of roman noses on "The View". —Preceding unsigned comment added by 98.163.212.225 (talk) 15:16, 4 August 2008 (UTC)
- "Roman Nose" implies that the nose is better. There has never been negative prejudice surrounding the aquiline nose. The aquiline nose has been associated with strong will, strong mind, and strong spirit--like the bald eagle and President Washington. The aquiline nose is an aristocratic nose. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 157.252.146.251 (talk) 15:43, 28 January 2010 (UTC)
Restored Old Version.
I restored the old version because the redirect messed up several articles. This article is a stub of a main article.
--Root Beers 11:02, 19 May 2007 (UTC)
List
Do we really need to list all of these people? Why not give a few examples, and leave it at that? A comprehensive list would be exhausting! 71.51.113.204 (talk) 19:52, 22 December 2007 (UTC)
- The article is small. What reason is your complaint founded upon? If you are exhausted by text, then stop frequenting Wikipedia, please.
Roman hook nose
You're going to put Roman Hook Nose and not Jewish hook nose. Suppression of information. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 70.23.235.251 (talk) 21:57, 9 August 2008 (UTC)
I removed the picture of the girl. She is not German, probably iranian or something else.Zylan (talk) 10:36, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
ANSWER : Can you put back the german girl ? If not can anyone give me the link where you found it ? It was a nice picture. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 75.27.239.60 (talk) 03:40, 4 October 2009 (UTC)
Thank you for the one who found the picture and sent it to me ! Its a great example of a hooknose, but not very much of a roman nose. Also definitely not a German ! —Preceding unsigned comment added by Nico333 (talk • contribs) 04:09, 4 October 2009 (UTC)
German Jews do not have aquiline noses. German Jews have distinctly different noses. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 157.252.146.251 (talk) 15:46, 28 January 2010 (UTC)
Doesn't make sense
"Of Native Americans, he wrote that they were "marked by a brown complexion; long, black, lank hair; and deficient beard. The eyes are black and deep set, the brow low, the cheekbones high, the nose large and aquiline, the mouth large, and the lips tumid and compressed". Other ethnic groups said to have aquiline noses were the Shagia (Africa), the Abipones (South America), and the Kabbabish (Africa)."
"Other ethnic groups" doesn't make sense - First, it implies that Native Americans are in themselves a single ethnic group, and second, it implies that the Abipones aren't Native Americans. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 174.59.218.34 (talk) 02:12, 12 May 2010 (UTC)
Disturbing Images
I am finding, of late, wikipedia has a habit of unnecessarily disturbing images in its articles. Why do I need to see a dead body just to understand a nose, people? There's a second picture that illustrates it properly, without the Nightmare Fuel. I would fix it myself but 1) I don't know how and 2) I don't want to keep looking at it. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 59.167.212.69 (talk) 03:20, 22 November 2012 (UTC)
- Hello. you are totally wrong with your statement. The authentic mummy of the pharaoh Ramesses II is a GREAT example of an aquiline "Roman" nose, which is sometimes referred to as a Semitic nose (when the tip is slightly arched or when the nose is really convex). Why is the mummy a great example? Because it proves the theory that the Ancient Egyptians had hook-noses just like Jews, and this shows us that the ancient Egyptians were not Black Africans but Semitic Africans, only with some Black-African features. The mummy is an scientific material for Egyptology. If you are a little child and do not want to look at it, than just don't. 78.8.180.41 (talk) 17:05, 17 May 2014 (UTC)
- That's almost a worse reason for its inclusion then the suggested reason for removing it. We don't add images to articles to prove a point.Dougweller (talk) 17:55, 17 May 2014 (UTC)
Proposed page move to Roman nose
The page Roman nose redirects here, but AFAIK the term "Aquiline nose" is only for humans. I know that the term "Roman nosed" is commonly used in animal conformation to describe an animal with a convex muzzle. The term is "roman nose", not "aquiline nose" for horses, goats, dogs and other animals. —Vandraedha (talk) 11:55, 14 April 2013 (UTC)
Extreme gender imbalance in gallery
18 pictures in the gallery, and all are of males. There isn't one available depiction of a female with an aquiline nose? A reader could go away thinking that they only feature on males, which is of course nonsense. —Paladisious 23 November 2013
The "Occurrences" section - improved.
