04 Jul 2018 The Rage of Horemheb: Traditionalism for the Greater Glory of the Egyptian State – Part II By anand balaji Archaeology & Science 0 Horemheb was no run-of-the-mill general, but a true nationalist at heart. The demise of King Aye was a watershed moment, insofar as getting the country back on track wholeheartedly was concerned. With no opposition to him or his ideals; Horemheb... Read More
02 Jul 2018 The Rage of Horemheb: Hurried End of Akhenaten, Aye and Atenism – Part I By anand balaji Archaeology & Science 0 Barely four years after the death of Nebkheperure Tutankhamun in 1323 BC, the powerful ruling family was overthrown by Horemheb, a general and one-time non-royal crown prince; ending the Thutmosid line - and later, the Eighteenth Dynasty itself -... Read More
27 Jun 2018 Following ‘Sarn Helen’, an Ancient Roman Network of Roads, Across Wales By Elyn and Gary Archaeology & Science 0 Looking at a detailed roadmap of Wales, one will notice an unusual feature; alongside, and sometimes between the expected highways and scenic byways is a broken assortment of dotted lines identified as ‘Sarn Helen’. These splintered lines are... Read More
25 Jun 2018 The Significance of Planetary Harmony: Creating Megalithic Structures Through Music By Richard Heath Archaeology & Science 0 Over the last 7,000 years, hunter-gathering humans have been transformed into the 'modern' norms of city dwellers through a series of metamorphoses during which the intellect developed ever-larger descriptions of the world. Past civilizations and... Read More
13 Jun 2018 The Lost Legacy of the Super Intelligent Denisovans Who Calculated Cygnocentric-based Cosmological Alignments 45,000 Years Ago By Andrew Collins Archaeology & Science 2 A chance discovery by archaeologists in 2008 of a finger phalanx of an archaic human found in the Denisova Cave in the Altai Mountains of southern Siberia has helped change everything we know about the origins of civilization. The sequencing of the... Read More