Dragon Court and the Order of the Garter, getting to know our Enemy who thinks they rule the world. Aristocracy and Hierarchy clings to Civilization like a bad Habit. Part 2 of Studying the Enemy.
The red dragon on The Prince of Wales's coat of arms is more symbolic of Wales than of the prince. The Welsh flag (🏴) is known as The Red Dragon. It is said by some to represent Enki/Enoch/Ptah, known in Wales as Idris, who appears in the Mabinogi. I have heard him called The Father of Wales.
With regard to the red cross of Saint George, it is said to have been presented by Joseph of Arimathea (Saint Ilid), who fled to Britain with The Holy Family after the crucifixion, to the Ancient British King Gweirydd (Latin: Arviragus; English: George). According to Timothy Hogan ("The Way of The Templar" page 16), the red cross of Saint George is symbolic of Giza. The ancient name for Giza was "Ros Tau," which in Greek means "red/rosy cross." So more links between Ancient Britain/Wales and Ancient Egypt.
I'm with you, I have been noticing some of those links lately in my studies. I have heard of Ros Tau, yet if it has a Greek meaning, I wonder if there were adaptations made for Greek in the original Egyptian Language. This makes sense to me because of the true Archaic Ancient name for Egypt is Tau Wei. The name "Egypt" itself is an adaptation from an original greek name of the city of Memphis, Egypt. In Egyptian it was "Hau-kaupt-Ptah" (emphasis on the capital letters) "Home of the House of Ptah." In later iterations; in late Egyptian: pronounced as Hau-kaupt. The Greeks later made an adaptation in their own language: Aegyptos, I'm not sure how that adaptation came about.
There are a lot of interesting facts that support the links between Ancient Egypt and Ancient British Isles. There are some Robert Sepehr videos, where he shows the migrations that took place in ancient times, relative to the "Haplogroup" study of genetics in populations. It turns out that ancient migration from north Africa reached Ireland too. Red Hair is a trait that was connected to Egypt.
Yes Sepehr does very interesting work. It was thanks to him that I learned about Sabbatean-Frankists.
Many believe that the ancient migration from North Africa to Ireland was actually a return journey, that there was an even earlier migration from Ireland to North Africa involving, IIRC, the Tuatha Dé Danann, who may have been refugees from Atlantis?
An astounding book covering this subject, which was a life-changer for me, was "Ireland, Land of The Pharaohs," by Andrew Power:
Osiris’ One or I represented, not simply the phallus, but both the tongue and the spinal column, and the eight thus represented Isis’ womb and vagina. Because a king isn’t a king without a queen, Isis and Osiris are shown together as 18, or 666, the mark of the beast, or the Knossos Axe Head: 8 - where the I is horizontal.
If you're interested, I wrote about some of this in my Anacalypsis articles.
Osiris and Isis are terribly misunderstood in today's analysis. The only thing I can say for sure is that the story of Osiris is the original story of resurrection; or as in my culture, the message can be found in the Shiva Mantra: "Maha Myritunjaya." or:
asato ma sadgamaya
tamaso ma jyotirgamaya
mrtyorma amrtam gamaya
om shanti shanti shanti.
ॐ असतो मा सद्गमय ।
तमसो मा ज्योतिर्गमय ।
मृत्योर्मा अमृतं गमय ।
ॐ शान्तिः शान्तिः शान्तिः ॥
Lead me from the asat to the sat.
Lead me from darkness to light.
Lead me from death to immortality
Om Peace Peace Peace.
What I might add to this is Ancient Egyptian is somewhat contemporary to Sanskrit both in symbolism as well as in direction of meaning. I am trying to get people to realize that the ancient cultures of the world were NOT the true source of the current Parasitic Cabal we see today, nor the "automatic" preconceptions of the Christian authors who editorialized the ancient world without symbolic perspective.
In the case you mention above, I interpret that whole movement of meaning as "The true God Self," is not complete without a both a male and female aspect.
I always like to say: "The knowledge that unites is the true knowledge."