The aquiline hook nose is present among a variety of nations. I agree with that statement. However, it must be stressed, that this type of nose is very popular among Middle Easterners and people with Semitic heritage. Moreover it is also seen among Native Americans, especially the Indigeneous peoples of North America. People like: pharaoh Ramesses II (ancient Egyptian), Titus Flavius Josephus (Jewish-born), Serge Gainsbourg (Jewish-born), Jean Reno (Spanish born in Morocco), Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (Iranian) - all have some portion of Semitic blood. However, some prominent British or German people who are listed in the article's gallery, and who have this kind of nose, beyond all doubt are mixed with the mediterranean race, which to some extent also appears on the British Isles, and in Central Europe, nonetheless, such noses in that area are still quite rare. Hooked-noses are also rather rare among Central and Eastern European Slavs but they still appear among that ethnic group, moreover, talking about Slavs, the convex hook noses are more likely to be observed among Slavic people from the Balkans, and this is caused by the mediterranean, and primarily, the armenoid genetic admixture, which is probably because of the longtime relations of all Slavs with Armenians, Gypsies, Tatars, and Jews.
Therefore, the "Occurrences" section of the article should look moreless like this:
The aquiline nose is met among people from nearly every nation in the world, nevertheless it is typical for ethnic groups that predominantly originate from Southern Europe, the Western and Southern Asia, North Africa, and the Middle East. In the racial classification according to biological anthropology this type of nose most frequently appears among the oriental race and the armenoid race, however it is also often seen in the mediterranean race, therefore it is called the "Roman nose" found among Italians, the French, and the Spanish people. This aquiline hook-nose was also a distinctive feature of some Native American tribes, members of which often took their names after their own characteristic physical attributes (i.e. The Roman Nose). Such shape of the nose is occasionally seen among Black people, especially those originating from East Africa, probably due to some of the inhabitants having considerable admixtures of Semitic blood.[1]
Thank you for all the contributions and improvements. 78.8.75.87 (talk) 11:48, 14 May 2014 (UTC)
- Yes indeed, I agree, as I made the main edit. The source of these information is a biological anthropology book, one of the most complete and authentic anthropological publications ever written. It's Jan Czekanowski's book "Człowiek w Czasie i Przestrzeni" (English: "A human in time and space"). It's an old, pre-war book written in 1934. I actually have some re-edition, probably from the 1950s or the early 1960s. Czekanowski puts the whole existing data in the world in one piece, analyses it very deeply and compares it to his own research and the research of his mate-anthropologists. What's interesting, this book, despite being old, contains many pictures like photos of people (examples of various racial types and ethnicities), maps of races, diagrams etc. Yatzhek (talk) 21:52, 14 May 2014 (UTC)
- Aquiline noses are not common in the Horn. The dominant features in the region are instead straight noses. These features also don't owe their presence in the region to admixture with Semitic peoples (who in any event, at least according to the wiki-text here, appear to be mainly aquiline-featured) or other populations since there are ancient human fossil specimens in the area that already uniformly possess this trait. This may, however, be the situation with some Afro-Arab Swahili Bantus on the Swahili Coast to the south. At any rate, I haven't removed Czekanowski altogether. But just be aware that per WP:NONENG, English language sources are preferred as they are more readily verifiable for the average English-speaking reader; please also see WP:REDFLAG on exceptional statements. Middayexpress (talk) 20:47, 15 May 2014 (UTC)
- Greetings. Well, I'm only writing the things which are precisely based on the source. I know that it can be a problem that my source is not in English language, however, if I had some time I could make a few photos of some certain pages of the book with those specific information, and translate them. I think Czekanowski was one of the greatest anthropologists and he was really open on other views and research of other anthropologists from around the world.
- Czekanowski claims that, apart from the armenoid type, a common "racial type" of Ashkenazi and Sephardi Jews is the oriental type. The aquiline nose is a characteristic feature of both of these racial types, plus the mediterranean type. He states, that the oriental race is not only present among Jews, Arabs and other Semitic peoples, but also among some Southern Europeans (mainly Spaniards and Sicilian Italians), South Asians (indians) and Black Africans from East Africa (Somali people, Sudanese people, Eritreans, Ethiopians). This is caused by the migrations of ethnic groups which were primarly Semitic.
