@aporia82 Lol what are you talking about? I was checking youtube and saw someone replied to me...so I checked and replied back. I check Youtube at least 2-3 times a day.
@retardinho hahaha people's and their national prides. you answered in half an our, i wonder if you dare to answer anything else that fast. take care my friend.
@aporia82 The mentioned wikipedia article also says: "There is little reliable data showing how the tamboura entered Central Europe. It already existed during Byzantine Empire, and the Greeks and Slavs used to call "pandouras" (see pandoura) or "tambouras" the ancestor of modern bouzouki."
Which renders the second passage a mere assumption and also in contradiction with the first one and also with the link posted as reference to the passage you posted here as well. Read it.
@retardinho I think you should delete and re-write the wikipedia article about tamburitza : "It was probably brought by the Turks to Bosnia, from where the instrument spread further with migrations of Šokci and Bunjevci above the Sava River to all parts of Croatia, Serbia and further[2].
@aporia82 You never get into these discussions but you were quick to emphasize it was "turkish". Well it is your misconception because the Turks didnt bring that instrument, its origins are in Persia and it was present in Croatia before the Ottoman invaders. Thats a fact.
@aporia82 Actually what I wrote is a historical fact. Tambur is a Persian insturment not Turkish and Tamburica is an instrument that has developed from Tambur and is present in Pannonian area before Ottomans even appeared.
Now if you want to believe in something else that is your prerogative, who am I to tell you otherwise....I thought you would be interested in facts not in tell-tale fanatsy but oh well...
@aporia82 Tamburica is not Turkish nor is the Tambur. Tamburica is a regional instrument of Lower Pannonian area with origins in the Persian Tambur. The instrument was present in the area since early Byzantine period already.
upeaa soittamista!!!!
Marika584 5 months ago
@aporia82 Lol what are you talking about? I was checking youtube and saw someone replied to me...so I checked and replied back. I check Youtube at least 2-3 times a day.
retardinho 7 months ago
@retardinho hahaha people's and their national prides. you answered in half an our, i wonder if you dare to answer anything else that fast. take care my friend.
aporia82 7 months ago
@aporia82 The mentioned wikipedia article also says: "There is little reliable data showing how the tamboura entered Central Europe. It already existed during Byzantine Empire, and the Greeks and Slavs used to call "pandouras" (see pandoura) or "tambouras" the ancestor of modern bouzouki."
Which renders the second passage a mere assumption and also in contradiction with the first one and also with the link posted as reference to the passage you posted here as well. Read it.
retardinho 7 months ago
@retardinho I think you should delete and re-write the wikipedia article about tamburitza : "It was probably brought by the Turks to Bosnia, from where the instrument spread further with migrations of Šokci and Bunjevci above the Sava River to all parts of Croatia, Serbia and further[2].
aporia82 7 months ago
@aporia82 You never get into these discussions but you were quick to emphasize it was "turkish". Well it is your misconception because the Turks didnt bring that instrument, its origins are in Persia and it was present in Croatia before the Ottoman invaders. Thats a fact.
retardinho 7 months ago
@aporia82 Actually what I wrote is a historical fact. Tambur is a Persian insturment not Turkish and Tamburica is an instrument that has developed from Tambur and is present in Pannonian area before Ottomans even appeared.
Now if you want to believe in something else that is your prerogative, who am I to tell you otherwise....I thought you would be interested in facts not in tell-tale fanatsy but oh well...
retardinho 7 months ago
@aporia82 Tamburica is not Turkish nor is the Tambur. Tamburica is a regional instrument of Lower Pannonian area with origins in the Persian Tambur. The instrument was present in the area since early Byzantine period already.
retardinho 7 months ago
@retardinho tamburica is turkish. it"s an ottoman instrument. check for "tambur".
aporia82 7 months ago
@huzalin Tamburica is Slavonian (Slavonia - northeast province of Croatia) not Dalmatian. Dalmatia always used a mandolin.
retardinho 8 months ago