From: aero.spike@mail.com
Jon Ribbens wrote:
> On 2025-08-26, Brian wrote:
>> Jon Ribbens wrote:
>>> On 2025-08-25, Spike wrote:
>>>> So, being born in Cappadocia of a Cappadocian father, St George would be
>>>> Cappadocian twice over, by blood and birth. This would, of course, trump
>>>> the more tenuous €€€blood and residence€€€ connection.
>>> That's not how any of this works. If you are two things at once, one
>>> doesn't "trump" the other, you remain two things. Why you're twisting
>>> about desperately trying to deny the fact that he would appear to have
>>> been both Cappadocian and Palestinian is beyond me.
>> St George was killed in 303AD, long before there was any suggestion of
>> Palestine as a State and therefore Palestinians. There weren€€€t even
>> Muslims for several centuries.
> What was the name of the region in which he lived and died at the time
> that he lived and died there?
Where St George lived is irrelevant. And which law, of Cappadocia, Judea,
or wherever, bestows citizenship on death?
--
Spike
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