It's surprising that Hinduism doesn't have a resurrection myth like Osiris. Yeah, Gerald Massey's main theme in Light of the World is that Christianity is bastardized and mangled from the Kemetic mythology.
I suppose that reincarnation could be a spiritual lesson that all cultures had in one form or other. The underlying concept is that death can be viewed as part of life; the god self, the true being within is naturally immortal and so has never been born nor has it ever died. Another way to view the story of Osiris is that by the god self plunging into death, causes a chance to pull the awareness and power of the divine downwards to transform death and the lower nature, bringing the creation into death creating everlasting life.
There's a lot to explore in the ancient cultures, it's actually really profound.
Apr 10, 2023·edited Apr 10, 2023Liked by Nefahotep
yes, reincarnation is part of all cultures. Yes, the life cycle of birth, growth, death is a higher fractal of other cycles like the breath, seasons, and lower of yugas, etc. Which books on Egypt would you recommend? I wasn't impressed with Schwaller's smaller Temple in Man- left me hanging at the end for more evidence, although I get what he's saying. Esoterism and Symbol looks more promising. Almost finished with Massey. Thanks.
My study of the ancient Egyptian cultural experience is mostly through language and the symbolism that exist throughout. "Going Forth by Day," misidentified as Book of the Dead is where I get many of the symbolic connections and meanings. The big difficulty there in connecting words of power to meaning, is many of their expressions and words have multiple definitions to them. You can't just "translate" what they wrote, you need to bring in actual spiritual interpretation. Egyptological attempts to learn those meanings always fall short.
For language purposes, I can recommend: "Ancient Egyptian a linguistic introduction," by Antonio Loprieno; "Middle Egyptian Literature," (containing 8 literary works of the Middle Kingdom) by James P. Allen. There is a website I found; this really delighted me: https://seshkemet.weebly.com/
This website has many of the ingredients necessary to recreate a functional approximation of the language; I find this to be really cool. Could be beneficial in keeping some of our communications from the Criminal Cabal.
There is one other thing; I have always had a connection to the yogic traditions of India; my Guru, Sri Aurobindo wrote an interpretation of the Isha Upanishad, the importance of this is I tend to view the symbolism found in other ancient cultures through the lens of the tradition I am a part of.
This is a link to a small copy, but it is less expensive than others I found.
Maybe if I get the time to, I will post a copy of one of the chapters out of Going Forth by Day, known as "Adoration of Horus," the transliterated and English interpretation is quite profound.
thanks a lot, I'll look into these. Aurobindo is pretty advanced stuff- I listened to some of his writings last year, but I realized I need to get to other foundational works first. I've read the Upanishads interpreted by Swami Prabhavananda.
Yeah, just like the whitewashing comment I left about the Pythagorean theorem, I feel that Budge and others purposely and subliminally imprint a negative connotation by using negative words like 'dead' in that text as well as the Tibetan 'book of the Dead', etc. from 'savages' and 'primitives'.
Death is part of life. Human existence is a temporary experience, it is a focal point of attention within infinite awareness. We are NOT the body, not the mind, nor the emotional sense. We are Consciousness; oneness of being, God was always supposed to represent this. If you ask about "belief," I have none.
I have experiences within existence. When we view others as an extension of our own soul, we will know what God is. As for Israel......... it doesn't have an Egyptian origin. When ever I read things like that, I just think, "well there's another Christian author trying to demonize ancient Egyptian culture." Since I have actually read from some source material in that language, I find it very disturbing that some people think of Horus, Osiris and Isis as "evil." They are not, they are the source for the symbolism behind the holy trinity. Egyptian culture also shares a lot in common with Hindu perception.
I am fairly sure that "El" at the end of Israel connects to Elohiem; supposed space aliens that invaded Earth approx 12,000 years ago and became the real masters of what would later be the Scythian Khazarian people. Some of the many gifts that can be found in the Talmud.
The red dragon on The Prince of Wales's coat of arms is more symbolic of Wales than of the prince. The Welsh flag (🏴) is known as The Red Dragon. It is said by some to represent Enki/Enoch/Ptah, known in Wales as Idris, who appears in the Mabinogi. I have heard him called The Father of Wales.
