06 Aug Ancient Demonic Shadows Of Today's Alien Body Snatchers By ashley cowie Mythology & Mystery 0 The demons that tormented the people of history were considered to be angels cast out of heaven for defying God, and similarly, today’s aliens are believed to come from distant, incomprehensible, realms in the universe. Read More
09 Aug Divine Queen Thea Musa, The Parthian Basilíssa By MartiniF History & Tradition 0 The victory of the Parthians over the Roman General Marcus Licinius Crassus at Carrhae in 53 BC is perhaps the single most significant event in Rome's engagement with Parthia. The loss of Roman standards associated with Crassus' campaign in 53 BC was not only embarrassing Read More
11 Aug Life Of A First Century AD Rural Nazarene Versus A City Sepphorite By micki pistorius Archaeology & Science 0 Nazareth was inhabited since the Bronze Age, and pottery dating from 900-600 BC confirms an Iron Age settlement there, but the Assyrian, Babylonian and Persian invasions turned the region into a wasteland. Villages were destroyed and the people exiled. Read More
13 Aug Beat The Drum, Sound The Bugle, Play The Bagpipe: Music In Warfare By ashley cowie History & Tradition 0 Since prehistoric times when hunters tapped along to the rhythm of drips in caves and carved the first bone flutes and skin drums, music has always been an integral part of the hunt and warfare, where it serves a two-fold function. Read More
16 Aug Plato’s Prehistoric Athens Destroyed In A Neolithic Landslide By Dr. Phil Flambas Archaeology & Science, Sustainability & The Environment 0 The Ancient Greek philosopher Plato wrote his Atlantis story in two documents called the Timaeus and Critias. These writings date from about 360 BC and are the only known works that describe the Atlantean civilization in detail. Read More
18 Aug Thermopylae A Speedbump for the Persian War Machine By Myke Cole History & Tradition 1 If there is a single event that made Sparta’s military legend a seminal moment when the ‘Bronze Lie’ was forged, it is the Battle of Thermopylae in 480 BC, fought 10 years after Marathon. Read More