Catastrophism.com
history linguistics mythology palaeontology physics psychology religion Uniformitarianism |
Sign-up | Log-in |
Introduction | Publications | More
Search results for: assyrian in all categories
833 results found.
84 pages of results. 311. Proceedings of The Third Seminar of Catastrophism and Ancient History [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... IN PARMA, OHIO, AND TORONTO, CANADA MARVIN ARNOLD LUCKERMAN Executive Editor CONTENTS iii Introduction MARVIN ARNOLD LUCKERMAN 1 The Egyptian Prince Moses CHARLES McDOWELL 13 The Dating of Hammurabi D. HICKMAN 29 Some New Factors Bearing Upon the Date of the Exodus WILLIAM H. SHEA 37 David as a Hab/ 'piru Leader LAURA GOLLOP 43 The Early Assyrian King List, The Genealogy of the Hammurapi Dynasty, and the "Greater Amorite" Tradition HERBERT A. STORCK 51 A New Interpretation of the Assyrian King List LESTER J. MITCHAM 57 A Celtic Destruction Myth: Togail Bruidne Do Derga DOROTHEA KENNY 65 On the Survival of Velikovsky's Thesis in Ages in Chaos DONOVAN A. COURVILLE 77 The ...
312. Eden's Flaming Sword by Isaac Vail [Books]
... roof was like a forest of trees", but this is enough for a volume of the size intended. As I leave this branch of the subject I cannot do better than commend to my readers Dr. Warren's valuable and fascinating book Paradise Found, from which I have gathered much valuable information in this work. We have much old Assyrian thought that might come in here, for freshly derived from the buried libraries of immemorial antiquity the centuries of vandal hands and heartless interpolations have not disfigured their many golden facts. The tablets tell us that "In Eridu a pine tree grew. Its crown was crystal white which spread toward the deep vault above. The Abyss of Hea ...
313. Scientific Dating Methods In Ruins [Journals] [Velikovskian]
... of stratigraphy." (56) Elsewhere, Stiebing adds, Heinsohn seems unaware of this [stratigraphic] principle, for his system requires impossible correlations of archeological material. He has no concern for archeological contents of the strata, which he shifts around to fit his Mesopotamian chronology. For instance, he makes the Hyksos of Egypt equal the Assyrians and then dates the Hyksos...between 750 and 625 BCE. (57) Stiebing's criticism of Heinsohn's archeological work ends as follows: Heinsohn has obviously read a tremendous amount of material and put a great deal of study and energy into the creation of his chronology. But the results he has come up with are impossible and ...
314. Velikovsky, Fundamentalism and the Revised Chronology [Journals] [Aeon]
... the resulting gap is called a "dark age." It occurred to me that Velikovsky, by sandwiching his revision between the unbending bookends of volumes I and V, might be inviting similar problems. As it turned out, a "dark age" does exist in the centre of the Ages in Chaos series. Volume m, The Assyrian Conquest, still hasn't seen the light of day. In the summer of 1977, however, I shared Velikovsky's optimism. Nevertheless, I couldn't help wondering why, instead of jumping forward, he didn't simply continue down the trail that began so promisingly in volume I. After all, his principal guide was Biblical chronology and the guide ...
315. What Was "Brimstone"? [Journals] [Kronos]
... of lightning, and an earthquake."(2 ) Before analysing this passage, let us make an enquiry concerning the Hebraic institution of offering "incense" upon the "golden altar": "The offering of incense, or burning of aromatic substances, is common in the religious ceremonies of nearly all nations (Egyptians, Babylonians, Assyrians, Phoenicians, etc.), and it is natural to find it holding a prominent place in the tabernacle and temple-worship of Israel. The newer critical theory that incense was a late importation into the religion of Israel, and that the altar of incense described in Exodus 30:1 ff. is a post-exilian invention, rests on ...
316. Compelling Insights: Concluded in Sorrow [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... discuss it without fear of betraying his trust. What I am alluding to, of course, is his retraction of the identifications he had originally offered in his ever unfolding, multi-layered reconstruction. Thus, for years, and in page after page, Heinsohn had been presenting his readers with what he saw as parallels between the biographies of the Assyrian Sargonid kings and those of Akkad, stressing over and over again that these parallels could not be due to coincidences but that, in fact, Sargon of Assyria was the same as Sargon of Akkad, Manishtusu was the same as Sennacherib, Naram Sin the same as Esarhaddon, and Shar-kali-sharri the same as Ashurbanipal [22]. In ...
317. EBLA -- A New Look at History (Review) [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... , Ebla's strength appears primarily in its commercial rather than strictly political empire, although it was not incapable of flexing its military muscle for its own ends. It is the elaboration of this commercial network that adds a completely new dimension to the history of northern Syria of the third millenium B.C . This network was later continued by the Assyrians, at least with respect to southern Anatolia and northern Mesopotamia several centuries later. The scope of Ebla's activities appear even grander despite the limitations that uncertain identifications place upon the precise details of the interpretation. Through the archaeological remains of Chephren and Pepi I it is clear that Egypt was known by the Eblaites. However, Ebla is not ...
318. Aeon Volume I, Number 4: Contents [Journals] [Aeon]
... repeated and persuasive links to the planet Mars and the polar column. Page 89 The Israelite Conquest of Canaan Reviewing archaeological sites in Israel, Gunnar Heinsohn identifies "Middle Bronze" strata (usually dated around -1950 to -1750) with the early Israelite kingdom of 1050 to 900, seeing the ensuing "Hyksos" strata as that of the invading Assyrians. Page 106 The Hyksos Were Not Assyrians A critical response to Heinsohn's treatment of the land of Israel, by Martin Sieff, an admirer of Heinsohn's work on Mesopotamia. Page 119. Aeon Volume 1, Number 4 CONTRIBUTORS Ev Cochrane has devoted the past nine years to catastrophist research. He is an Associate Editor of KRONOS and a ...
319. Were The Hitites Lydians? [Journals] [Velikovskian]
... , 16. 13 A.R . Burn, op. cit. 14 Herodotus, i, 22. 50 VELIKOVSKIAN Vol V, No. 1 the Scythians),15 a fact which recalls Alyattes' achievement of driving the Cimmerians out of Asia.16 Any hostilities in the east against Adad-Nirari were short-lived, for neither Hittite nor Assyrian records speak of a full-blooded war between these kings. Again, we are in agreement with what we know of Alyattes' relationship with the Medes, for we are told that conflict between the two great kingdoms was terminated by the divine intervention of an eclipse. CROESUS AND HIS TIME We know rather a lot about Croesus because Herodotus describes ...
320. Si-Amon. Part 2 Ch.4 (Peoples of the Sea) [Velikovsky]
... Alexandria, now the capital of Egypt, obscured Sais, Memphis, and other cities in the Delta. Ptolemy II was a patron of arts. Living under the Ptolemies, Si-Amon must have witnessed the change of scene. The Egyptian culture that, though affected, survived the impact of the Hyksos invasion, of the Libyan, Ethiopian, Assyrian, and Persian dominations, was now exposed to a spirit and mode not even oriental; whereas in the past Greek mercenaries had settled and merchants frequented Egypt and philosophers had come-since Solon, Pythagoras, Herodotus, and Plato-to seek knowledge, the new trend was bringing changes not only in fashion but in wisdom, too, from Hellas to ...
Search powered by Zoom Search Engine Search took 0.040 seconds |