- That's what's in the book. But I'm thankful for your suggestions. Biological anthropology is one of my main interests, so I will try to find some English-language sources that prove the presence of aquiline noses or hook-noses among Black people of East-African origin. Yatzhek (talk) 18:55, 16 May 2014 (UTC)
- There were actually a number of problems. First, it is highly doubtful that Czekanowski indicated what was claimed in the wiki-text/above by the Polish ip. This is because Czekanowski, like most of his contemporaries, regarded the populations of the Horn region as Hamitic and thus related to North African groups (not Semitic, partial or otherwise). I think perhaps you are thinking of the Tutsi-Hima population of the African Great Lakes region to the south, whom Czekanowski actually suggested was formed through intermarriage between a Hamitic migrant ruling class from Abyssinia and local Bantu women [1]:
- "It is a well-established fact that the Bahima-Batutsi states of the Lake Region were founded by an invading group of people associated with the North African Hamites, although the specific region of their original home is difficult to determine. Czekanowski's conclusion, according to which they came from Abyssinia about the end of the first millennium has been universally accepted, although his analysis is not based on recorded history but on genealogical and physical anthropological data. This ruling class of Hamites not only conquered and culturally influenced the peoples of the Lake Region, but this influence has been felt even farther to the south. According to definite traditions the ruling class of the Wafipa on the south-eastern shore of Lake Tanganyika belong to this Bahima dynasty. Spannaus has also shown that the Wahehe and Wabena of the Northern Nyasa area are also related to the Hamites of the Lake Victoria states ; an assumption supported by cultural as well as physical anthropological evidence."
- More importantly, the human fossil record in the Horn region shows ancient human specimens with straight nasal profiles quite unlike the aquiline facial features that are so common in Arabia and environs, including those found amongst equally swarthy, Semitic-speaking tribes like the Mahra. So not only are narrow and straight (not aquiline) features common today in the Horn, they actually have an ancient local presence that long predates the spread of the Abrahamic faiths. Middayexpress (talk) 16:43, 17 May 2014 (UTC)
- Thanks for your input. However, I have some doubts. I can not agree that the vast majority of people from North Africa and the Horn of Africa have perfectly straight noses. If you don't believe the sources, just look around you. If you live in the USA or the UK, you can probably meet some North and East Africans on the street. From my personal experience - as I do have many friends from Algeria, Morocco, Egypt, Sudan and Ethiopia - 70% of them have typical aquiline noses. Only my Kenyan friends nearly all have straight noses. The North African Arabs and people from East Africa are MOSTLY hook-nosed because they are all mixed with the oriental type. Yatzhek (talk) 17:19, 17 May 2014 (UTC)
- Interesting anecdotes. A quick correction, though: Kenya is not in the Horn; it is in the Great Lakes region to the south. Its Bantu/Nilotic majority also on average have broad features, not straight or aquiline features. This was not the situation there in the past, when other peoples used to largely inhabit that region. Anyway, the Afro-Asiatic groups in North Africa and the Horn are a) not heavily mixed with Arabs (though they do have older ties with them), b) indeed mainly have straight nasal profiles (though aquiline features are also present), and c) have had those features since time immemorial per the actual skeletal record (e.g. [2], [3], [4], [5]). Middayexpress (talk) 19:21, 17 May 2014 (UTC)
I will tell you sth, I don't know NOT EVEN A ONE person from Somalia with a straight nose. How could that be? As far as I see, you claim that the aquiline nose is not common among North Africans. It's strange, while North Africans share the same common ancestry and similar genes to the Middle Easterners. The same goes to people from the Horn of Africa who share similar genetic types to oriental people from Yemen. Let's leave the Horn, and stick to North Africa for a minute, as it seems you have deleted it too, while, as I remember, you did not delete it earlier. Why? And in one of the links you gave here it says that the modern Egyptians (North Africans) have aquiline noses. You still claim otherwise. So, how could North Africans have mostly straight noses, if: (a) most of the North African Arabs that I know have arched or hook-noses? (b) the Mediterranean race which characteristic feature is a narrow and aquiline nose, is in fact known to be prevalent in North Africa, and EVEN in the Horn of Africa?? (c) the Egyptian pharaoh Ramesses II without a doubt had a classic Middle Eastern type of an aquiline nose which is proved by the original, well-preserved mummificated body? I'd say - IF the aquiline nose is popular among the Middle Easterners and South Europeans (which is a fact), THEN how come North Africans are different, when they share some similar racial types (oriental + mediterranean)? Yatzhek (talk) 21:11, 17 May 2014 (UTC)
- I actually didn't notice the North Africa link until today. But anyway, Coon indicates that Copts and Fellahin vary between two nasal poles; one that is straight or concave, and the other aquiline. I concede above that such aquiline features are present there (as is indeed evident in Ramesses II), just not dominant. In the other links, this is made clearer; especially the first one ("the profile is usually straight, with a strong minority of concave and concavo-convex forms"). At any rate, I do understand your point; the distribution of aquiline vs. straight profiles just needed to be made clearer. Middayexpress (talk) 21:54, 17 May 2014 (UTC)
Original research & other issues in the gallery
I don't see any sources for these? Do I gather as editors we just decide 'that's obviously a Roman nose'?
