cladking Wrote:
Deleted
Cladking if you had learned to read the AE Egyptian language instead of pretending to understand it you would be able to answer your own question.
Alas you didn't.
We understand your ego prevents you from seeing the evidence, that's okay we know it is impossible to get you to acknowledge your decades of incompetence and blindness.You simply deny and d
by
Hans
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Ancient Egypt
cladking Wrote:
Deleted
Tombs, 2 + 2 doesn't equal 5 Cladking no matter how many times you scream it.
by
Hans
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Ancient Egypt
cladking Wrote:
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> Hans Wrote:
> -------------------------------------------------------
> > John Greaves (1602-1652), professor of
> astronomy
> > at the University of Oxford, first reviewed the
> > existing literature and then went to Egypt to
> > study the pyramids for himself. He dismissed
> al
by
Hans
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Ancient Egypt
Hermione Wrote:
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> Hans Wrote:
> -------------------------------------------------------
> > Hermione Wrote:
> >
> -------------------------------------------------------
>
> ...
>
> > > (I'm just wondering now (given that the Nile
> is
> > > today about 5 miles from the GP
by
Hans
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Ancient Egypt
Hermione Wrote:
> Yes, Herodotus did (and see also the authors
> mentioned in Hans' post). And so did Inspector
> Merer, with his references to "Akhet Khufu."
This is one he refuses to see....
Oh he denied that the Greek word Pyramid has anything to do with tombs and that the pyramids aren't 'Mer'
by
Hans
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Ancient Egypt
cladking Wrote:
Deleted
Cladking long experience has shown that it is not a worthwhile endeavor to engage a pathological liar and one so blind that he pretends he doesn't see evidence.
The two dozen or so folks I sent your disgraceful treatment of Manu and your childish dismissal of his evidence against you idiotic Zipf idea clearly show you are not worth talking too.
by
Hans
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Ancient Egypt
John Greaves (1602-1652), professor of astronomy at the University of Oxford, first reviewed the existing literature and then went to Egypt to study the pyramids for himself. He dismissed all the accounts of the Giza pyramids having been built by biblical figures or legendary kings. From the classical sources, it was he who concluded that these monuments were erected by Cheops (Khufu), Chephren (
by
Hans
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Ancient Egypt
Hermione Wrote:
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> Thanks for the quotes, Hans.
>
> Where Herodotus has the edge on the other ancient
> writers, of course, is that he's some centuries
> before Strabo.
>
> (I'm just wondering now (given that the Nile is
> today about 5 miles from the GP) whether the
> legend about the canal re
by
Hans
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Ancient Egypt
cladking Wrote:
Al-Mas’udi, Meadows of Gold (c. 947-956 CE)
Chapter 31
...On the question of the construction of the pyramids: “They were,” he (the Copt) continued, “the tombs of the kings. When one of their kings died, his body was placed in a stone basin similar to what is called a djarun in Egypt and Syria; this they sealed with a lid, and they started to construct the pyramid from the ba
by
Hans
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Ancient Egypt
cladking Wrote:
Strabo circa 64 BC-19 AD
At the distance of 40 stadia from Memphis is a brow of a hill, on which are many pyramids, the tombs of the kings.64 Three of them are considerable. Two of these are reckoned among the seven wonders . They are a stadium in height, and of a quadrangular shape. Their height somewhat exceeds the length of each of the sides.65 One pyramid is a little lar
by
Hans
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Ancient Egypt
cladking Wrote:
>
> But the fact remains no ancient author referred
> to any great pyramid as a tomb and no contemporary
> evidence exists any great pyramid was intended or
> used as a tomb.
Yes they did - and you know they do - why are you lying about this?
by
Hans
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Ancient Egypt
Strabo circa 64 BC-19 AD
At the distance of 40 stadia from Memphis is a brow of a hill, on which are many pyramids, the tombs of the kings.64 Three of them are considerable. Two of these are reckoned among the seven wonders . They are a stadium in height, and of a quadrangular shape. Their height somewhat exceeds the length of each of the sides.65 One pyramid is a little larger than the other
by
Hans
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Ancient Egypt
Yawn - 2 years ago
cladking Wrote:
Remember you've made these same comment several dozen, if not hundreds of times before and ignore any answer to it. So what is your point? Trolling?
