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... Professor Sigmund Kardas Dr. Shane Mage Professor Joseph May Mr. Jan Sammer- others have also been invited to participate- SOME ANNOUNCED TOPICS Where We Are : A Call to Action (Joseph May) Catastrophism in Plato (Shane Mage) An Objective Approach to the Work of Velikovsky (Robert Hewsen) Planetary Gods in Hindu Religion Tutankhamen and Assyrian Art (Lewis Greenberg) The Garden, The Fall, The Restoration (Richard Heinberg) Concepts of Collective Memory (David Griffard) A Report on the Unpublished Work of Dr. Velikovsky (Lynn Rose) Cosmic Catastrophes and the Day of the Lord (Warner Sizemore) Neocatastrophism in Geology and Paleontology (Sigmund Kardas) also A video ...
342. Assuruballit and his Time [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... say this is quite unacceptable unless Mr James can offer an acceptable chronology for the XVIIIth Dynasty that would enable us to place the last part of the reign of Akhnaton as late as the years 828 to 823 BC. Such late dates for this reign would create problems with the dating of the Amarna period. It is therefore unlikely that the Assyrian letters could have come from this period. 3. Mr James also reviewed the solutions proposed by Courville and Velikovsky. Again, both appear quite unacceptable for the reasons Mr James has stated. In addition, the Courville solution would seem to require the acceptance of Assur-nadin-ahe as Shalmaneser III. Later Courville has also pointed to the possibility of ...
343. The Cyclic Nature of Ancient Catastrophes [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... . A heavy, close, outside fly-by would break resonance in the opinion of Dr. Steinhauer and Mr. Chang, and in ours too. Did this occur? One eye-witness, Isaiah. has fortunately left behind something of an observational report:23 Then the angel of the Lord went forth, and smote in the camp of the Assyrians a hundred and fourscore and five thousand: and when they arose early in the morning, behold, they were all dead corpses. This suggests that a cosmic, interplanetary discharge of lightning hit the bivouac of Sennacherib's army, waiting to pounce on Jerusalem. Velikovsky does well to cite Assyrian texts indicating that while Sennacherib himself survived, it ...
344. The Scandal of Enkomi [Journals] [Pensee]
... ." So far so good. But the pottery, porcelain, gems, glass, ivory, bronze, and gold found in the tombs all presented one and the same difficulty. From the Egyptological point of view many objects belong to the time of Amenhotep III and Akhnaton, supposedly of the 15th to the 14th centuries. From the Assyrian, Phoenician, and Greek viewpoint the same objects belong to the period of the ninth to the eighth or seventh centuries. Since the objects are representative of Mycenaean culture, the excavator questioned the true time of the Mycenaean Age. But as the Mycenaean Age is linked to the Egyptian chronology he found himself at an impasse. "Dr ...
345. The Immanuel Velikovsky Archive [Journals] [SIS Internet Digest]
... The Greek Pantheon 4. Mycenean City Names in the Iliad 5. The Mycenean Dialect 6. Cadmus. Chapter IV: A Gap Closed. 1. Seismology and Chronology 2. Celestial Events in the Iliad 3. Changes in Land and Sea 4. A Gap Closed 5. Competing for a Greater Antiquity 6. Summing Up. The Assyrian Conquest: This book belongs, in chronological order, after Ages in Chaos: From the Exodus to King Akhnaton, and before Ramses II and His Time and Peoples of the Sea. Chapters include: Part I: The Time of Isaiah. 1. When the House of Akhnaton Died Out 2. The Sequence of Dynasties 3. ...
346. In Defence of the Gods [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... the latter at the earliest in the late 13th century even according to conventional chronology. However, Ionian settlements in Asia Minor in the 6th century BC which could be expected to follow the conquest of Troy would suggest a much later date for the latter. In addition to this, in view of Heinsohn's identification of the Hyksos with the Imperial Assyrians [6 ], and the possibility that the Israelite Exodus may have been connected with the expulsion of these Hyksos/Assyrians, it may be that a radically later date for Moses will emerge. The writings of Manetho, as described by Velikovsky [7 ], could very well support this view in spite of the latter's view to ...
347. Baal-Manzer the Tyrian: A Reappraisal [Journals] [Aeon]
... and Elissa fled the city to found a colony in North Africa which she named Carthage (Kart-Hadsht, "New City"). The name Sicharbas has been interpreted as Zikar-Baal, a name attested in Byblos at the time of Wenamun (early 21st Dynasty Egypt). (10) This name could have been shortened to Baal in the Assyrian records, and we would not expect him to be called "king of the Tyrians". The chronology gives us little problem. Josephus provides us with a synchronism between the fourth year of Solomon, when he began work on the Temple, and the twelfth year of Hiram. (11) With the reign lengths of all the ...
348. Society News [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... revised chronologies for Assyria and Babylonia currently being developed by SIS scholars. It was found that there was remarkable agreement concerning the dates arrived at from this work (with a variation factor of only a few years between the different versions) and that a pattern for the chronology of Assyria was now becoming much clearer. The consensus was that the Assyrian Kings' Lists could be reconstructed to form two distinct lines of contemporary rulers shortly following the demise of Tukulti-Ninurta I and then, at around 925, a re-establishment of a single dynasty under Assur-Dan II. A chart of the Rohl/James revision of the Mesopotamian civilisations was provided to show the resulting tuck' and the consequent synchronisms between ...
349. Oedipus Questions (Letter) [Journals] [SIS Review]
... that were killed or maimed. Akhenaten, he claims, put a stop to human sacrifice and even animals were not hunted for pleasure - or at least among the royal household. Does anyone know to what extent the Egyptians practised human sacrifice? It is rarely mentioned in books. Likewise, what about the Near and Middle East - the Assyrians dedicated prisoners of war to their gods but when did human sacrifice come to an end? Later still, Velikovsky claims there was a conflict between Smenkhkare and Tutankhamun and a clash of armies. I have never seen anything like this mentioned in books. Did this really happen ? Likewise, he associates the fall of Akhenaten with a great ...
350. The Hittites in Israel [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... the land of Canaan; thy father was an Amorite, and thy mother an Hittite" (Ezekiel 16:3 ). But... .. . "Behold, I will raise up thy lovers against thee, .. . the Babylonians and all the Chaldeans, Pekod, and Shoa, and Koa, and all the Assyrians with them: .. ." (Ezekiel 23:22-3). [Emphasis added] If the Hittites were part of the Chaldean Empire, as Velikovsky claims, it is strange that Ezekiel omits them, as he clearly knows who they were. However, if Hatti had ceased to exist as an independent political state over a ...
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