06 Aug 2018 Once Upon A Time: Concepts of Afterlife and Altered Consciousness Concealed in Faerie Folklore By nrushton Mythology & Mystery 0 Once upon a Time, they all lived happily ever-after. In the 1891 publication The Science of Fairy Tales, the folklorist Edwin Sidney Hartland devoted three chapters to ponder over ‘The Supernatural Lapse of Time in Fairyland.’ He makes it clear... Read More
03 Aug 2018 The Pros and Cons of the Armory of the Ancient Israelites By Cam Rea History & Tradition 0 While the Israelites saw Yahweh in the spiritual sense as their divinely armed warrior leading the way, in the physical realm, they were anything but divinely armed. At Sinai, Moses instituted a draft in which the number swelled from 1,000... Read More
01 Aug 2018 Does the Ancient Symbolism of the Los Angeles Public Library Hide a Luciferian Undertone? By ashley cowie Archaeology & Science 0 To most people the Los Angeles Public Library is a functional city building providing books and reference material to the public. Online, however, the library has come under attack by a growing army of misguided New Age writers, who paint the... Read More
30 Jul 2018 Arth Vawr and the Pendragon: Astronomical Link Between the Great Bear and Draco Constellations and the Arthurian Legend? By jim willis Mythology & Mystery 1 From Mystery Hill and the spot dubbed Calendar Hill in New England to the venerable Stonehenge, from Incan Pyramids to the Australian outback, from the windswept northern Islands of Great Britain to sun-washed Egyptian ruins, the findings all are... Read More
27 Jul 2018 When the Falcon Had Flown: Evidence of Approximate Order in Burial Paraphernalia – Part II By anand balaji Archaeology & Science 0 A great deal of ritualistic activity was involved in the burial of royals in the ‘Valley of the Kings’. This apart, stocking their tombs with everything that they would need in the Afterlife was crucial. The procedures seem to have followed a... Read More
25 Jul 2018 When the Falcon Had Flown: Understanding the Process of Stocking Pharaonic Tombs – Part I By anand balaji Archaeology & Science 0 Given their overwhelming belief in the Afterlife, did ancient Egyptian royalty organize their tombs in advance of their eventual demise; or were preparations made post mortem? Although we do not possess any single book or set of texts that provide... Read More
23 Jul 2018 Passions of Pele: The Hawaiian Goddess of Fire By MartiniF Mythology & Mystery 0 Kilauea, one of earth’s most active volcanoes located on the island of Hawaii, is believed to be inhabited by a family of gods. One member of the family has become the most visible of all the old gods and goddesses of Hawaii. Her name is Pele,... Read More
18 Jul 2018 The Mythologized Legacy of the North American Mounds By ashley cowie History & Tradition 0 Ancient landscapes the world over were once encrusted with earthen mounds, variously called cairns, tumulus, barrows, burial mounds and kurgans. In England, Silbury Hill near Avebury in the English county of Wiltshire, is a prehistoric... Read More
16 Jul 2018 The Ancient Trackways of Britain’s Ley-Lines Steered Bronze Age Tin Miners By Charles Christian Mythology & Mystery 0 The Great St Michael and St Mary Alignment (or ‘corridor of incidence’) is probably the most famous ley-line in Britain, if not the world. Running for 350-miles across the country in a north-east to south-westerly direction, from the East... Read More
13 Jul 2018 How Did the Benjamites Manage to Overthrown the Mighty Moabites: Ehud the Deliverer By Cam Rea History & Tradition 0 After forty years had passed after settling in the promised land of Canaan, the Israelites found themselves dealing with an old adversary. Chushan-Rishathaim, the ‘twice-evil Kushite, king of Aram-Naharaim, or north-west Mesopotamia, was the... Read More