Is there a reason for having 4 Egyptian mummies?
And I'm dubious about including living people. Again, do we just choose our favorites? People we don't like and want to ridicule? Dougweller (talk) 13:38, 20 May 2014 (UTC)
- What do you mean by "People we don't like and want to ridicule"? As I see, you think that Wikipedia is a place where you can arrange your private war. The gallery MUST show us the whole spectrum of aquiline noses, not only the ancient people, but also living people, because we must show the people the evidence that aquiline noses exist among the nations that those people respesent. The Irish (mediterranean type), German (mediterranean type), Italian (mediterranean type), Spanish (mediterranean and oriental types), Native American (American indigenous type), French Jew / Iraqi Jew / Roman-Jew (armedoid, oriental, mediterranean), Polish (armenoid), Iranian (armenoid and oriental) etc etc - they all share the aquiline nose and I don't see nothing bad in showing a wide range of people, not only some ancient Greeks and Roman Emperors as you wish it to be.
- And what do you mean by that you don't see no sources? You need sources to the images in the gallery?
- And yes, there is a reason for 4 Egyptian mummies, as this proves that the aquiline nose was very common among the Ancient Egyptians (as all North Africans), in this case we have the Egyptian pharaohs. This clearly proves that the aquiline nose is definitely not only a European feature. 78.8.126.95 (talk) 20:29, 21 May 2014 (UTC)
- No, I think Wikipedia is not a place for us to have our own private wars, that's why we have basic policies such as WP:VERIFY. You have no knowledge of what I want it to be - or rather you've missed my point, I want sources. Trying to prove a point about Ancient Egyptians through images is exactly what I think is against our policy. Finding sources that meet our criteria is what is rquired. I will be removing images shortly if no one can source them. See WP:BURDEN. Of course, with only 2 edits,including this one, you might not have a clue as to how we work. Yes, I need sources for the images stating that they have aquiline noses - preferably in the text first. Dougweller (talk) 21:08, 21 May 2014 (UTC)
Well, you suggested that the gallery is comprised of people that we want to make fun of. This is insane. How come someone want to ridicule a person just by showing him/her as an example of an aquiline nose? Btw - a few topics above this one, someone suggested that there was a great gender imbalance and that only men are shown as those who have aquiline noses. This is what is not changed and women are also included (and it's not easy to find a well-known woman with an aquiline nose, but for instance a Iraqi-Jewish filmmaker Zana Briski, or a Spanish actress Rossy de Palma are known for their nose shape, and they're proud of it). You might be not aware of it, but in the past, in ancient Rome, Greece, Spain, and North Africa the factor of male attractiveness was an aquiline nose, while a woman shall have a short straight nose. That's why you won't find a statue or a painting of a woman with an aquiline nose, well, maybe a Romani/Gypsy woman, not a European. So, there is a point why living people are present in the gallery - females also have hook noses, and this should be balanced in the gallery section. PS - so I guess you don't believe in what you see? You see the ancient Egyptian pharaohs: Ramesses II, Seti I, Seti II and Merneptah - all with the realest prominent aquiline noses, and you don't believe in what your eyes see, so that you need some sources? But then again, you might not believe in what your eyes have just read. 78.8.226.94 (talk) 10:09, 22 May 2014 (UTC)
- I believe this article should follow our policies at WP:NOR and WP:VERIFY - yes, that means we should have sources, not just an editor's statement "I see it!". And again, it's clear that the 4 mummy images are in the article to make a point. Dougweller (talk) 13:37, 22 May 2014 (UTC)
It seems like we have some vandalism in the article. The IP number 197.200.61.1 made many destructive changes in the article including the "Occurences" section and the gallery. The user deleted the specific data, as the user tries to prove a point. The user claims that the aquiline nose was met among the Teutonic race, and gives a source established by William Z. Ripley, an economist, whose hobby was anthropology. This is pathetic, as according to most professional anthropologists Ripley confused his "Teutonic" (Nordic) race with the Dinaric race, which is a mix of Nordic and Armenoid. Armenoids have prominent aquiline noses, and therefore, the Dinaric race has the aquiline nose too. Ripley didn't know about the existance of the Armenoid race. His research as a non-anthropologist made a lot of confusion in the anthropological world, a lot of disgrace, he was criticised by tons of anthropologists, including Czekanowski, who was one of the world's first anthropologists, who recognized the Armenoid race and other subraces of Europe. The "Gallery" section was also changed by that secret IP 197.200.61.1. I see that actually ALL of the people who have aquiline noses were DELETED by this IP user, and tons of Nordic people who do not have aquiline noses at all were introduced. This user obviously tries to prove a point, that only the Nordic race has aquiline noses, which is a pathetic and filthy lie, while the Nordic race is known for its straight and smooth nose type. Every professional anthropologist will say that. Yatzhek (talk) 09:22, 5 June 2014 (UTC)
