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206 pages of results.
... families. Quetzalcoatl, the culture hero of the Mexicans, landed near Panuko, on the eastern coast of Mexico. The Loucheux say that at the time of the flood a godlike man came to them from the Moon, whither he returned again after some time. To turn to the eastern hemisphere, we read in Schliemann's translation of an Egyptian papyrus of the second dynasty, kept in Leningrad: About (3 350) years ago the ancestors of the Egyptians came to the Nile-land as colonizers, bringing with them the wisdom, the philosophy, and the culture of the ancient state of "Atlantis". ' Even if this passage should have been too confidently rendered, there ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 38  -  26 Mar 2007  -  URL: /online/pubs/books/bellamy/moons/30-culture.htm
... Cornwall. THERE is an extraordinary account of the Flood, preserved by the Hellenes as the Deluge of Deucalion, in the first book of the history of Diodorus Siculus, that prolific and learned historian contemporaneous with Julius Caesar and Augustus. He not only entirely removes the arena of that catastrophe from the present Greece, but brings into it the Egyptians and Ethiopians, and places the scene by the Atlantic Ocean. The particular passage is this, in which I have placed the governing names in capitals: "OSIRIS marched away into ETHIOPIA. Whilst they were thus employed the NILE, they say, at the time of SIRIUS' rising, inundated the greatest port of EGYPT and especially ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 38  -  31 Jul 2007  -  URL: /online/pubs/books/beaumont/britain/201-flood.htm
773. Failure of a Concept? [Journals] [SIS Review]
... the Sothic period chronology without recourse to the arguments rooted in my other books." (p . 243) Moreover, Marx seems to forget that while Ages to Chaos does not rely on catastrophism, Worlds in Collision does rely on a revised chronology, for the initial synchronisation of the Exodus, the Papyrus Ipuwer and the end of the Egyptian Middle Kingdom: "On one point alone, not necessarily decisive for the theory of cosmic catastrophism, I borrow credence: I use a synchronical scale of Egyptian and Hebrew chronologies which is not orthodox." (Preface to W in C) Does Marx really expect Egyptologists to be convinced of any revision of chronology, especially if they ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 38  -  05 Mar 2003  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/review/v0301/10fail.htm
... wall on either side and above the actual burial chamber itself. During the trip we will also see Iron Age sites, and possibly some of the later sites, medieval cathedrals and so on. We will try and cover as much as we possibly can in eleven days. Peter James: I think it should be as hectic as the Egyptian trip for those that came on it. [General hubbub) Nick Thorpe: There are a number of good, general books on the archaeology of Scotland and there is also a new book on the archaeology of Orkney, and then there are a number of guide books, so there will probably be three or four books that are ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 38  -  01 Jul 2001  -  URL: /online/pubs/articles/talks/sis/860914ix.htm
775. The Death of Heracles [Journals] [Aeon]
... . (82) The iconography of the two figures converges on at least one point as well, both gods being represented sailing across the seas in a vessel of some sort. (83) The archetypal significance of Heracles' Daktyl-form is further supported by his early assimilation to Bes, a god of unknown origin who is abundantly attested in Egyptian art as a dwarf with bandy legs and wrinkled face. (84) (Bonnet, in her detailed examination of the Daktyl's relationship to Melqart, suggests that the cult of Bes mediated the confusion between the two figures, presumably on Cyprus, a well-known melting pot of oriental and Greek ideas. (85) ) The cults of ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 38  -  30 Jul 2008  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/aeon/vol0205/055death.htm
776. Horizons [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... any period prior to the 6th or 7th centuries BC makes all dating of events in earlier centuries and millennia uncertain. This fact is candidly conceded by a minority of Egyptologists and Assyriologists. One example of such candour is provided by Sir Alan Gardiner, who declared (in Egypt of the Pharaohs, 1961) that what is proudly advertised as Egyptian history is merely a collection of rags and tatters'. Another comes from Leo Oppenheim, who wrote (in Ancient Mesopotamia, 1964); The cuneiform texts have given us a strangely distorted picture of more than two thousand years of Mesopotamian civilization... torn to shreds again and again by immense gaps in time and space. ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 38  -  05 Mar 2003  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/workshop/w1990no1/22horiz.htm
... the Sea" © 1977 by Immanuel Velikovsky | FULL TEXT NOT AVAILABLE Contents Alexander Alexander Before the Oracle of Amon in the Oasis IN THE AUTUMN of -332 Alexander crossed the desert and came to Egypt. The Persian satrap, who could not depend on the people of Egypt, offered no resistance. The population received Alexander jubilantly. "The Egyptian people hailed him with joy as their deliverer from the Persian yoke."[1 ] He sacrificed to Apis and brought royal offerings; this implies that he was crowned king of Egypt where "the Pharaoh was regarded as the incarnation of the greatest god".[2 ] He arranged athletic and literary contests and took care also ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 37  -  04 Jul 2007  -  URL: /online/no-text/velikovsky/peoples/203-alexander.htm
... And unless his inner motives are understood, one is equally baffled by Freud's insistence on writing and publishing as his last book - almost as his last testament - his degradation of Moses. He degraded him by denying him originality; simultaneously he degraded the Jewish people by denying them a leader of their own race, for he made Moses an Egyptian; and finally he degraded the Jewish God, making of Yahweh a local deity, an evil spirit of Mount Sinai. On the eve of his departure from a long life he had to blast the Hebrew God, demote his prophet, and glorify an Egyptian apostate as the founder of a great religion. Freud admitted that he had ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 37  -  04 Jul 2007  -  URL: /online/no-text/velikovsky/oedipus/210-seer.htm
... under existing theories. If those events actually occurred, their explication still awaits work within the disciplines. Velikovsky's attempt to discard the theory of gravity is simply not on. Velikovsky pointed to a great many things that are not fully understood, and he showed conventional views on a number of matters to be on shaky ground- for instance, Egyptian and Mesoamerican chronology. But his contribution stops at that point. He did not propose acceptable ways of modifying the presently held ideas so as to make them sounder, more reliable, and better able to handle all the facts. His method was subjective: selecting data from among a much larger mass of available information and making interpretations that ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 37  -  04 Dec 2008  -  URL: /online/no-text/beyond/10-intermezzo-x.htm
780. Immanuel Velikovsky: A Short Biography [Journals] [Pensee]
... In April, 1940, Velikovsky was first struck by the idea that a great natural catastrophe had taken place at the time of the Israelites' Exodus from Egypt- a time when plagues occurred, the Sea of Passage parted, Mt. Sinai erupted, and the pillar of cloud and fire moved in the sky. Velikovsky wondered: Does any Egyptian record of a similar catastrophe exist? He found the answer in an obscure papyrus stored in Leiden, Holland- the lamentations of an Egyptian sage, Ipuwer. The Ipuwer document, Velikovsky became convinced, parallels the Book of Exodus, describing the same natural catastrophe, the same plagues. As a result he began to reconstruct ancient Middle Eastern ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 37  -  05 Mar 2003  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/pensee/ivr01/05biogr.htm
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