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670 results found.
67 pages of results. 501. A Fifteenth-Century Exodus [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... The available data suggest that the nine kings who separated the fourth and fifteenth reigned a total of about 500 years, placing Titu Yupanqui Pachacuti II (the fifteenth monarch) at about 1400 B.C . If this date for the Exodus holds up to the fifteenth century B.C ., it would, of course, rule out Ramses II. However, there are three possibilities as to what the date might mean to other theorists. To some establishment scholars it would mean eighteenth dynasty Egypt; to Velikovsky it means the end of the Middle Kingdom, and to other revisionists the end of the Old Kingdom. Nevertheless, it does give support- one, to the ...
502. Jonsson's 'Gentile Times' (Letter) [Journals] [SIS Review]
... , and were not contemporary with them. I hope this incontrovertible evidence, offered in such clear and scholarly detail by Olof Jonsson, will not be ignored by those revisionists who claim that the Persian kings were alter egos of the Late Assyrian and Neo-Babylonian kings. John Crowe, Reading, Berks. References 1. Velikovsky, I., Ramses II and his Time, Sidgwick and Jackson, 1978, p.112. ...
503. Immanuel Velikovsky: A Short Biography [Journals] [Pensee]
... of Ages in Chaos, which details Velikovsky's historical reconstruction from ca. 1450 B.C . to 840 B.C . (A sequel, extending the reconstruction to 330 B.C . was originally due to appear shortly after the initial volume but has now been re-worked and enlarged to three or four volumes. One of these, Rameses II and His Time, is scheduled to appear later this year, while Peoples of the Sea is due next spring.) Earth in Upheaval, presenting geological and paleontological evidence to buttress Worlds in Collision (and also offering a new understanding of evolution that conflicts with Darwinian theory), came off the press in 1955; in 1960 ...
504. Assuruballit and his Time [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... p. 15-22. Revised dates for Hattusilis III are c.790-760. 3. Private letter from Dr Courville. 4. D. Courville, THE EXODUS PROBLEM AND ITS RAMIFICATIONS, II, p. 314-7. 5. See note 2 above. James refers to these letters in his rebuttal to Velikovsky's solution in "A Critique of RAMSES II AND HIS TIME" in SISR III:2 , p. 51. \cdrom\pubs\journals\workshop\vol0401\04time.htm ...
505. Proof readers wanted: earn a free Catastrophism! CD-Rom [Journals] [SIS Internet Digest]
... Source by Bob Forrest (7 vols). (3 points each volume) Note that due to copyright, computer-generated indexes, and not the full text of these items will appear on the CD: Hamlet's Mill (20 points) Ages in Chaos by Immanuel Velikovsky (20 points) People of the Sea by Velikovsky (20 points) Ramses II & His Time by Velikovsky (20 points) Mankind in Amnesia by Velikovsky (10 points) Stargazers & Gravediggers by Velikovsky (10 points) Moons, Myths, and Man by HS Bellamy (10 points) Scientists Confront Velikovsky by AAAS (10 points) Beyond Velikovsky by Henry Bauer (10 points) Exodus Problem and its ...
506. Society News [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... many of our overseas members. While in Australia he was very active in organising meetings among those interested in Dr Velikovsky's work and his presentation of films at the Meeting on 6th June contributed in no small way to the success of that meeting. Overseas Publications Service A limited number of copies of the U.S .A . hardback edition RAMSES II AND HIS TIME are now available from stock. Price: UK £2 .85, Overseas Surface, £2 .85, Airmail £6 .50 (Middle. East airmail £4 .70). \cdrom\pubs\journals\workshop\vol0401\18news.htm ...
507. The Blind Pharaoh [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... and cults. The priests were not interested in liberating the Greek from the blindness that prevented him from detecting the restoration of Hyksos hero-worship, hardly hidden in the dynasty of Seti- more exactly, Psammetich- which myopic Egyptology insists on calling the Twenty-sixth Dynasty, in obsequy to Manetho. But thereby hangs the tale already told by Velikovsky in Ramses II and His Time (1978). REFERENCES 1. Herodotos, Histories, Henry Cary, Trans. New York: Appleton, 1899, 135; II 137. 2. I. Velikovsky, Oedipus and Akhnaton. New York: Doubleday, 1960, 120, quoting Bethe's Thebanische Heldenlieder, 157. 3. Herodotos, II ...
508. Fire From Heaven [Journals] [SIS Review]
... quite differently to stony or iron meteorites, which are solid. The controversy surrounding the Tunguska event is a moot point. In ancient Egypt the goddess Sekhmet, a manifestation of Hathor/Isis, was pictured as a circling, or rotating, star (or descending object), that distributed fire (and heat) upon the earth. Ramesses III depicted the so-called Sea Peoples' in flight due to a fiery flame likened to Sekhmet. In the time of Merenptah, the star Anath is said to have fallen on Libya. It incinerated the dwellings, villages and pasturage of the Libyan tribes that subsequently invaded the eastern delta in search of sustenance. Linking Egyptian textual evidence with ...
509. Velikovsky's Chronology in Question [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... , KUB XXVI 70 (Bo 4979) contains the words: "Tukulti-Ninurta has sent me the tablet [letter] of Urhi-Teshub." There were two Assyrian kings Tukulti-Ninurta. The first is dated c. 1242-1206, and the second, 890-884. The Hittite Urhi-Teshub, a nephew of Hattusilis III, is datable as an early contemporary of Ramses II. All Velikovskian type models place the time of Urhi-Teshub much later than the reign of Tukulti-Ninurta II. I therefore conclude, on the basis of Amarna Letter No. 4 and the return of the letter of Urhi-Teshub, that no Velikovskian-based Egyptian chronology can be regarded as valid. Only models that would place dynasties 18 and 19 at ...
510. The Amarna Royal Tombs Project - the last 3 seasons [Journals] [SIS Internet Digest]
... area between that had been avoided. The work had been deliberately slow and systematic and was not yet finished. Hence this was of the nature of an interim, in-progress report. The workers' houses discovered by Carter near Tutankhamun's tomb continued, and suggested the area had not been disturbed since antiquity. These structures date from the time between Ramesses 3 and 6 and the area was evidently crowded and busy. More than 1000 items including occasional jewellery items were found here. Graffiti on a cliff face, dating from a time when these structures had fallen into disuse, refer to a known 20th dynasty individual. The graffiti was apparently carved when the entrances had become hidden, and ...
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