With regard to the red cross of Saint George, it is said to have been presented by Joseph of Arimathea (Saint Ilid), who fled to Britain with The Holy Family after the crucifixion, to the Ancient British King Gweirydd (Latin: Arviragus; English: George). According to Timothy Hogan ("The Way of The Templar" page 16), the red cross of Saint George is symbolic of Giza. The ancient name for Giza was "Ros Tau," which in Greek means "red/rosy cross." So more links between Ancient Britain/Wales and Ancient Egypt.
I'm with you, I have been noticing some of those links lately in my studies. I have heard of Ros Tau, yet if it has a Greek meaning, I wonder if there were adaptations made for Greek in the original Egyptian Language. This makes sense to me because of the true Archaic Ancient name for Egypt is Tau Wei. The name "Egypt" itself is an adaptation from an original greek name of the city of Memphis, Egypt. In Egyptian it was "Hau-kaupt-Ptah" (emphasis on the capital letters) "Home of the House of Ptah." In later iterations; in late Egyptian: pronounced as Hau-kaupt. The Greeks later made an adaptation in their own language: Aegyptos, I'm not sure how that adaptation came about.
There are a lot of interesting facts that support the links between Ancient Egypt and Ancient British Isles. There are some Robert Sepehr videos, where he shows the migrations that took place in ancient times, relative to the "Haplogroup" study of genetics in populations. It turns out that ancient migration from north Africa reached Ireland too. Red Hair is a trait that was connected to Egypt.
That's fascinating. Thank you.
Yes Sepehr does very interesting work. It was thanks to him that I learned about Sabbatean-Frankists.
Many believe that the ancient migration from North Africa to Ireland was actually a return journey, that there was an even earlier migration from Ireland to North Africa involving, IIRC, the Tuatha Dé Danann, who may have been refugees from Atlantis?
An astounding book covering this subject, which was a life-changer for me, was "Ireland, Land of The Pharaohs," by Andrew Power:
https://www.docdroid.net/iCnxbVe/ireland-land-of-the-pharaohs-pdf
There is an interview of the author on YT:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nJWQVzIaKTI&t=2s
If you have not already read this book, you must. You will not regret it!
Thanks, good information to piece together. Here is some more info: https://francesleader.substack.com/p/who-rules-the-world . The comments section there has more links. Sean Hross has good info also.
I like what was written about Osiris and Isis:
Osiris’ One or I represented, not simply the phallus, but both the tongue and the spinal column, and the eight thus represented Isis’ womb and vagina. Because a king isn’t a king without a queen, Isis and Osiris are shown together as 18, or 666, the mark of the beast, or the Knossos Axe Head: 8 - where the I is horizontal.
If you're interested, I wrote about some of this in my Anacalypsis articles.
Osiris and Isis are terribly misunderstood in today's analysis. The only thing I can say for sure is that the story of Osiris is the original story of resurrection; or as in my culture, the message can be found in the Shiva Mantra: "Maha Myritunjaya." or:
asato ma sadgamaya
tamaso ma jyotirgamaya
mrtyorma amrtam gamaya
om shanti shanti shanti.
ॐ असतो मा सद्गमय ।
तमसो मा ज्योतिर्गमय ।
मृत्योर्मा अमृतं गमय ।
ॐ शान्तिः शान्तिः शान्तिः ॥
Lead me from the asat to the sat.
Lead me from darkness to light.
Lead me from death to immortality
Om Peace Peace Peace.
What I might add to this is Ancient Egyptian is somewhat contemporary to Sanskrit both in symbolism as well as in direction of meaning. I am trying to get people to realize that the ancient cultures of the world were NOT the true source of the current Parasitic Cabal we see today, nor the "automatic" preconceptions of the Christian authors who editorialized the ancient world without symbolic perspective.
In the case you mention above, I interpret that whole movement of meaning as "The true God Self," is not complete without a both a male and female aspect.
I always like to say: "The knowledge that unites is the true knowledge."
