Unravelling the Mysteries of Ancient Artifacts - Two Year Anniversary Edn (2015) - www.Ancient-Origins.net.pdf

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Unravelling the Mysteries
of Ancient Artifacts
www.Ancient‐Origins.net
Two Year Anniversary Edition
2015
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Published on 22
nd
of February 2015 to celebrate the Two Year
Anniversary of www.Ancient‐Origins.net.
This eBook wouldn’t have been possible without the
contribution of the authors and writers that have supported
Ancient Origins from the beginning.
Many thanks to:
Ralph Ellis, Brien Foerster, Petros Koutoupis, Maria Wheatley,
Dr Rita Louise, Hugh Newman, Rand and Rose Flem‐Ath, Tashi
Alexander Javed, Ahmed Osman, Gary A. David, Leonide Martin,
Scott Onstott, Gary Evans, and Paul Burley.
www.Ancient‐Origins.net
Facebook – Google+ – YouTube – Twitter – Tumblr
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Table of Contents 
The Ark of Edessa by Ralph Ellis
2
 
A Mysterious Map Emerges at the Dawn of Egyptian
Civilization by Rand & Rose Flem‐Ath
14
 
Circular Myth – The Dendera Zodiac by
Tashi Alexander
Javed
27
 
Eteocypriot and the Amathus Bilingual by
Petros
Koutoupis
37
 
The Vajra: An Ancient Weapon of War by Dr Rita Louise
49
 
Stonehenge: Mounds, Artifacts, and Intrigue by
Maria
Wheatley
60
 
Memnon’s Musical Statue by Ahmed Osman
73
 
Lost Ancient High Technology in Egypt by
Brien
Foerster
84
 
The Sacred Meaning of the Reed by Gary A. David
98
 
Mayan Women and the Coiled Snake Headdress by
Leonide Martin
110
 
The Mystery of Obelisks by Scott Onstott
123
 
Ancient Acoustic Artifacts and Communication with the
“Gods” by Gary Evans
140
 
Geometric Stone Spheres of Scotland… and Beyond by
Hugh Newman
154
 
Orion: Overlord of Stonehenge by Paul Burley
1
173
 
The Ark of Edessa 
By Ralph Ellis
The year was 165 AD, and the location was the Edessan
necropolis at Sogmatar, in what was then northern Syria. In this
year King Wa'el of Edessa had an inscription carved upon the
sacred hill of Sogmatar, which said:
In Sebat of the year 476 (of the Seleucid era) ... we set up this
pillar
(netsib) on this blessed mountain and erected a
seat
(kersa) for the one who maintains it. The governor will be a
budar
... and he will give the
seat
to the one who is going to
maintain it ... If he withholds the seat or the pillar is ruined, god
will be the judge.
1
Before we come onto the meaning of this inscription, lets first
look at the hill of Sogmatar. It is the central focus of the Edessan
royal necropolis, which lies in a very remote location in the
barren rolling hills to the southeast of Edessa (modern Sanlurfa
in Turkey). And the strange thing about this man‐made hill, is
that it is the same size and shape as Silbury Hill in England. Why
and how this similarity arose, is open to speculation.
Figure 1. The identical man‐made hills of Silbury and Sogmatar.
(Photo credit: Ralph Ellis)
2
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