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41 pages of results. 191. The Ark And Tent Of Meeting [Journals] [Aeon]
... even more. On a totally different subject, this manner of decoding brought me to identify the Arcadians, who claimed that they lived before there was a moon, [12] as "people who were living at the time of Arka, i.e . Saturn." [13] However, Marinus van der Sluijs disagreed on linguistic grounds. [14] Appendix 2 See www.askelm.com especially the section "Major Keys in Discovering the Lost Temples of Jerusalem." This website was inaugurated by my long time, but now deceased, acquaintance, Dr Ernest Martin, scientist and historian. Notes [1 ] See AEON VI:4 (August 2003 ...
192. Sins Of The Father [Journals] [Aeon]
... ...virtually identical in fact to the Indo-Iranian language of the Medes. The text of a treaty between Mitanni and the Hittite land shows that Mitra, Varuna, and Indra, deities of Indo-Iranian origin, comprised the Mitanni pantheon. Indo-Iranian technical terms appear with great frequency in the Mitanni vocabulary...True, another racial and linguistic group, designated Hurrian, is evinced in Mitannian documents and personal names. The exact relationship between the Hurrian and Iranian elements is unclear, though it would appear that the Iranian group was dominant, for all the Mitanni kings clearly had Iranian names. Hurrian is non-Indo-European, and is closely related to the language of Urartu, the region ...
193. Kronos Vol. IV, No. 1 Fall 1978: Contents [Journals] [Kronos]
... ): Associate Editor. John D. Waskom (Ph.D ., University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Professor of Geology, Northwestern State Univ. of Louisiana, Natchitoches, Louisiana: Associate Editor. Roger W. Wescott (Ph.D ., Princeton Univ.), Rhodes Scholar, Professor of Anthropology & Linguistics, Drew Univ. (Madison, N. J.), and Past President of LACUS: Senior Editor Irving Wolfe (Ph.D ., Univ. of Bristol, England), Associate Professor of English at the Université de Montreal: Senior Editor. KRONOS is an independent, non-profit quarterly Published by KRONOS PRESS. Copyright ...
194. Greek Debt To Babylonians [Journals] [SIS Internet Digest]
... earlier than the Greek, which by itself doesn't prove that the Greeks copied from them (directly or otherwise). In theory they could have both been borrowing from some earlier common source. Still, one has never been identified and the Babylonians seem to have developed their ideas about the constellations by themselves. There may even be some specific linguistic borrowings. The most interesting instance here concerns Pegasus. The Sumerians and Akkadians called it "iku", meaning "field". Why did the Greeks then see a horse? It seems because "iku" meant "horse" to Greek ears, but only at a very early period. Later it was "hippos" of ...
195. Chaos and Creation by Alfred de Grazia [Books] [de Grazia books]
... multitude of persons and the body of scholars, the human mind today is moving into an area "where the action is". For perhaps no more exciting and important a set of problems is to be found anywhere in the realms of science and scholarship. Every discipline is implicated in the theory of ancient catastrophes - psychology, sociology, linguistics, archaeology, biology, physics, chemistry, astronomy, and geology, together with their many subdivisions down to special and new sciences, such as plasma physics, dendrochronology, and mega-vitamin therapy [1 ]. It has something to say about "the Jupiter Effect," "the Ion Effect," and "the Bermuda Triangle ...
196. Magi, The Quest for a Secret Tradition by Adrian Gilbert [Journals] [SIS Review]
... were Hurrians, as were the Hyksos. The Hurrians brought the war chariot from the steppes of Central Asia. They also built or took over Carchemish, Urfa and Harran, where Abraham first settled, so perhaps his family were migrating Hurrians. The names of the people are Hurrian and Harran the city and Haran (Abraham's brother) are linguistically cognate. Gilbert speculates about the locality of the garden of Eden, which could have been the plateau dominated by Mount Ararat. The four rivers mentioned in Genesis II (Pishon, Gihon, Tigris and Euphrates) would have been its boundaries. The Pishon, meaning free-flowing', would have been the turbulent Arax and not the Nile ...
197. Kronos Vol. IV, No. 2 Winter 1978: Contents [Journals] [Kronos]
... ): Associate Editor. John D. Waskom (Ph.D .. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Professor of Geology, Northwestern State Univ. of Louisiana, Natchitoches, Louisiana: Associate Editor. Roger W. Wescott (Ph.D ., Princeton Univ.), Rhodes Scholar, Professor of Anthropology & Linguistics, Drew Univ. (Madison. N.J .) , and Past President of LACUS: Senior Editor Irving Woolfe (Ph.D . Univ. of Bristol, England), Associate Professor of English at the Université de Montreal: Senior Editor. KRONOS is an independent, non-profit quarterly Published by KRONOS PRESS. Copyright © ...
198. Letters to the Editor C&AH 4:2 [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... were called (T )iberians long before the Romans got there. Iberians of the Caucasus are related to the present-day Georgians and the ancient Hurrians, who were known to be in Israel in ancient times. Finally, the Berbers of North Africa are related to both the ancient Egyptians and to the Iberians of Eastern Anatolia. We need a linguistic expert to compare Georgian with Berber and with Basque. Another footnote might be that the British Isles were also populated by the Iberians. In the first place Ireland was called Hibernia. Secondly, it has been theorized that the early islanders were dark-haired people, whereas the Celts were fair-haired. The most uninhabited areas of England are called " ...
199. Centuries of Darkness? - the reviewers reviewed [Journals] [SIS Review]
... and Ebla." Seemingly, it is not enough to draw attention to the contemporaneity of dark ages' and gaps' all round the ancient Mediterranean and to ask, on this basis, whether these are artefacts of a faulty chronology. More would seem to be required to convince the academic community, perhaps a greater emphasis on cultural, linguistic, artistic and technological progression and/or continuity. This seems a tall order for an emerging revised chronology: it is more the material for generations of PhD students! In a lively exchange in subsequent issues of TLS, Kitchen's various items of evidence were disputed by James et al., with the latter getting decidedly the better of ...
200. Catastrophist Geology [Journals] [Catastrophist Geology]
... Finkl pedologist Fort Lauderdale, USA Albert V.Carozzi sedimentologist Urbana, USA Peter Gretener geophysicist Calgary, Canada Pietro Passerini geologist Florence, Italy Doeko Goosen pedologist Enschedé, Holland Board of advisors: V.Axel Firsoff astronomer Glastonbury, Great Britain Horace C.Dudley physicist Chicago, USA Manoel Nunes Pereira anthropologist Rio de Janeiro Roger W.Wescott linguist/prehistorian Madison, USA René Thom methematician Bures-sur-Yvette, France Correspondents: Ewoud H.Bon exploration geologist Amsterdam David J.Thomas palaeontologist Osweqo, USA R.n .van Everdinpen hydrogeologist Calgary, Canada C.Eugène Wegmann geologist Neuchitel, Switzerland Oscar P.G . Braun geologist nRio de Janeiro George Choubert geologist Paris Leendert Krook geologist ...
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