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The history of animal domestication is extremely interesting tbh and you can kind of look to them as bookmarks to human evolution as well.
Almost has to be because without it the wheel and the chariot, which is two of the most important innovations in human history, would have taken much longer to develop.I've heard it argued very convincingly that domesticating the horse was the most important domestication in our history.
I mean that one will never be solved, for obvious reasons... but I'm inclined to believe that the bones they found about 150 years later or so are the remains of the two, until anything else substantial would be found and that Richard had his hands in the whole story. It just fits too perfectly with him getting the throne that way.We can even include historical characters who just go missing from the records, or disappear entirely, like the Princes in the Tower.
The story of Bardiya in Achaemenid Persian history is fascinating.
The "canon" for the longest time is that someone claiming to be the son of Cyrus and brother of Cambysses (first kings of the empire) was toppled by the next king, Darius. This "fake" Bardiya has a whole backstory where he's actually a guy named Gaumata, which was so crucially written on the side of a mountain in multiple languages by Darius himself.
The problem here is....Darius clearly made this up to kill the real Bardiya without having to worry about people being upset about him staying a coup. But it was accepted as fact for so long that most historians are still being stubborn about it.
So to relate it back to your question, let's pretend they're right and Darius was telling the truth....then wtf happened to actual Bardiya and why wasn't anyone concerned about this when a fake was revealed lol
Most modern historians do not consider Darius' version of events convincing, and assume that the person who ruled for a few months was the real son of Cyrus, and that the story of his impersonation by a magus was an invention of Darius to justify his seizure of the throne.
The key argument against a fabrication is that there is no evidence for it, and lacking further discoveries that view "must remain hypothetical". However, the idea that Gaumata was a fabrication is nonetheless appealing because "it was vital for a man like Darius, who had no particular rights to the throne, to invent a character (Gaumata) condemned for his acts against gods and men." There are some implausibilities in the official story, e.g. the impostor resembled the real Bardiya so closely that most of his wives did not spot the difference, except for queen Phaidyme. Darius often accused rebels and opponents of being impostors (such as Nebuchadnezzar III) and it could be straining credibility to say that they all were.