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. 151. Sword-Time, Wolf-Time, Part 2 Mars Ch.4 (Worlds in Collision) [Velikovsky] [Velikovsky Worlds in Collision]
... did not pacify the nations, but on the contrary, uprooted them, impelling them to migration and war. The Scythians came down from the plains of the Dnieper and Volga and moved southward. The Greeks left their home in Mycenae and on the islands of the Aegean and carried on the siege of Troy through years of cosmic disturbances. Assyrian kings waged war in Elam, Palestine, Egypt, and beyond the Caucasus. Civil war in the nations, tribal strife, and strife between members of households became so widespread that the same complaint was heard in many parts of the world. As I have already said, Mars was named the war god not only because of his ...
152. Letters [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... From: SIS Chronology and Catastrophism Workshop 2005:2 (May 2005) Home | Issue Contents Letters Dear Reader Emmet Sweeney is one of many people who have realised that if the chronology of Egypt is to be revised then that of the Assyrians, Babylonians and Persians may need to be revised too. He has in many ways developed his revision of these chronologies in a far more detailed way than most of the rival revisions, but that does not necessarily make his version correct. For instance, it is not clear how those kings of Israel recorded in the Assyrian inscriptions as having paid tribute to Assyrian kings could have done so if the dates of these kings are revised ...
153. Heinsohn's Revised Chronology [Journals] [Aeon]
... Jewish and Christian authors who already had adapted them to biblical chronology. (2 ) Because of belief in the antiquity of Abraham, the beginnings of Egyptian and Mesopotamian civilization were stretched back to the beginning of the third millennium BCE and later scholars ignored the testimony of ancient authors who knew only four pre-Hellenistic periods in Mesopotamia: early Chaldean, Assyrian, Chaldean, and Persian. However, there is clear evidence that, without any influence from biblical chronology, the ancients (especially the Greeks) believed that civilization had very ancient beginnings. Herodotus, the fifth century BCE Greek historian, stated that while he was visiting Egypt priests informed him that three hundred forty-one kings had reigned from ...
154. Epilogue: Questions And Answers (Ramses II and his Time) [Velikovsky]
... ascribes to him a long reign of over fifty years. What is the true evidence? 4. The "Hittite" king Suppiluliumas was one of the correspondents of the el-Amarna letter exchange found in the state archive of this short-lived capital of the heretical king Akhnaton. How could he be so long-lived as to be a contemporary of Assurbanipal the Assyrian or Tirhaka the Ethiopian? In the revised-or synchronized- history, between the time the el-Amarna letters were written and Suppiluliumas, a contemporary of Assurbanipal and Tirhaka, over one hundred and fifty years passed. What is the answer? 5. The age of Seti and Ramses is the Bronze Age; Psammetich and Necho, however, lived in ...
155. A Chronology for Mesopotamia (contra Heinsohn) [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... . The undernoted details can be considered as a summary of some of the more significant of those studies together with the conclusions reached. The table presented herein is a synthesis of twelve of the above-mentioned charts. However, as a result of continuing collaborative research and various exchanges of information, it has been deduced that the structures of the various Assyrian king lists cannot be effectively amended to produce a significant and viable reduction in the dates for any of the listed kings, from those calculated by conventional Assyriologists. Hence this figure has some differences from the dates contained in the original charts. It should be viewed as a demonstration model only. With regard to Egypt, Wegelaar and Kurt's ...
156. Star Names: Their Lore and Meaning [Books]
... as flocks; each asterism had its special leader, and the star, and subsequently the constellation, that led the heavens through the year was the Ram. Elsewhere he tells us that when Aries became chief of the zodiac signs it took the Akkadian titles Ku, I-kn, and I-kn-n, from its lucida Hamal, all equivalents of the Assyrian Rube, Prince, and very appropriate to the leading stellar group of that date, although not one of the first formations. He also finds, from an inscription on the Tablet of the Thirty Stars, that the Euphratean astronomers had a constellation Gam, the Scimetar, stretching from Okda of the Fishes to Hamal of Aries, the ...
157. Ignis E Coelo, Part 2 Mars Ch.2 (Worlds in Collision) [Velikovsky] [Velikovsky Worlds in Collision]
... From "Worlds in Collision" © 1950 by Immanuel Velikovsky | FULL TEXT NOT AVAILABLE Contents Ignis E Coelo The destruction of the army of Sennacherib is described laconically in the Book of Kings: "And it came to pass that night, that the angel of the Lord went out, and smote in the camp of the Assyrians a hundred fourscore and five thousand; and when the people arose early in the morning, behold, they were all dead corpses. So Sennacherib king of Assyria departed, and went and returned, and dwelt in Nineveh." It is similarly described in the Book of Chronicles: "And the prophet Isaiah, the son of Amoz, prayed ...
158. The Chronology of Israel and Judah Part I [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... of many Bibles. Thiele specialized in his work on the time of the Hebrew kings. His results are widely accepted by historians and are used in their expositions. The results of Thiele's efforts are summarized in Table I. [1 ] Thiele's chronology is an attempt to harmonize the data of the Bible with the currently accepted dates for the Assyrian and Babylonian kings as computed from the surviving king-lists. To achieve this "harmony" he chose to regard some of the biblical data as erroneous. Concerning the contemporaneous reigns of Hoshea of Israel and Hezekiah of Judah, Thiele concluded that the data of 2 Kings 17 and 18 are "late and artificial synchronisms" which produce an " ...
159. On the Survival of Velikovsky's Thesis in 'Ages in Chaos' [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... occupied by ten peoples who are listed by name.[28] At the time of Joshua seven of these ten peoples were still there, again listed by name. [29] There certainly was no such complete turnover of occupants at any time during this interval to match the biblical account. And there was none later. Neither the Assyrians nor the Persians occupied the territory following their conquests. So also was the event absolutely unique archaeohogically. At no other point in the archaeology of Palestine was there the extensive destruction of cities, including those at Jericho, Ai, and Arad.[30] In these three cases further details are available for associating their destruction with those ...
160. Index of Authors
... its Methods (1 )" : A Reflection on Neurotic Science Antonino Del Popolo, Extrasolar planetary systems: observational results and theoretical problem Arie Dirkzwager, Aftermath of the Trojan War Arie Dirkzwager, Author's Note to the Editor's Note Arie Dirkzwager, Be Careful with the Hittites Arie Dirkzwager, Dating the Trojan War Arie Dirkzwager, Expanding the End of Assyrian History Arie Dirkzwager, Herakles and Velikovskian Catastrophism Arie Dirkzwager, Herodotus on Thutmoses III and Amenophis III Arie Dirkzwager, Pharaoh So and the Libyan Dynasty* Arie Dirkzwager, Sardanapallus and Arbaces Arie Dirkzwager, Some Ideas for Further Investigation Arie Dirkzwager, The 360 Day Year: Science and Humanities Arie Dirkzwager, Velikovskian Catastrophes in the Revelation of St ...
Search powered by Zoom Search Engine Search took 0.040 seconds |