Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Archaeologists find 120m tunnel leading to ‘funeral chambers’ deep below ancient Mexican city

June 2, 2011 by  
Filed under Ancient Religions

It has taken technology almost two millennia to break one of the greatest secrets of the ancient Americas. Archaeologists have discovered ‘a recreation of the underworld’ at the ancient city of Teotihuacan in Mexico thanks to a radar device.  Researchers have only advanced 7 metres along the tunnel but the radar has revealed it to [...]

Bizarre Rat Temple

April 19, 2011 by  
Filed under Ancient Religions, Weird

Karni Mata was a female Hindu sage born in the Charan caste and is worshiped as the incarnation of the goddess Durga by her followers. She is an official deity of the royal family of Jodhpur and Bikaner. During her lifetime, she laid the foundation stone of two of the important forts in Rajputana. She [...]

Holy, or wholly accessible?

March 29, 2010 by  
Filed under Ancient Religions

At 10.30 this morning, the planning committee of Exmoor National Park will sit at its headquarters in an old Victorian workhouse, behind the statue of local heroine Lorna Doone in Dulverton, to decide whether All Saints Church at the top of the hill should be allowed to have a new road put across its ancient [...]

The power of the rose

March 26, 2010 by  
Filed under Ancient Religions

Gertrude stein once wrote ‘A rose is a rose is a rose’ as part of her poem Sacred Emily, which apparently, in her view, meant that simply using the name of something invokes the imagery and emotions associated with it. A more common interpretation of this sentence is that “things are what they are”. But [...]

666: the day of the Devil

March 22, 2010 by  
Filed under Ancient Religions

According to legend, today is the day of the Devil ? and will trigger the end of the world. Superstitious hokum? Hollywood hype? Or should we really prepare for the worst… Across the world, millions of women are due to give birth. Apart from the usual understandable concerns about whether their baby will be born [...]

Primary 90-Sacred-Year Age of Enos

February 6, 2010 by  
Filed under Ancient Religions

Description: Primary 90-Sacred-Year Age of Enos defines partitions within the Antediluvian Calendar year. Mayan 260-day-Tzolken-sacred-years and 360-day-Tun-years describe the primary characters from Adam to Enoch in Genesis 5. Enos is the third Antediluvian Patriarch in the chain that quarters the 360-year-Tun-cycle with a primary 90-Tzolken-sacred-year age. Article Title: Primary 90-Sacred-Year Age of Enos Author: Clark [...]

Sumerian 6 Sign Zodiac and Mayan Calendar 360-Day-Tun-Years

February 2, 2010 by  
Filed under Ancient Religions

Description: The Antediluvian Calendar in Genesis 5 illustrates the early Black Head Sumerian zodiac that had six astrological signs. Sumerian and Babylonian animal zodiacs stipulate the vernal equinox began the New Year. Mayan Calendar 260-day-Tzolken-sacred-years and 360-day-Tun-years are products of the Decan stars and numbering systems. Egyptian, Greek, Roman, Chinese, Hindu and African people shared [...]

Measuring Value

January 30, 2010 by  
Filed under Ancient Religions

Measuring Value compares intangibles within the marketplace to the business of organized religion. Popularity is the indicator for accurate ideas. The most amazing component in nearly every deep chronology is the one offered by, and interpreted from, the Holy Bible. We can measure hits, but ideas are impossible to appraise. Measuring Value Clark Nelson 771 [...]