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Search results for: myth in all categories
1708 results found.
171 pages of results.
... Earth (1827) Works of Flavius Josephus Legends of the Jews Vol.I - IV (1909) The Migration of Symbols (1926) The Night of the Gods | Vol 2 Principles of Geology (1854) Ragnarok (1883) Recollections of a Fallen Sky (1974) Sacred Theory of the Earth | [ II ] The Saturn Myth (1980) The Serpent Symbol (1851) Star-Names & their Meanings (1899) The Sibylline Oracles The Swastika (1894) Writings of Isaac Newton Veil Velikovsky and his Critics (1978) Velikovsky's Sources (1981) Immanuel Velikovsky's Jewish Science (1977) .. . by Comyns Beaumont: The Riddle of the Earth (1925) ...
222. The Climatic Breakdown (The Atlantis Myth) [Books]
... From: The Atlantis Myth by H. S. Bellamy CD Home | Contents Title Page | Ch. 1 | Ch. 2 | Ch. 3 | Ch. 4 | Ch. 5 | Ch. 6 | Ch. 7 | Ch. 8 | Ch. 9 | Ch. 10 | Ch. 11 | Ch. 12 | Ch. 13 | Ch. 14 | Ch. 15 | Ch. 16 | Ch. 17 | Ch. 18 | Conclusion | Notes | Bibliography | Index | The Climatic Breakdown The slow and painful rise from the effects of the descent into barbarism, and the acquisition of a sufficient supply of those necessaries of life ...
223. The Meaning Of The Name (The Atlantis Myth) [Books]
... From: The Atlantis Myth by H. S. Bellamy CD Home | Contents Title Page | Ch. 1 | Ch. 2 | Ch. 3 | Ch. 4 | Ch. 5 | Ch. 6 | Ch. 7 | Ch. 8 | Ch. 9 | Ch. 10 | Ch. 11 | Ch. 12 | Ch. 13 | Ch. 14 | Ch. 15 | Ch. 16 | Ch. 17 | Ch. 18 | Conclusion | Notes | Bibliography | Index | The Meaning Of The Name Everyone who attempts to ascertain the meaning of the name `Atlantis' ventures on notoriously thin ice. I am well aware of ...
224. Night of the Gods: Polar Myths. The Pole Star [Books]
... The Night of the Gods Part i | Part 0 | Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Polar Myths. The Pole Star 6. THE POLESTAR. Is not Eloah in the Height of the Heavens? Doth he not see beneath him the Head of the Stars? (Job xxii, 12.) To whom then will ye liken EI, or what likeness will ye compare unto him? He that sitteth above the Khug1of the Earth, and the dwellers therein are as grasshoppers. That stretcheth out the Heavens as a curtain, ...
225. SERVANT OF THE SUN GOD [Journals] [Aeon]
... either the concept of a "warrior" or a "hero." The problem of definition will be easy when one takes on such well-known figures as the Babylonian Nergal, Greek Ares and Latin Mars, figures readily identified as both warriors and heroes. But pressing the investigation further will inevitably move the researcher into a much larger circle of myth and a wider range of personalities: from the music maker Apollo to the healer Aesculapius; from the visionary Orpheus and the magician Merlin to the North American trickster Coyote, or the Polynesian trickster Maui. Here one is dealing with many attributes which may seem remote from the warrior function. In terms of generic categories, we find the ...
226. Christopher B. Siren's Myths and Legends [Journals] [SIS Internet Digest]
... From: SIS Internet Digest 1996:2 (Feb 1997) Home | Issue Contents Christopher B. Siren's Myths and Legends http://pubpages.unh.edu/~cbsiren/myth.html A wealth of links to texts and mythological sources including: Encyclopaedias, Dictionaries, Myth and Story Collections, and myths from the Ancient Near East Indo-Iranian, East Asian, Greek and Roman, Norse/Teutonic, Finno-Ugric, Slavic and Baltic, British and Celtic, Frankish & Carolingian, Australian Aboriginal, Polynesian, African, and many others. ...
227. How Much Did They Know? [Journals] [SIS Review]
... Society, and currently preparing Indexes to the Review and other Velikovskian material. The question of the nature of knowledge in earlier civilisations is a vast one, often relegated to the "lunatic fringe". This review article attempts a preliminary survey via some of the literature.* * The books considered are: HAMLET'S MILL: An essay on myth and the frame of time, by Giorgio de Santillana and Hertha von Dechend (Boston: Gambit, 1969; London: Macmillan, 1970); SECRETS OF THE GREAT PYRAMID by Peter Tompkins, with an appendix by Livio C. Stecchini (London: Allen Lane, ]971); HISTORICAL METROLOGY by A. E. Berriman ...
228. The Hero's Garment [Journals] [Aeon]
... "a brightness as if by a flash of lightning." [17] The Cross-dresser In the second place, the mythological Hero is often encountered clad in women's clothes. The motif of the transvestite Hero is a widespread phenomenon in several completely different aspects of religion, such as shamanism, temple ceremonials, New Year festivals, and heroic myth. Significantly, even the prime examples of heroes- such as Herakles and Susanowo- are associated with traditions of cross-dressing. [18] Male trans-vestites were in the service of Aphrodite-Astarte. [19] "On the island of Kos sacrifice was made to Heracles by a priest wearing woman's clo-thing, and the story was told that Heracles ...
229. Velikovsky Symposium- Florida, July 12 [Journals] [SIS Internet Digest]
... . This appeal to ancient testimony was considered absurd by virtually every critic. At our symposium in November of 1994, I asked the astronomer Tom Van Flandern if he agreed with this statement: "that there is considerable evidence to suggest ancient civilizations may have arisen in the shadow of celestial catastrophe, and if so would he agree that ancient myths and symbols deserve careful study and cross-cultural comparison to see if they might point to the nature of the upheavals." I found it very interesting that he agreed with both statements. And what do you think the astronomers Clube and Napier have done? Do you really want to say they would have a case for anything if they had ...
230. Consequences of the Capture (Moons, Myths and Man) [Books]
... From: Moons, Myths and Man by H. S. Bellamy CD Rom Home Last | Contents | Next 23 Consequences of the Capture The captured Moon was a magnificent trophy, but a dangerous one. Though a dwarf- one-fiftieth of the Earth's size- and feebler still in power-one-eightieth- and though it was hopelessly in the Earth's grasp, its captor was in its clutches, too. A life-and-death struggle ensued. The capture at once caused a terrible succession of cataclysmal changes in the threefold organism of our planet: earth, ocean, and air. The lithosphere of the Earth writhed in the throes of terrific earthquakes. For their violence we have no means of comparison. The Mexicans ...
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