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2: The Great Pyramid, a Professor, Mathematician, an Engineer
3: The Great Pyramid, the Mathematician, a Professor, and Engineer
4: The Age of Enlightenment
5: The Dawning of Light
6: The Great Pyramid, the men of who shaped its meaning
7: The morning of Enlightenment
8: The Seed of the Phoenix and the Great Pyramid
9: The Fire Phoenix and the Stars
10: The Great Pyamid and the Promise of Redemption
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History Categories: Total Articles Count 19
1: The Great Pyramid and the Bird of Fire
One of the strangest and least understood myths of Ancient Egypt concerns the bennu bird or phoenix. A description of the symbolism which it was intended to invoke was given by Rundle Clark.
2: The Great Pyramid, a Professor, Mathematician, an Engineer
John Taylor, an amateur astronomer, London publisher and mathematician began a study in order to analyze the measurements of the Great Pyramid. He wanted to understand the Great Pyramid from a mathematician's point of view.
3: The Great Pyramid, the Mathematician, a Professor, and Engineer
John Taylor, an amateur astronomer, London publisher and mathematician began a study in order to analyze the measurements of the Great Pyramid. He wanted to understand the Great Pyramid from a mathematician's point of view.
4: The Age of Enlightenment
In the eighteenth century travel to Egypt and then to the Giza plateau was a dangerous undertaking. Even though control of area was under the Ottomon Turks the occasional visitors were likely to be robbed or killed by bandits or Arabs.
5: The Dawning of Light
While Egypt was under the control of the Ottoman turks in the 18th century it was an extreemly hazerdous undertaking to visit the Giza plateau. The lawless renegade bandits and Arabs were likely to ro or kill the unsuspecting traveler
6: The Great Pyramid, the men of who shaped its meaning
John Taylor, an amateur astronomer, London publisher and mathematician began a study in order to analyze the measurements of the Great Pyramid. He wanted to understand the Great Pyramid from a mathematician's point of view.
7: The morning of Enlightenment
Travel to the Giza plateau became a dangerous undertaking in the eighteenth century. Though Egypt was still nominally under the suzerainty of the Ottoman Turks, the traveler was likely to be robbed or killed by gangs of bandit or Arabs.
8: The Seed of the Phoenix and the Great Pyramid
One of the most mysterious myths of ancient Egypt was the legend of the Phoenix. Rundle Clark in explains the relationship of the bennu bird to the phoenix and the symbolism it was intended to invoke.
9: The Fire Phoenix and the Stars
One of the strangest and least understood myths of Ancient Egypt concerns the bennu bird or phoenix. A description of the symbolism which it was intended to invoke was given by Rundle Clark.
10: The Great Pyamid and the Promise of Redemption
The Bible in the first chapters of Genesis reveals God's plan so that we may understand the reason for life and death on this planet. These truths are also contained in the Great Pyramid, and without such knowledge it is impossible to understand the rest of the scriptures.
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