It's surprising that Hinduism doesn't have a resurrection myth like Osiris. Yeah, Gerald Massey's main theme in Light of the World is that Christianity is bastardized and mangled from the Kemetic mythology.
I suppose that reincarnation could be a spiritual lesson that all cultures had in one form or other. The underlying concept is that death can be viewed as part of life; the god self, the true being within is naturally immortal and so has never been born nor has it ever died. Another way to view the story of Osiris is that by the god self plunging into death, causes a chance to pull the awareness and power of the divine downwards to transform death and the lower nature, bringing the creation into death creating everlasting life.
There's a lot to explore in the ancient cultures, it's actually really profound.
yes, reincarnation is part of all cultures. Yes, the life cycle of birth, growth, death is a higher fractal of other cycles like the breath, seasons, and lower of yugas, etc. Which books on Egypt would you recommend? I wasn't impressed with Schwaller's smaller Temple in Man- left me hanging at the end for more evidence, although I get what he's saying. Esoterism and Symbol looks more promising. Almost finished with Massey. Thanks.
My study of the ancient Egyptian cultural experience is mostly through language and the symbolism that exist throughout. "Going Forth by Day," misidentified as Book of the Dead is where I get many of the symbolic connections and meanings. The big difficulty there in connecting words of power to meaning, is many of their expressions and words have multiple definitions to them. You can't just "translate" what they wrote, you need to bring in actual spiritual interpretation. Egyptological attempts to learn those meanings always fall short.
For language purposes, I can recommend: "Ancient Egyptian a linguistic introduction," by Antonio Loprieno; "Middle Egyptian Literature," (containing 8 literary works of the Middle Kingdom) by James P. Allen. There is a website I found; this really delighted me: https://seshkemet.weebly.com/
This website has many of the ingredients necessary to recreate a functional approximation of the language; I find this to be really cool. Could be beneficial in keeping some of our communications from the Criminal Cabal.
There is one other thing; I have always had a connection to the yogic traditions of India; my Guru, Sri Aurobindo wrote an interpretation of the Isha Upanishad, the importance of this is I tend to view the symbolism found in other ancient cultures through the lens of the tradition I am a part of.
The book by Sri Aurobindo is available here:
https://ia801701.us.archive.org/4/items/isha-upanishad-sri-aurobindo/isha-upanishad-sri-aurobindo.pdf
You can purchase a copy of it from:
https://www.alibris.com/search/books/isbn/9788170588474?invid=16690473996&gclsrc=ds
This is a link to a small copy, but it is less expensive than others I found.
Maybe if I get the time to, I will post a copy of one of the chapters out of Going Forth by Day, known as "Adoration of Horus," the transliterated and English interpretation is quite profound.
Let me know what you think ---- Cheers
thanks a lot, I'll look into these. Aurobindo is pretty advanced stuff- I listened to some of his writings last year, but I realized I need to get to other foundational works first. I've read the Upanishads interpreted by Swami Prabhavananda.
Yeah, just like the whitewashing comment I left about the Pythagorean theorem, I feel that Budge and others purposely and subliminally imprint a negative connotation by using negative words like 'dead' in that text as well as the Tibetan 'book of the Dead', etc. from 'savages' and 'primitives'.
Death is part of life. Human existence is a temporary experience, it is a focal point of attention within infinite awareness. We are NOT the body, not the mind, nor the emotional sense. We are Consciousness; oneness of being, God was always supposed to represent this. If you ask about "belief," I have none.
I have experiences within existence. When we view others as an extension of our own soul, we will know what God is. As for Israel......... it doesn't have an Egyptian origin. When ever I read things like that, I just think, "well there's another Christian author trying to demonize ancient Egyptian culture." Since I have actually read from some source material in that language, I find it very disturbing that some people think of Horus, Osiris and Isis as "evil." They are not, they are the source for the symbolism behind the holy trinity. Egyptian culture also shares a lot in common with Hindu perception.
I am fairly sure that "El" at the end of Israel connects to Elohiem; supposed space aliens that invaded Earth approx 12,000 years ago and became the real masters of what would later be the Scythian Khazarian people. Some of the many gifts that can be found in the Talmud.