I call myself a Royal and a GOD?
ANCIENTS: They call themselves GODS, PHAROAHS, etc. We are living through an agenda THEY created! I call this sorcery and manipulation of history -- and fake science.
The ancient Egyptians (MINOANS/ROMANS) wanted to defy death and live forever. [They obviously consider themselves SUPERIOR) In preparation, they mummified their dead, burying them in coffins covered with religious scenes and texts, and surrounding them with grave goods to sustain them in the afterlife. With more than 140 objects ranging in date from about 1700 BC to AD 300, the Mummies gallery (Museum of Fine Arts Boston) introduces visitors to the gods and goddesses who inhabited the underworld, and to the journey taken to reach them. The installation features five embalmed dignitaries, including the husband and wife duo of Nesptah and Tabes, still enclosed in their elaborately decorated cases, and Nesmutaatneru, whose blue bead-adorned mummy was buried in a series of three coffins. Other objects include carved tomb chapel walls, painted coffins, statues, magical equipment, papyri, and canopic jars, designed to hold the mummified organs of the deceased. Dominating the gallery is the massive black stone sarcophagus lid of Kheperra, a general in the 6th century BC. READ: https://www.mfa.org/gallery/mummies
An elaborate hoax of history, YES!
Ancient Egypt: History, dynasties, religion and writing
LIVE SCIENCE: https://www.livescience.com/55578-egyptian-civilization.html
The rich history of ancient Egypt involves power struggle, amazing feats of engineering, advances in writing and art, and more.
When exactly early hominids first arrived in Egypt is unclear. (No, the Ancients kept records but carefully hid them.) The earliest migration of hominids out of Africa took place almost 2 million years ago, with modern humans dispersing out of Africa about 100,000 years ago. Egypt may have been used to reach Asia in some of these migrations. (JUST THEORY!)
Villages dependent on agriculture began to appear in Egypt about 7,000 years ago. The civilization's earliest written inscriptions date back about 5,200 years and reveal information about the early rulers of Egypt, Live Science previously reported. These early rulers (gods) include Iry-Hor, who, according to the inscriptions, founded Memphis, a city that served as Egypt's capital for much of its history. The inscriptions also document a queen named Neith-Hotep, who ruled as a regent for a young pharaoh named Djer. [The word pharaoh originates from the Egyptian term "per-aa," which means "the Great House," Leprohon wrote. The term was first incorporated into a royal title during the rule of Thutmose III (reign circa. 1479 to 1425 B.C.). The country's ancient rulers are referred to today as "pharaohs," although in ancient times they each used a series of names as part of a royal titular, wrote Ronald Leprohon, an Egyptology professor at the University of Toronto, in his book "The Great Name: Ancient Egyptian Royal Titulary (opens in new tab)" (Society of Biblical Literature, 2013).]
How
and when ancient Egypt was united into one kingdom is a matter of
debate among archaeologists and historians. One possibility is that a
number of smaller states coalesced into two kingdoms — Upper and Lower
Egypt — and then these two kingdoms united. After Egypt was united
pharaohs were often depicted wearing two crowns — one for Lower Egypt
and another for Upper Egypt. (Ha, this is funny. They knew what they were doing and created multiple places and names and titles for themselves.)
Egypt's climate was much wetter in prehistoric times than it is today, and some areas that are now barren desert were once fertile. One famous archaeological site where this can be seen is at the "cave of swimmers," as it is called today, on the Gilf Kebir plateau in southwest Egypt. The cave is now surrounded by miles of barren desert; however, it has rock art showing what some scholars interpret as people swimming. The exact date of the rock art is unclear, although scholars think that it was created in prehistoric times.
Ancient Egypt's history has traditionally been divided into 30 (or sometimes 31) dynasties. (Civilizations and Empires, of course)
READ: https://www.livescience.com/55578-egyptian-civilization.html
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Commodus as the infant Hercules killing the snakes |
Roman portraits, and especially those of emperors, were frequently given attributes of gods and other mythological characters. (No, they act like they are GODS and commit heinous acts!) Particularly common by the mid-second century A.D. were images of the emperor in the guise of Hercules, the hero who earned immortality for his labors; the emperor could hope for a similar fate, namely official deification, if he maintained the love of the Roman people. (What crap) Still, immense political power sometimes begat excesses, as demonstrated by the manner in which Commodus, whose reign lasted from A.D. 180 to 192, pursued his Herculean fantasy.
A bond between Commodus and Hercules may have been cultivated from childhood, when, as the oldest living son of Emperor Marcus Aurelius (reigned A.D. 161-80), Commodus was next in line for the throne. (Above) This fragmentary marble statue illustrates a popular legend in which the youthful Hercules strangles a pair of snakes. The boy's hairstyle matches that worn by Commodus on coins minted in his mid-teens, suggesting that this statue is a mythologizing portrait of the prince.
Debate continues regarding the date of the statue, which may have been commissioned either when Commodus was a child or later in his life in an attempt to impart a heroic dimension to his boyhood.
There is no doubt, however, that when Commodus grew up to be emperor, he actively perpetuated his bond with Hercules. The reverse of this medallion shows a half-draped standing figure of Hercules, with the hair and beard of Commodus, pouring an offering over a burning altar; his wooden club rests against the altar, and his trademark lion's skin hangs from a nearby tree. Disposing of any ambiguity, the inscription running around the edge of the medallion makes the fusion of emperor and hero explicit by naming him Hercules Commodianus.
SICK SICK SICK -- I think it's obvious these are very sick people with psychopathic traits and extreme narcissism. All the historians "flower" their stories to make them interesting and not f*cking lunatics)
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