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SaCraba.
User deleted
Elsa sapevo che questi post ti sarebbero piaciuti...
picciokkusu..siamo fuori tema,questa è la sezione archeoastronomia!! conteniamoci per favore..
mi interessava evidenziare il dio egizio-semitico Reshep perchè credo che sia legato alla dea raffigurata nella placchetta d'oro ritrovata nel relitto di Uluburun.. ma non ho idea di come esporre la cosa..
parlo di questa deaCITAZIONE (SaCraba @ 5/7/2010, 21:36)Pendant with Nude Female, Gold,Uluburun shipwreck, Late Bronze Age, ca. 1300 B.C., Bodrum Museum of Underwater Archaeology, Turkey, Photo: Bruce White.
http://arttattler.com/archivebeyondbabylon.html
Gold pendant,
possibly Astarte. Ugarit. 1500-1200/1150 BCE
www.matrifocus.com/IMB04/spotlight.htmCITAZIONE
KTU 1.78 dates Akhenaton/Exodus to 1386BCE
(....)a more responsible reading for this reference would simply be the
particulars of an eclipse event that occurred between 5am and 6am with the
sun rising in Taurus.
If we presume that perhaps the surface of this text was charred because the
text was out either drying or perhaps on some table under current
consideration and the fire that caused this was the same one mentioned to
Akhenaton in his 12th year, which is reasonable though not the only
explanation, then you potentially have a circumstantial marker for the 12th
of Akhenaton in the only eclipse date possible which is 1375BCE. This is the
year an ecilpse occurred during sunrise between 5am and 6am and the only
eclipse that does so.
Based upon the SBT (strict Biblical timeline) which uses extensive Biblical
reference for a timeline that ignores all conflicting extra-Biblical
references (ala "The Romance of Biblical Chronology" by Martin Anstey), the
Exodus is dated to 1386BCE based upon the 19th jubilee from 455BCE which
dates the 1st of Cyrus (Martin Anstey proposed that the Persian Period was
82 years too long, 357BCE455BCE for first of Cyrus). Jubilees are every 49
years; 49 x 19=931+455=1386). This means that Akhenaton's first year
(1375+11=1386BC) falls at the time of the Exodus. Considering this and
placing Akhenaton in the context of the king that ruled after the Exodus we
note a few interesting things.
1. He was not the first-born son, so would not have died.
2. He dismissed all the gods of Egypt as "worthless" which was part of the
intent of the ten plagues. One of the Ten Commandments required outlawing
the worship of any other gods.
3. He focussed on a new, single god, represented by light but refused to
make an image of the god, which was one of the ten commandments, not to make
an image of YHWH.
4. Akhenaton had a phobi of darkness, but not simple darkness, complete
darkness in the absence of artificial light. Night is not that fearful if
you have a torch so why the panic? During the three days of darkness though,
no artificial light was possible so it was total darkness which is a basis
for the fear factor of being in the dark without any light that Akhenaton
wrote about and thus focussed on Aten being a God of light versus darkness.
5. Further, the usual dating for Akhenaton is around this general time
period anyway and he would have become along with his father Amenhotep III
the pharoahsof the Exodus with the Biblical timeline dating the Exodus in
1386BCE. The eclipse only improves his chronology by moving his first year
by a mere 8 years.
http://sci.tech-archive.net/Archive/sci.ar...5/msg00081.html
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