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352 results found.
36 pages of results. 271. Bringing Light to a Dark Age [Journals] [Velikovskian]
... dated to near the end of the 7th century. These 16 VELIKOVSKIAN Vol. V, No. 2 latter characters are of course also contemporary with the early Neo-Assyrian kings Ashurnasirpal II and Shalmaneser III, so it is clear that this epoch of Assyrian history must be made to square with the history of the Near East as revealed in the Amarna letters, the documents of Boghaz-koi, and the various monuments of the 19th Dynasty. We are therefore involved in a double adjustment of ancient chronology. The Late Bronze Age, contemporary with New Kingdom Egypt and dated in accordance with Egyptian Sothic chronology, must be brought forward by five centuries or so, to bring it in line with ...
272. Untitled [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... Hittite regent in Carchemish. It is the link between Ugarit and the Hittites, however, that provides the most useful synchronism present here. Turning to the Egyptian side of the equation, Singer has located four different Egyptian officials who bore the name of Haya (Egyptian Hwy) during the New Kingdom period. One of them served during the Amarna period of the eighteenth dynasty and three of them served under Ramesses II of the nineteenth dynasty. Tomb biographies of Egyptian government officials commonly list the various titles of offices in which they served. From an examination of the course of honors accorded these four individuals, one of them stands out as bearing titles which would have put him in ...
273. The Bible as History? [Journals] [SIS Review]
... this period. A number of chronological notices in Judges and Samuel are both easily detachable from their contexts and fit awkwardly there - strong pointers to their being secondary. Again, I am more optimistic and differ from Hughes here, principally because of Na'aman's work, which notices that the usage of the word ibrim in I Samuel closely reflects the Amarna habiru. Na'aman concludes that Samuel would have been written down very shortly after the events described and may be the earliest of the Old Testament books. If Na'aman is right, then the Deuteronomist inherited both a history and a chronology (though how complete it is impossible to know): its present schematised state is as a result of ...
274. The Hyksos Were Not Assyrians [Journals] [Aeon]
... convincing parallels and interactions that Velikovsky and his successors have developed for Saul versus the Amalekites; Ahmose versus the 13th dynasty feudal lords of the Delta; Thutmose III sacking the land of Israel, and taking booty that fits the description of the Temple in Jerusalem; the close parallels between Hatshepsut's Temple at Deir el-Bahari and the Temple in Jerusalem; Amarna period and the time of the prophet Elisha in Israel. 8) The saga of King Keret, from Late Bronze Ugarit, describes an earlier, apparently Middle Bronze, epic ruler, whose life parallels with King David are quite astonishing. Chetwynd's important study of this ran in SIS Review some years ago. But if the historicity of ...
275. On SIS and Insularism [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... up to the death of Solomon took place somewhere in the West, presumably the Iberian Peninsula. There, also, Touchet has shown convincingly that Merenptah's famous stela does not contain the name of Israel, as still maintained by John Bimson in JACF (Vol. 2, 1988). Similarly, in their otherwise excellent article on The El Amarna Letters and the New Chronology' (C & C Review X, 1988), David Rohl and Bernard Newgrosh are writing as if in a vacuum; this has already been criticised by Derek Shelley-Pearce in C & C Workshop 1989:1 . There is no taking into account of Heinsohn's relevant researches. Illig's work, doubting with good ...
276. Up-date of year counts in the time of the Divided Monarchy (Israel and Judah) [Journals] [SIS Review]
... in place of the uncorrected' one used there (note also that the 680 BC datum on this diagram needs re-setting at year 18 of Manasseh - see [2 ]) . I find it premature to attempt a final balancing as yet, however, as I suspect there must be more detailed evidence yet to come - especially from the Amarna letters and the histories of Hatti/Babylon/Assyria. The present basic chronology will also not be generally accepted in the absence of some scheme for re-dating the individuals of Dyn. XX (who are incidentally all but unknown to Manetho). John Bimson's Glasgow chronology is set out on p. 24 of SISR V:1 and ...
277. Forum [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... Avaris. Tanis was not Avaris, although the stela was found there. If as David and the conventional chronology supposes, that the 18th Dynasty was followed by the "19th", how do we explain that a "hated" god was highly honoured by the pharaoh, and "replaced" the Theban Amon, so soon after the Amarna religious "revolution"? None of this makes any sense. Dr Velikovsky's chronology, points to the expulsion of the hated Hyksos, at the time of king Saul , (c . 1000 BC) 400 years before the start of Ramesses II . This would be a cause for celebration. There is also connecting and supporting data. ...
278. Velikovsky And Cultural Amnesia [Journals] [Pensee]
... the refinement of the column and entassis; and 4) the subsequent introduction into art of abstract causality. Rather than bring this general scheme of phases into any relation with Velikovskian dating of catastrophic events, Gowans twisted the parabola of his talk at the end to a detail of the revised chronology, pointing out that the artistic refinement of the Amarna period in Egypt goes well with his third phase and would match the dating of the same phenomenon in Greece more closely if Ages in Chaos is correct. 2) Dr. George Grinnell (history department, McMaster University). "Catastrophism and Uniformity-a Probe into the Origins of the 1832 Gestalt Shift in Western Science." The second ...
279. Were the "Sumerians of the Third Millennium" in Reality the Chaldeans of the First Millennium? [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... , we have some data, though few contemporaneous inscriptions. After this we have a lengthy Isin-Larsa copy (of an apparently no-longer-extant original) dating from c. 1900 B.C . Next we have a very famous epic concerning Sargon of Akkad, called the "King of Battle Epic" (shar tamhari), which dates from the Amarna period c. 1400-1300 B.C . There is also the "Chronicle of Sargon" and the famous birth legend of Sargon [ANET, 119] which dates from the 7th century B.C . These are but a small sampling of the gamut of literature and dates of the copies concerning Sargon of Akkad, and is by ...
280. Transcript of the Morning Session of the A.A.A.S. Symposium [Articles]
... the eclipse. HUBER:- and we couldn't agree on which publication it was. VELIKOVSKY: He published only one paper in Nature on one eclipse, that he believes this is the only one [that early] that he established with complete, absolute, so to say, firmness, and he referred to the library of El- Amarna [meaning Ras Shamra]. HUBER: I am not aware of that. VELIKOVSKY: You were not aware. It was published in Nature. It was published by Stephenson in Nature. This issue is of November 14, 1970. He speaks about the eclipse of 1375. He believes that this is the only ne [that ...
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