Showing posts with label Brutus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brutus. Show all posts

15 August 2021

Three Maries

As big supporter of Jezus Christ, Mary Magdalene seems to be the first witness of his resurrection: She even might have fled to Gaul, been his wife & author of a gospel. These namesakes also lived during the epoch of the saviour: Mary the Virgin, Mary of Bethany, Mary of Clopas & Mary the Peaceful. Some might be duplicates, but also form groups of "Three Maries":

According to Eastern Orthodoxy, Lazarus fled to Cyprus. According to mainstream history, emperor Andronikos Komnenos died in Constantinople, but some claim he managed to escape to Cyprus. Is the bishop of Kition a partial duplicate of the emperor, which might be a partial duplicate of the saviour?

That escape is similar to the escape of Aeneas, a name very similar to Aenon: The emperor had estates in Oinaion, so might he also be a partial duplicate of the saviour?

Could the son of Anchises have arrived by boat near Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer, instead of in Latium?

Are the Cathars right in claiming the saviour had a wife?

25 April 2021

Merlin the Magician

A shapeshifting druid functioning as the tutor of the legendary king Arthur: Emrys Wledig & Myrddin Wyllt are the historical sources for the famous wizard. Latinised as Ambrosius Aurelianus, the first source appeared in different historical sources:

Is any of these stories fully correct?

It seems Emrys Wledig sent his troops to Ireland for cutting stones to be used in the construction of a memorial near the place of slaughter of their nobles. However, his soldiers weren't able to dismantle the stones, so he asked Myrddin Emrys for help: Applying his magic, in one night he managed to bring them from Mount Killaraus to Salisbury Plain, although archeological research seems to pone the stones stood, at least for a while, at Preseli Hills. Even that transfer of those stones is quite challenging: Did the druid have access to technology that might be lost today?

He also led the construction of Stonehenge: Giants helped him, though Brutus of Troy already wiped them out. Did Gogmagog & his brethren resurrect, or was Brutus a duplicate of Ambrosius that killed those giants afterwards, or did some stories mix up?

15 March 2021

Julius Caesar

According to mainstream history, on the Ides of March in 44 BC, dictator Julius Caesar got assassinated in a conspiracy led by Cassius Longinus & Junius Brutus, respectively the son-in-law & son of the dictator's mistress: His Last Words refer to that relationship. Namesake Brutus of Troy also killed his father and fled through Gaul to reach England, where he founded New Troy ...

For the Roman Empire, the future dictator had conquered Gaul, home to the Celts: Their territory stretched from Galicia, over Galatia, along Galich, to Wales, as Abraham Ortelius seems to have mapped. They celebrated Yule during the twelve days following the winter solstice & Anatoly Fomenko translates "Julius" as "Sunny": After his assassination, the dictator got venerated as "Son of the Divine". The feasts of Saturnalia & Sol Invictus are also situated around the date of Christmas ...

He returned to Rome in triumph, as if it was Palm Sunday, where he finally became dictator. He reformed the calendar, the Julian replaced the Roman: A civil year now contained 365 days & the leap year was introduced to keep track with the length of a tropical year. A quite accurate approach, though the Gregorian correction seemed necessary: 1582 AD misses ten days ...

A bit odd, cause calculations lead to one extra day for nearly 128 years, so ten days only bring us back to emperor Constantinus Magnus, who decided Sunday should be the last day of the week. It inspired Heribert Illig & according to the New Chronology he is just a double of emperor Octavianus Augustus, as are Constantius Chlorus & Julius Caesar: The "green" & the "young" might have a similar meaning ...

Their research is refuted by career historians, claiming the goal was to get into accordance with the usual dates around the period of the Council of Nicaea. However, the Easter Book tells us that event should have taken place at least a few centuries later, as Florin Diacu confirmed: Scaliger was working around 1582 AD, did his research & the reform influence each other? That's right, it might be coincidental, but his father bore the name Julius Caesar ...

21 February 2021

Great Wall

As protection against raging nomads from the Eurasian Steppes, Chinese Emperors deployed labour forces to build qualitative fortifications. Alas, it didn't stop some invading hordes conquering the country: Qin, the first dynasty of the united empire, initiated the project, while Qing, the last dynasty in that empire, crossed it to take power overthere. Manchuria is a region in Chinese Tartary, whereof cartographer John Cary drew the borders:

Before Pugachev's Rebellion it seemed to belong to Great Tartary, together with Siberia & Turkestan, but Crimea was known as the distinguished Little Tartary: Were they even earlier united as one Tartary? On its borders with Persia, near the Caspian Sea, we also find walls:

  • Near Gorgan on its eastern shore
  • Near Derbent on its western shore

Dhu Al-Qarnayn or Alexander the Great might have built them to isolate Gog of Magog: In the Tartarus, where Giants are buried? In England, Gogmagog was killed by a companion of Brutus of Troy, as Goliath fell ...

Throughout Europe, the supposed descendants of Aeneas of Troy constructed the Roman Limes to keep nomadic tribes outside the empire, ranging from the Black Sea to the Atlantic Ocean, with the following extremities:

Did all those fortifications act as fences between a Heartland of a world-empire & the first parts of a separating Rimland?