LL-L "History" 2007.04.01 (02) [E]

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L O W L A N D S - L - 01 April - Volume 02

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From: Theo Homan <theohoman at yahoo.com>
Subject: L-L "History" 2007.03.31 (01) [E]

> From: john welch <sjswelch at yahoo.com.au>
> Subject: LL-L "History" 2007.03.30 (04) [E]
>
> Hi Marcel,
> "Do you think it is likely that a word like Alans
> has lead to a word like
> Asir?"
> The quote is not about my ideas, and I am not a
> linguist, and I guess "Asir"
> did not come from "Alan". Perhaps the "Aesir" are
> linked to "Assyria"?
> The dragon of Assyria /Babylon has links with
> Scythians and Celts, as
> Brahmin Danu river-goddess also has links with
> Scythian DNieper and Celt
> DANUbe rivers of the dragon-woman. The dragons on
> Lom stave-church in Norway
> are next to the steeple with 4 corner-spires. This
> is seen on Persian mihr
> temples, which are square with 4 gables on the roof.
> That shape is copied in
> Armenia's Mother temple, built over a Persian mihr,
> and having out-lying
> towers with 4 gables. The great example is Angkor
> Wat in Cambodia, of
> Scythian tradition.These represent Mount Meru,
> mythic central world-mountain
> of Brahmins, located between between India and
> Russia, with 4 rivers to the
> compass directions.  The 4 gable shape is seen in
> the Rhenish Helm
> church-steeple of the Rhine area. It has the sense
> of government to the 4
> quarters, as in the symbol >+<. That sacred sign
> with v and ^ at top and
> bottom, is A   /ang/  meaning "vow. abyss. death",
> and may be the sense of
> "Angle" people. (Cambodian "Angkor" is from Skt.
> negara meaning "people of
> the city. government"). The shape persists in
> Scandinavian flags.
> John

Hello,

Archetypes always have links.
And so have figures.

vr.gr.
Theo Homan

•

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