Geographically, Hyperborea was located north of the Black Sea, at the foothills of the Ural Mountains. Borea is a Turkish word meaning "cold north wind." Bora is used today as a male name among Turks.
Bora: A harsh and temporary wind.
Boruk: Boran, bara: A severe snowstorm.
Boyanak: Rain falling in large drops.
Boran: Torrential weather with wind, lightning, and thunder.
Boranglamak: To snow.
Buran: A snowstorm.
Boranla: To snow.
Kara boroon: A violent hurricane without snow.
All of these words are found in Turkish (TR, AZ, Krgyz, Kazakh, Uzbek), and even in Mongolian, they appear as "boruğan, buragan."
Hyper is also of Turkish origin and comes from "ubir, upir, obur," meaning "to bite, nibble, suck, drink, insatiable." Thus, "Hyperborea" means "biting cold wind," meaning "so cold that it bites."
Even the word "vampire" is derived from this "upir." The word "vampire" first entered Western literature in H.A. Ossenfelder's poem "Der Vampir" written in 1748. According to Webster's Dictionary, the word's entry into English as "vampire" dates back to 1732. The Oxford Dictionary states that the ultimate origin of the word, which passed from Hungarian to French and from French to English in the mid-18th century, may be the Turkish "uber."
For more details Vampir / Upir
Hatice Şirin, "Vampir," Turkish Language Studies Yearbook Belleten 2010/2, Ankara: TDK Publications, pp. 119-130
Researchers' failure is not to include Turkish history and language in their research also leads to incomplete information being conveyed within the scientific community. This shame belongs to the entire academic community. Turkish history and language possess a rich heritage, and Turkic peoples such as the Scythians, Huns, Avars, Khazars, Pechenegs, Kipchaks, Cumans, Ogurs, Bolgars, and Chuvash are found throughout Eurasia. Simply looking at place names, proper names, and archaeological data is sufficient. Even kurgans are of Turkic, not Indo-European, origin. The word kurgan itself derives from the Turkish word "korugan," meaning "to protect." Indo-Europeans must finally realize that they cannot write history without the Turkic World. "Dismissing" or "ignoring" another civilization is another form of racism.
Regards from Türkiye, and thank you Caleb.
This is my commend on Caleb's video on YT
PS: Those who want to start Turkish history and language with the 6th century AD, we did not fall from the sky!
link for Turkic World

