No comments Pyramid Research Researchers have conclusively demonstrated that objects placed inside pyramid shapes are acted upon by unusual properties. These properties are independent of known physical variables because the physical variables could not, by themselves, reproduce the properties. Therefore, experimenters are faced with a physical phenomenon foreign to accepted concepts of physics and chemistry, […]
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Cleopatra Queen of Ancient Egypt
No comments Cleopatra Queen Cleopatra and the last of the Ptolemies Egypt was bequeathed to Ptolemy XIPs daughter, Cleopatra VII, aged 17, with the injunction that she should marry the elder of her two brothers, Ptolemy XIII. He, with the aid of ever-scheming palace courtiers, this time Pothinus and Achillas, attempted to dispose of her, […]
Setnakhte Pharaoh Biography 1185-1182 BC
No comments Setnakhte (mereramunre) Userkhaure Setepenre 1185-1182 BC The 19th Dynasty had ended with a degree of confusion, not least with the presence of Twosret as queen regnant, only the fourth in Egypt’s history to that date. Whether there was a short period of anarchy, perhaps of only a few months, between the end of […]
The Secret Sign is Ancient Egyptian Pyramid
No comments A lot of people asking themselves where is the most place has Pyramids ? The secret word in our story is Egypt. Notice this article need to modify don’t be hesitate to read the master topic : The only 10 Pyramids in Ancient Egypt There are between 110 and 138 ancient Egyptian pyramids […]
Coming from the Desert, 1483 | Walking Through Egypt
No comments Coming from the Desert, 1483 Friar Felix Fabri Egyptian Desert Without warning the hoped-for moment arrived. From the edge of a plateau we looked down to where, over against us, far below, lay a country of a different kind . . . from our barren and enormous waste. For we looked down upon […]
Luxor Temple: Grandeur and Craft, 1844 | Walking Through Egypt
No comments Luxor Temple: Grandeur and Craft, 1844 Prince Puckler-Muskau Luxor Temple The first observation that forced itself upon me, was one that has occurred to many others: viz. how much better the Egyptians understood architecture than we do, and how little we have been able to learn from them. The removal of the second […]
The Aswan Dam
No comments The Aswan Dam For thousands of years, leadership in Egypt has been associated with that great source of life the Nile. From the first pharaoh, Narmer (3100 BC), who traditionally diverted the river at Memphis, to Nektanebos (360 BC), the last Egyptian pharaoh, canals were cleared and irrigation projects were carried out. When […]
Women along the Banks of the Nile, 1819
No comments Women along the Banks of the Nile, 1819 John Fuller Banks of Nile River The groups of women going to fetch water form a striking feature in the scenery of the Nile. Thirty or forty of them are frequently seen walking in single file, and at regular distances to and from the river, […]
Ra Egyptian God of the Sun
9 comments Ra God The Sun God Now we will speak about the most famous God in ancient Egypt ( Ra God ) the God of the Sun our article will consist of some points Ra ancient Egyptian God Ra God was a version of the sun god , and Egyptian art often represented him […]
Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Energy Part 2
No comments E.S.P. Laboratory, a psychical-research organization based in Los Angeles, California, is conducting experiments in which the pyramid shape is actually used as an incubator for thought forms. The organization’s director, A1 Manning, explains that the pyramid form functions as a geometric amplifier which increases the power of prayer or strengthens the spiritual request […]
The Old Kingdom of Ancient Egypt
No comments The Old Kingdom The Old Kingdom which had its beginnings round about 2700 B.C. is considered by many scholars to be the greatest period of the whole of Egyptian civilisation. It is also sometimes called the Memphis Kingdom, the capital being moved from Abydos to Memphis (Memphis, the capital of the 1st nome […]
Preparing to Collect the Young Memnon, 1817 | Luxor
No comments Preparing to Collect the ‘Young Memnon,’ 1817 Giovanni Belzoni Young Memnon After having taken a cursory view of Luxor and Karnak, to which my curiosity led me on my landing, I crossed the Nile to the west, and proceeding straight to the Memnonium, I had to pass before the two colossal figures in […]
Ra God and the Phoenix
1 comment The Ra – Sun God – and the Phoenix Sacred at Heliopolis, the phoenix was a mythological bird based on the wingtail or the heron. It was specially attached to Ra God because it seemed to mimic the sun rising from the water when it took flight. Its Egyptian name (for “phoenix” I […]
Temple of Horus at Edfu
No comments Temple of Horus at Edfu Edfu (Greek Apollonopolis), which is situated between Esna and Aswan, is a site with a long-standing tradition. Its name is derived from the ancient Edbo; it means ‘The Town of the Piercing’ and refers to the triumph of Horus over Set. Temple of Horus There is evidence of […]