- The Nordic race (whatever that is) is known for lots of things, but their straight noses? That's news to me. I think, and Dougweller might have something to say about this too, that the racial bit is thoroughly overplayed here: a decent article on this nose type should discuss the cultural meaning of such a nose more than anything else. We're not in the nineteenth century anymore, and I challenge readers here to read Oroonoko and figure out why Behn chose to give her main character a Roman nose. Hint: it has to do with race, but not in the way you might think. Drmies (talk) 14:14, 5 June 2014 (UTC)
- The Nordic race is known for their very narrow and straight noses. All of the people who claim that Nordics/Teutonics have hook-noses confuse them with Dinarics. Every anthropologist knows, that Teutonics are tall, slender, blonde, and have perfectly straight noses, occasionally snub. Hook noses are characteristic to Armenoids at first place, secondly to Orientals, then, to a slightly smaller extent to Mediterraneans, and finally - the Native Americans, mostly the indigenous peoples of North America. Yatzhek (talk) 14:57, 5 June 2014 (UTC)
(edit conflict):Google books and Google scholar have a lot of sources discussing aquiline or Roman noses, including names of those that had them. An interesting source for noses and racism in relation to Cleopatra is here:[6] At [7] I find " Physiognomic thinking about aquiline noses is already in place long before Elizabeth inherits the English throne, and the positive connotations are rooted in the representations of the emperors of antiquity. The variants of this shape are frequently compared to birds’ beaks: in particular, to those of the eagle, raven, and hawk, with the physiognomic meanings linked to the cultural notions about each bird. Pseudo-Aristotle’s treatise, for example, connects the raven-like nose (“nose [that is] somewhat hooked and rises straight from the forehead”) to shamelessness,"whereas a person whose nose is reminiscent of an eagle’s beak (“aquiline nose with a marked separation from the forehead”) is said to be magnanimous.,Johannes Indagine makes extensive remarks about the controversy as to the...(next page not on Google books)". We can sources all the images and should source them. I wish I had time to turn this into a proper article. User:Drmies, that's more your thing, isn't it? As for Teutonics, User:Yatzhek, Alfred Cort Haddon disagrees with you: "The fairest of all peoples are:— Nordics or “ Teutonic Race ": Yellow, very light brown, or reddish hair, and blue or grey eyes; reddish-white complexion; tall, with stature of l-73m. (5ft. 8in.); mesaticephalic (index76-79 in the living); long face; narrow aquiline nose. Their original home was North Europe."[8] but this is an argument I'm not convinced we should get into. Dougweller (talk) 15:08, 5 June 2014 (UTC)
- Dougweller - Haddon recognized the Armenoid race? did he? Ohh really? You see, all of the 19th century anthropologists didn't, that's why they confused nordics with the actual Dinarics.~Give me the example of some anthropologist since 1950s (since the time Czekanowski and a few others who continied his research recognized and proved the existance of Armenoid race as an important race of Europe), who said that Nordics have hook-noses, and only then I will agree than not all anthropologists claimed so. I'm waiting impatiently. Yatzhek (talk) 15:19, 5 June 2014 (UTC)
(edit conflict)Sorry Drmies, just noticed that you've been editing this article. Great - it's always been a sad little thing. Yatzhek, I don't seem to have said anything about Armenoids - if you were being sarcasting maybe it would help if you just wrote exactly what you are trying to get across. Although frankly this hold 'dinaric', 'armenoid', 'teutonic' thing has been one of the problems with the article and should be relegated to a minor section of its own - slightly larger if we can get a decent writeup of the uses of nose types in racial anthropology. Dougweller (talk) 15:28, 5 June 2014 (UTC)
- ^ Czekanowski, Jan (1934). Człowiek w Czasie i Przestrzeni (eng. A Human in Time and Space) - The lexicon of biological anthropology. Kraków, Poland: Trzaska, Ewert i Michalski - Bibljoteka Wiedzy.