All  

Store Banner Mobile

Store Banner Mobile

Here you can navigate quickly through all comments made in any article sorted by date/time.

  • Reply to: The Kolbrin   3 months 2 weeks ago
    Comment Author: Chitra150

    The Kolbrin stands as a captivating testament to ancient wisdom, offering readers a unique glimpse into the mysteries of the past. This ancient book, composed of two distinct sections – the Egyptian and Celtic Books of Wisdom – provides a fascinating journey through time, transcending geographical boundaries to weave a tapestry of ancient knowledge.

    https://www.ancient-origins.net/forum/kolbrin-002156gcp

  • Reply to: Which Culture Sparks Your Curiosity?   3 months 2 weeks ago
    Comment Author: Chitra150

    It’s really amazing.

  • Reply to: Pagan Temple Shifts Rome's Narrative of Rapid Conversion to Christianity   3 months 2 weeks ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    Constantine's conversion courts considerable questions.

  • Reply to: When Did Humans Stop Being Naked? (Video)   3 months 2 weeks ago
    Comment Author: riparianfrstlvr

    i know the exact day we started wearing clothes. the day we climbed down out of the trees, stopped fling feces at each other, and started throwing spears. the first man or woman that ran from a spear, through a wild rose bush or equivalent. nads or snatch...ouch!

  • Reply to: Who wrote the Bible?   3 months 2 weeks ago
    Comment Author: Bgilroy

    Overwhelming you say? Can you share any evidence? Backed by fact? Any at all??
    I think we found our Jr. high school student.

  • Reply to: King Pyrrhic’s Costly Conquest that Inspired the Term “Pyrrhic Victory”   3 months 2 weeks ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    Romans 6:23 says that the wages of sin is death. However, that doesn't mean that hardcore, evil sinners do not enjoy life. They usually do. They just pay for it eternally, afterwards.

    This is the ultimate Pyrrhic victory.

  • Reply to: Who wrote the Bible?   3 months 2 weeks ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    "The Old Testament (which dates to 300 BC)..."

    "Interestingly, another group of texts, known as the Apocrypha, were written during the time between the Old and New Testaments (400 BC to the first century AD)"

    Such is an interesting timeline, presented in these two quotes from this article. We are told the Apocrypha were all written after the Old Testament (after about 300 BC) yet some beforehand (about 400 BC).

    This is such a serious flaw it is hard to understand how an academic could have written it. It is the sort of thing one might expect from a junior high school student.

  • Reply to: Who wrote the Bible?   3 months 2 weeks ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    It is worth noting that the author has also written on how Buddha became a Christian saint. I have no doubt those desirous of a single world religion would find that article very pleasing.

    However, those ultimately behind such a religious push want no single worild religion, but two, at least in the beginning. These shall be Satanism for them and Satanism-lite for the rest of us. The Buddha fits the latter of the two perfectly. He does not fit with Christ.

  • Reply to: Who wrote the Bible?   3 months 2 weeks ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    Does Satan write things through human scribes?

    The evidence for this would appear to be overwhelming.

  • Reply to: 8 Ancient Cultures Practicing Cannibalism Through the Ages   3 months 3 weeks ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    Transubstantiation is not cannibalism. No flesh is eaten, no blood is drunk. However, that does not mean that elite Catholicism and cannibalism are not, in some ways, linked.

    Not all Catholic elites are Christian. Some worship Satan. The partaking of human flesh and blood is part of elite Satanic worship. Pretend partaking, using fake corpses at parties etc, doesn't disprove this.

    In 2024, the cannibals are not some Amazonian tribe shunning modernity, but shadowy global elites behind the push to techno-modernity. They are happy to feed us human cells or products from it in some processed food, for example. In fact, they laugh about it, as can the mainstream media they control.

    Few will believe this, however. This is the beauty of encouraging half-bright conspiracy theorists to rant about a flat Earth and reptilian aliens - the untruth discredits the unpopular truth by association.

    This article gives the impression that cannibalism is a thing of the past. Such would be a foolish notion to hold.

    People like to believe in the maxim of where there's a will there's a way. It should be flipped on it's head. Where the aforementioned global elites are concerned, it's where there's a way there's a will. If they can do it, they shall do it.

    Such was the personal mantra of Aleister Crowley, the self-proclaimed 'wickedest man in Christendom'. He's something of a favourite amongst some in history circles. Was Crowley a cannibal?

    With what I learnt decades ago, there's no chance he wasn't one.

  • Reply to: Grauballe Man: Ritual Sacrifice? Justice Dealt? Or a 2,300-Year-Old Murder Mystery?   3 months 3 weeks ago
    Comment Author: Robert105

    Econly:

    In British English, ‘corn’ refers to all cereal grains: wheat, barley, etc, not corn-on-the-cob corn – unless it’s the canned corn shipped from America.

    Typically, Europe also uses British English, but not consistently. Like all language usage, it is evolving.

