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67 pages of results. 481. Chapter VIII: the Earliest Solar Shrines in Egypt [Books]
... be taken. South mound old temenos wall, 289 ½ mag. bearing = 19 ½ N. of W. Wall at right angles .. . 189 mag. bearing = 71 S. of W. Going to the West mound there are two higher humps with an opening between them, tons of limestone chips, sandstone blocks with Rameses II. 's name; so that I take this for the site of the great pylon. It is exactly opposite the obelisk, and distant, I should guess, 600 yards. Site of S. pylon to obelisk, 106 ½ mag. bearing = 16 ½ S. of E. Pole of N. pylon to ...
482. The Velikovskian Vol. V, No. 4: Contents [Journals] [Velikovskian]
... Vol. V, No. 4 (2003)Quota pars operis tanti nobis committitur CONTENTS The Relative Simplicity of Ptolemaic and Copernican Theories, by Lynn E. Rose Were the Hittites Lydians? A Different Approach, by Eric J. Aitchison The Strange and Terrible Story of the Kensington Runestone, by Jim and Allen Richardson Science, History, Rameses II and Velikovsky, by Charles Ginenthal Sedimentology Evidence by Ulrike Rosner about Tel Munbaqa, by Charles Ginenthal ...
483. Some Preliminary Remarks About Thera and Atlantis [Journals] [Kronos]
... . destructions in Greece are likewise downdated by ca. S00 years, eliminating the Dark Age. Velikovsky, like Pomerance, would have these due to earth shocks rather than invaders, but would attribute these not to Thera but to close approaches of the planet Mars. The fall of the "Hittite Empire" and the woes recorded by.Ramses III of Egypt, both currently set at ca. 1200 B.C ., would be redated to the mid 6th and early 4th centuries B.C . respectively. 4. Plato's chronological framework is a real set of problems. He claims that Atlantis was destroyed long before Deucalion's flood (Timaeus 22 A-B, 23 B-C; ...
484. The Egypt Exploration Society Hears the New Chronology [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... during the construction of Psusennes's tomb. With time pressing, David fairly skims over much more evidence, including that of the Memphite Genealogy. Travelling back in time, he outlines his case for an Amarna/Early Monarchy synchronism in which Saul and his family appear among the El Amarna correspondents. Consequent upon this synchronism is the further identification of Ramesses II as Shishak, with his expedition to capture Salem in his year 8 being the counterpart of Shishak's taking of Jerusalem. The revision goes further back yet - as far as the biblical Exodus from Egypt - and here David produces Manfred Bietak's evidence from Tell ed Daba where an occupation level with many Asiatic servant type dwellings ends suddenly and ...
485. Esarhaddon In Egypt [Journals] [Kronos]
... trans. by Luckenbill, Records of Assyria II. 580 20. "Ishupri", Oricntalistische Literaturzeitung (1925), Nr. 9/10, pp. 574-578. 21. Alt, "Ishupri", p. 578. 23. See I. Velikovsky, "From the End of the Eighteenth Dynasty to the Time of Ramses II," KRONOS III:3 , pp. 12-15, 20, 21. 24. Luckenbill, Records of Assyria II. 580. 25. However, the reader is referred to I. Velikovsky, op. cit., pp. 17 and 20 and the letter by S. Kogan in KRONOS VIII:2 , ...
486. Speakers at the Conference [Journals] [SIS Review]
... York/London, 1950) Ages in Chaos - Vol. I: From the Exodus to King Akhnaton (New York, 1952; London, 1953) Earth in Upheaval (New York/London, 1955) Oedipus and Akhnaton (New York / London, 1960) Peoples of the Sea (New York/London, 1977) Ramses II and His Time (New York/ London, 1978) Mankind in Amnesia (New York, 1981; London, 1982) \cdrom\pubs\journals\review\v0601to3\05speak.htm ...
487. Sothis and the Morning Star in the Pyramid Texts [Journals] [Aeon]
... , the absence of testimony on this score in the Pyramid Texts- where Spd.t figures prominently- must give us grounds for caution when considering the conventional identification of Spd.t with Sirius. Later sources, it is true, do contain reference to an association between Sothis and the flooding of the Nile. The astronomical ceiling of Ramses II, for example, bears the following statement addressed to the king: "You go up to Heaven as Isis-Sothis on the Morning of the New Year, when it announces to you the Jubilee and Nile without injury (? ). " (17) Yet even if we grant an association between Sothis and the Nile-flood in later ...
488. Society News [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... Using recently designed computer programs, Wayne had replaced the former less precise magnitude calculations and also determined the Spring eclipse possibilities to produce sets of tables illustrating his thesis. He provided copies of all the tables together with a detailed essay which supported a revised Egyptian chronology: in particular, his dates for the Egyptian New Kingdom from Ahmose I to Ramesses II inclusive of 1225 to 899 BC and his synchronisms with Mursilis II, Muwatallis and Hattusilis III are very supportive of those worked out for the New Chronology'. A total of 17 people attended this study group meeting and several members exchanged addresses with our visitor so as to correspond on the issues and send their reactions to the evidence ...
489. A Concluding Retort [Journals] [Pensee]
... is, however, remarkable that by whatever method- stratigraphy, readable material, or carbon dating- it is always the same 500+ years that separates the opinions and that turns the history of archaeology into a history of strife. Stiebing attacks my work which is in volumes not yet published (The Dark Age of Greece, The Assyrian Conquest, Ramses II and His Time, and Peoples of the Sea) and which he could not have read; but he also demonstrates his unfamiliarity with Ages in Chaos volume I, printed and reprinted since 1952, for the criticism of which he requires space in Pensee for the second time. Not only that he does not refer to the body ...
490. Society News [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... the idea of far reaching Asiatic conquests by Sesostris I, an idea which he backs with an unpublished inscription from Memphis. In the subsequent question time Rohl said that this now appears to be an account of a trading mission rather than a military campaign, and that the Sesostris legends were probably a conflation of the exploits of Thutmose III and Ramesses II. Gammon pointed out that Bernal's attribution of various site destructions (e .g . Troy II) to Sesostris was arbitrary. Bernal postulates the surprising idea of a Hyksos invasion from Egypt into the Aegean. This results in the destruction of the Old Palace period (MM I-II) in Crete and the establishment of the Mycenaean era ...
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