Caesar was Italian

>Caesar was Italian
>Alexander was Greek
>Napoleon was French

>Sumerian were arab
>Assyrians were curds

>>Alexander was Greek
>>Napoleon was French
These are literally true though.

> Hitler was German

>>Caesar was Italian
But he was. He was born within the borders of modern-day Italy, Italian is the closest living language to Latin in terms of vocabulary, central and southern Italy have undergone basically no genetic change for thousands of years (on the other hand northern Italy got a little bit of Northern European in them, while Sicily is quite Greek), and the Romans always did view the Italics as a distinct category compared to other peoples.

>Contemporary history

>Italian is the closest living language to Latin

Nope, that's Sardinian.

This t b h
Modern people trying to appropriate people of the past.... BAKA

>Italian is the closest living language
Did you mean Romanian?

Macedonians were on thin fucking ice when it came to being Greek

...

>IN TERMS OF VOCABULARY

This tbqh famalam

Macedonians, but the Argead dynasty was arguably, and Alexander objectively, Greek.

Napoleon was Italian

>>Alexander was Greek
Alexander was Greek.

>Lionheart was English

>Alexander was an Ancient Greek
Fixed that for you ^:)

>English nobility is English

All of them were black according to the BBC.

>Queen Elizabeth ii is British

Something something competed in the Olympic games and made protectors of delphi

Born Corsica, died French

I'm pretty sure they got kicked out of the Olympics at some point

>Beowulf was Anglo-Saxon

Caesar was Italian.

Napoleon was ethnically Italian. But he fought for France and considered himself French, so he's french.

Alexander was Greek. He is not some stupid slav.

Everybody knows he's a Geat

That is questionable.

WE

She was born in Britain and English is her first language. How is she not British?

I didnt

>Egyptians were Egyptian

honestly saying that is redundant. Like everyone knows the ethnic, linguistic and cultural profile of any given region changes over time.

I think its better to say that "the Italians of 1000 years ago were different from today"

Italians meaning the people in the geographical region of Italy.

It just depends on your personal definition of a nation and the context in which you use it.
does a nation include a distinct cultural, linguistic, and ethnic profile? or is it just any political administration residing over equivalent specific lands?.

>Napoleon was ethnically Italian. But he fought for France and considered himself French, so he's french.
>These sandniggers were born in Algeria but now that they came to France and some of them enlisted in the military they are now french
no