  • Reply to: Unemployment Under Edward VI Was Punished with Branding and Slavery   3 months 3 weeks ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    "The Vagrancy Act was an extreme measure to coerce citizens into productive employment."

    Modern feudalism uses coercion into tax-paying employment as serfs of the state. Whether the work is truly productive is less relevant. Equally, though, it also has measures to discourage employment. These, however, are aimed at different sections of the community and the latter of the two approaches is disguised by programs to encourage employment, so few notice the underlying greater program of active discouragement. The purpose of these approaches is division for conquest. What worked for Caesar is still working today.

    This is the state of state and market control in the very unfree West. It has similarities to Medieval England, particularly in relation to peasants' revolting whereby revolt fermented slowly and disappated quickly. A prick to the emotional balloon and it's all over.

    That's because mass revolt runs out of gas very easily and is easily hijacked by traitors in the ranks. Those revolts that were successful were never mass entities, but elite-driven ones. The best candidate for the argument against that would probably be the American Revolution, yet even it is seriously questionable given the number of American Freemasons involved.

    In short, masses are ruled by elites because timidity is the default setting of the former and tyranny is often the default setting of the latter. As such, governments have much in common with Mafia protection rackets, except with less protection.

  • Reply to: Exquisite Silver Gilded Anglo-Saxon Artifact Unearthed, Baffles Experts   3 months 3 weeks ago
    Comment Author: Archaeologist

    While this artifact is very small, it still looks like an end cap to something and we may never know what it is.  The artistry in this gorgeous artifact is stunning.

  • Reply to: Opulent Tombs & Untold Wealth Revealed at Newly Found Roman Necropolis   3 months 3 weeks ago
    Comment Author: Archaeologist

    I have a necklace almost identical in construction and beauty to the one shown in the photo.  It’s amazing to think the ancient Romans were so advanced and loved beautiful things, just like we do.

  • Reply to: The Ancient Origins Of Modern Greece   3 months 3 weeks ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    The promotion of Pagan Greek origins may be seen even in the reintroduced Olympic Games. De Coubertin was a high degree Freemason tasked with destroying the true Sabbath (Saturday) with sport, and the false Sabbath (Sunday) with it later besides, as well as ensuring generations would be indoctrinated in the Pagan Greek subject at school.

    This diminished the understanding of the role of early AD Greek-speakers in the rise of Christianity. Indeed, the name 'Barbara' is a likely testament to the faith of these Greeks. It is from the same root as 'barbarian', which is an odd thing for devout early Greek Christians to call some of their daughters, esoecially given how zenophobic Ancient Greeks could be. Or maybe it wasn't that odd. It could well have been one in the eye to the Greek Pagans to effectively name one's daughter as a 'foreigner' when she wasn't one, given the Pagans regarded her Christian religion as foreign, thus throwing the insult back in their Pagan faces.

  • Reply to: The Ancient Origins Of Modern Greece   3 months 3 weeks ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    Modern Greece was a reconstruction by the powers that be, not were, for these powers are still with us. As such, these powerful elites can play the long game and, in the case of modern Greece, that was the promotion of Ancient Greece as a powerhouse of Pagan culture and more.

    These powers that be are anti-Christian and pro-Satan and, therefore, it fits them well to promote Ancient Paganism while pretending to be pro-Christianity. This was achieved by creating an Orthodox Christian country at the expense of fairly brutal Ottoman Islam, a Christian country in thrall to its glorious Pagan and equally brutal past even to the extent of pretending that Ancient Greece was greater in sciences, philosophy, democracy and other affairs than it probably was.

    Pretending is the elite default setting, after all. Most modern history, and often accepted history in general, is or was pretence. Still, as a minion one can make a good career out of pretence if one takes it seriously enough to constantly pretend it is not actually pretence, but truth. Or one can simply believe it anyway.

    People tend to believe that which they want to believe and the history of Greece, both Modern and Ancient, is no exception.

  • Reply to: Mesopotamian Military Mastery - The Ancient Reinvention of Warfare   3 months 3 weeks ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    "This was a proper army, complex and advanced."

    In other words, this was an army of indoctrinated or ultimately self-serving order-followers, doing what they were told for money and/or zeal, with no consideration for the righteousness of their actions - a proper standing army, standing on the severed heads of often innocent people..

    Much like today.

  • Reply to: Huge 500-Year-Old Longsword Recovered from Medieval Grave on Swedish Coast   3 months 3 weeks ago
    Comment Author: Nicko4404

    A sword on the left side indicates that the man was right handed. Think about just how you pull a sword out of a scabbard !

  • Reply to: Huge 500-Year-Old Longsword Recovered from Medieval Grave on Swedish Coast   3 months 3 weeks ago
    Comment Author: Archaeologist

    This is a stunning discovery.  With each new discovery we learn more about our ancestors and the way they lived and the implements they used.  Archaeology matters.

  • Reply to: From King Tut To The Jewish Tallit   3 months 3 weeks ago
    Comment Author: Damien1968

    I am unable to access the article even though I am a member.

Pages