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  • Reply to: Face of the Only Victim of Roman Crucifixion Found in Britain is Revealed   3 months 1 week ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    An article about crucifixion without a single mention of the famous crucifixion of all.

    The Devil would be most pleased.

  • Reply to: Charlemagne: How He Changed History Forever (Video)   3 months 1 week ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    Charles is an imposing figure in history. Yet, was he that great? Were other Christians he persecuted that heretical? Was he, himself, even that Christian?

    We have a one-sided ledger. It is written by the winners, such as Pope Leo III. The vanquished tell us nothing. Any lies about them must remain unchallenged.

    We are expected to believe what we're told. However, given who happily stands behind what we're told, such as the Vatican, that would seem to be potential folly.

    To put it bluntly, was Charles closer to Satan than to God?

  • Reply to: Vast, 4,000-Year-Old Oasis Fortification Discovered in North Arabia   3 months 1 week ago
    Comment Author: Kamlah

    Keeping the livestock in and out.

     

  • Reply to: Why Are Mysterious Handbags Prevalent in Ancient Carvings Worldwide?   3 months 1 week ago
    Comment Author: Kamlah

    Thank you!  I’m a farm person myself, along with being an amateure  historian, the more ancient the history the better.  The first time I saw something about the “mysterious handbags” I enlarged the image and thoughtt BUCKET.   Humans figured out basic animal husbandry first, then horticulture. In the beginning, you move the animals to water . You have to move the water  to the plants. Once  how to make buckets as an alternative to unsealed baskets or crockery was figured out, not only could water be taken to crops, but hundreds of other things could be transported easily.  Modern humans think of buckets as being made of hard, “workable” substances like metals (and now plastics). But buckets have also been made from wood  & bark, other plant parts & leather. One of thejokes about paleontology is “if you have no idea what the object was for, it must be of religious significance”.  This is a case in point, even tho having important beings ( religious or not), carrying buckets makes perfect sense.  During the invention of agriculture, the ability to grow plants where you wanted them was impressive – had to have been the sort of thing that the ‘immaterial’ world was responsible for & protective of. The occurance of the buckets in association with representations of useful plants would be consistent with this.

  • Reply to: Beyond Reality: 5 Common Themes in World Mythologies   3 months 1 week ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    Uluru wasn't particularly sacred. It has been granted sacred status by a disingenuous media and activist lobbying, such that the historical truth as it used to be is no longer recognised.

    The same applies to religious truth. There is a concerted effort to tear down Christianity, from without and within, and to raise up the false to equal status.

  • Reply to: Melting Stone With Plants: Was the Mythical 'Green Chisel' A Real Ancient Tool?   3 months 1 week ago
    Comment Author: chann

    Is there a link to be able to find the 40+ plants that naturally contain HF? I'm trying to identify any that might be in my area of North America so I can experiment with them.

  • Reply to: Ancient DNA Reveals Reason for High Multiple Sclerosis Rates in Europe   3 months 1 week ago
    Comment Author: Cataibh

    "This means we can now understand and seek to treat MS for what it actually is: the result of a genetic adaptation to certain environmental conditions that occurred back in our prehistory."

    The link between vaccination and diseases like MS will never be studied. Sure, genetics are important in MS. Uncoincidentally, genetics are the keys to bioweapon development.

    Whomsoever thinks bioweapons are outlawed and, therefore, don't exist is perfect fodder for them.

  • Reply to: Unearthing the Lost City Built By Prisoners Of The Famous Trojan War   3 months 1 week ago
    Comment Author: Nicko4404

    Serapis is more accurately described as a Greek- Egyptian god, closely associated with the Ptomelaic dynasty in Egypt. This indicates that the wearer probably either spent time in Egypt, post 330bc, or had trading connections with Egypt.

  • Reply to: The Riddle of the Rock Piles—Effigies and Enigmas: A Southeastern Mystery Story – Part I   3 months 2 weeks ago
    Comment Author: jim willis

    Hawkstone – I wish I could go exploring with you, but I’m afraid age and physical limitations have caught up with me. You can email me through the contact page of my website at www.jimwillis.net. I’d love to hear from you! Jim 

  • Reply to: The Riddle of the Rock Piles—Effigies and Enigmas: A Southeastern Mystery Story – Part I   3 months 2 weeks ago
    Comment Author: Hawkstone

    I'm glad I found this article. I actually live in South Carolina. I have found stone piles in North Carolina and South Carolina. As a matter fact, not far from where I live, I have found much more than that. I found what appears to be the remnants of an ancient settlement, Complete with a stone quarry, pieces of broken pottery, eroding out of the hillside, what looks like a terra formed hill, which was used as a settlement above the river floodplain, modified trees that acted as "road signs "to mark trails in the area and indicate direction, evidence of mineral extraction and processing, a magnificent fish or across a fork of the river, and most importantly, a ceremonial site, where some boulders were strategically, arranged and shaped and marked to indicate and record the direction of the setting of the sun during winter solstice. You can't top that. I have run into some resistance from local and state archaeologists, which is an absolute shame, but frankly not that surprising. not sure if it's jealousy or exactly exactly what the problem is but doors have been shut. Ironically, only a few miles north, and south in both directions excavations and discoveries have been made. The most interesting thing to me more recently is the discovery of the solstice site.  There is a boulder that is part of the assembly, which has what looks like pieces of white quartz embedded in the boulder. I've always thought crystals were a bit of a mystery, and with all the recent evidence and discoveries being made by both scientists and amateurs, such as myself is getting more interesting.  Too bad I can't find out where the guy who wrote this article is located because it would be great going out and exploring with other like-minded people. 

  • 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 2 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.

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