Who cares what you 'believe' you also 'believe' all kinds of ridiculous stuff even after experiments you yourself set up show you are wrong.
Most of these claims you've already made hundreds o
by
Hans
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Ancient Egypt
Corvidius Wrote:
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> A bit to one side, what intrigues me is that from
> our perspective living far into their future, were
> we can easliy fall into the trap of
> "concertinering" 3,000 years of history, we find
> that important gods became "popular" only in later
> times, Osiris being the main one
by
Hans
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Ancient Egypt
Byrd Wrote:
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> That's.... very very strange.
I think it's suppose to be
by
Hans
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Coffee Shop
Hermione Wrote:
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> Hans Wrote:
> -------------------------------------------------------
> > Hermione Wrote:
> >
> -------------------------------------------------------
> > > It looks interesting, but I couldn't work out
> > how
> > > to read it: it just says "snippet view"
by
Hans
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Coffee Shop
Hermione Wrote:
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> It looks interesting, but I couldn't work out how
> to read it: it just says "snippet view" ...
You probably need to open Play.google.com
by
Hans
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Coffee Shop
M. Williams Wrote:
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> You have no clue what you are talking about. Let's
> see your spirit/air/intercom evidence .?
Why would I do that? You have no clue what you are talking about which is why you are trying to change the subject. Isn't that so?
I remember who you are M. Williams and your methodology you are unqua
by
Hans
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Ancient Egypt
M. Williams Wrote:
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> -The QC shafts that were found plugged would have
> been open in the room that existed in that
> position before it was remodeled. The room we see
> today would not have been the room that was there
> when the shafts were open and functional.
Speculation and assumption
>
> -The idea is on
by
Hans
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Ancient Egypt
M. Williams Wrote:
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> Hey Hans.
>
> Super easy answer = remodeled the queen's chamber
> and moved the mechanism (or whatever) into King's
> Chamber.
>
> Whatever the rolling stones function, im
> guessing,it would have been related somehow to the
> fact those two chambers were located above gro
by
Hans
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Ancient Egypt
interesting: Questions
How would it 'trigger anything' if it was found sitting in a sealed shaft?
How close do you think it would have been on its passage down the shaft to the 'device' it was suppose to trigger?
by
Hans
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Ancient Egypt
Excellent another guide to wander thru ... and wonder.
by
Hans
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Ancient Egypt
robin cook Wrote:
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> There should be no need to mount an expedition.
> Petrie surveyed Giza and published his results,
> which have been accepted by the Egyptological
> community. Gantenbrink said that he made his own
> survey of the pyramid which placed his shaft exit
> points at a higher level, but as far as I know
by
Hans
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Ancient Egypt
robin cook Wrote:
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> This is a continuation of a previous discussion of
> the subject -
>
> as requested.
>
> Hans wrote -"I suggest we start with where we
> currently stand with understanding the physical
> aspects; size, length, direction and internal
> attributes of the various shafts." Abs
by
Hans
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Ancient Egypt
ah yes I was looking for AE religious reason for the humor -and didn't find it! Thanks
by
Hans
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Ancient Egypt
Hermione Wrote:
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> Hans Wrote:
> -------------------------------------------------------
>
> ...
>
> > Took a look at the location and its (with
> > restricted camera lenses) of the place next to
> > Queen Khentkawas tomb
> >
> >
>
> >
> > So it uses the cutting arou
by
Hans
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Ancient Egypt
Hermione Wrote:
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> Hans Wrote:
> -------------------------------------------------------
>
> >
>
> >
> > Well some creative camera angles but what are
> we
> > actually looking at?
>
> Perhaps the thinking is that this supposed second
> sphinx was once a sphinx like the one we kn
by
Hans
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Ancient Egypt