Showing posts with label Caesar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Caesar. Show all posts

27 October 2021

Hannibal Barcas

Famous for crossing the Alps with elephants & winning many battles against the Romans, this general never managed to conquer the eternal city & fled to Asia in the end, according to mainstream history. Some interesting questions arise:

  • His campaign started on the Iberian Peninsula, but Elephas never lived in Europe. However, Iberia is a name used for two different regions: Could he have started from Caucasia?
  • Carthage is located on the northern shores of Africa, but the name can also be found on another location: the district of Kadiköy in Istanbul bears the same etymology, could Dido have migrated to Anatolia instead?

The name Hannibal associates with the Phoenician deity Baal, sometimes honored by child sacrifice: It happened the worshippers ate the bodies, does "cannibalism" perhaps originate from "khan-i-baal", or "white khan"?

Hannibal Lecter is a famous cannibal in different movies, a character once performed by Anthony Hopkins, who also performed Titus Andronicus. If Tamora, also similar to Tomyris, refers to Tamar, Shakespeare might also hint to more similarities:

The cannibal is the son of a Lithuanian duke & an Italian woman: Does this refer to the Veneti, who migrated from the Vistula to Veneto, where those Phoenicians found Venice? Might Latin actually have been derived from Lithuanian, or Latvian?

28 September 2021

Titus Andronicus

This revenge tragedy of William Shakespeare shows the adventures of a general returning from a succesful military campaign. His name contains a Greek & an Italian part ...

According to the New Chronology, Andronicus is a partial duplicate of Jesus Christ, but also Titus is a candidate: Flavius Josephus might have been inpired by the life of the future emperor to create the character of the saviour to pacify the Jews. As well as Julius Caesar, he got deified and both of them won a famous seven year lasting war: Do these similarities hint to a partial duplicate?

The daughter of the protagonist bears the name of the second wife of Aeneas: According to Virgil, Turnus was the foreseen groom, but due to a dream Latinus changed his mind. Shakespreare wrote she was promised to Saturninus, but fell in love with his brother and fled with him. Is the character of the foreseen groom based on the king of the Rutulians?

However, in the revenge tragedy, Tamora and her surviving sons manage to kill Bassianus and rape Lavinia, whereas in the epic poem Turnus got killed earlier, so the storyline is different. Some authors identify the mentioned king as Titus, so might the inspiration for the mentioned rape come from the Abduction of the Sabine Women?

That event led to a shared reign of Titus & Romulus: After six years of mutual reign, the king of the Sabines got killed over a dispute. This resembles the fate of Remus: Gary Forsythe even claims the mentioned king was the first ruler of Rome, Romulus & Remus are only mythical characters in his opinion, as might the eldest sons of Adam & Eve be ...

According to the New Chronology, the life of the saviour inspired the author of the mentioned revenge tragedy a lot, cause also Hamlet, MacDuff & Apemantus seem to be partial duplicates of him, sometimes in a combination with John the Baptist. On the other hand, Lear & Henry VIII seem to be duplicates of Ivan the Terrible. His oeuvre is contemperary to that of Joseph Scaliger ...

05 April 2021

Jesus Christ

According to mainstream history, "ישוע מָשִׁיחַ" resurrected after he died on a cross, a fate shared with many other Gods: It might be the "Greatest Story Ever Told", as the alignment of the Karnak Temple, where the Crux Constellation is visible, might confirm ...

Besides apostle Simon, also his brother Andrew died on a cross: Respectively, their successors are called 'pope' & 'patriarch'. One brother preached in the eternal city, while the other went to Scythia: Political Rome accepted christianity some three centuries later, while it took about a whole millenium to be succesful in Kievan Rus ...

Andrey Bogolyubsky was known as the Scythian Caesar: He extended the realm, won a civil war & imposed popular reforms. A conspiracy of displeased boyars led to his murder, comparable to Julius Caesar's: A knife was the cause of death, in this case by cutting off a hand. Interestingly, the appointed dictator got a stab from Cassius Longinus, whereas the anointed saviour received one from Saint Longinus, which definitely led to his demise ...

Andronikos Komnenos was maintaining his estates in Caucasia around the time of the mentioned murder, but a few years later he returned to Constantinople to seize the throne, attempting to fight elitist corruption. Though nearly succesful, a conspiracy of nobles arose a tumult to dethrone the emperor. Tortured by the mob while tied to a post, also his hand got cut off: Penetrating swords of soldiers finally led to his demise ...

According to the New Chronology, the mentioned characters are partial duplicates: Could the Giant's Grave on Joshua's Hill be the burial spot of the original? SN1054 might inspire us: As son of the solar deity, a second "sun" appeared temporarily, situated near the Taurus Constellation, whereof Crab Nebula is the actual remnant. However, further research made clear the event should be postponed by about one century, leading us in four dimensions to the mentioned Byzantine Emperor ...

The supernova coincides with the Great Schism, also to be postponed by one century initially, but a millenial shift even brings us back to the supposed lifetime of the anointed saviour. Was the schism an unsolved dispute, partly on that extra "sun"? It might have been the trigger for the medieval Trojan War ...

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 ...