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Archive for the tag “Herodotus”

Proof Of Giza Labyrinth?

The talk of tunnels under the pyramids and other places in Egypt has gotten a lot more interesting since the work of Armando Mei and Filippo Biondi. Their SAR scan data has gotten a lot of attention.

What did the ancients say they saw when they went to Giza? Or Hawara? Did they speak of an ancient labyrinth? Let’s take a look. Here’s more from DeDunking.

Who Are The Wolf Men?

Here, well-known extraterrestrial investigator Linda Mouton Howe explores tales of wolf-like creatures from around the world. Sometimes called werewolves, wolf men or barghest, these creatures often were linked to a isolated hill or a remote, heavily forested area.

Herodotus, the ancient Greek historian, presented the oldest remembered story of a wolf man found in The Epic of Gilgamesh, from around 2,100 B.C. Howe talks with Paul Sinclair, a British filmmaker, who has a new documentary called Wolf Lands.

Sinclair delves deeper into the legends emanating from Flixton, along the North Sea in the United Kingdom. Wolf-like creatures, able to walk perched on their hind legs, were said to be able to surgically mutilate sheep, cattle or wild animals, before returning to underground caves in which they lived. Here’s more from Howe’s Earthfiles channel.

Mysteries Of The Underground

In Greek and Roman tradition, Ultima Thule is a name for “terra incognita”, or a place rumored to exist in the north, outside of established geography, a faraway, mysterious land beyond the limits of the known world. Hyperborea is a legendary continent in the Arctic and despite its location in an otherwise frigid part of the world, the Hyperboreans were believed to inhabit a sunny, temperate, and divinely-blessed land. More from Robert Sepehr, author and anthropologist.

https://www.bitchute.com/video/tP0dxqXbnN9T/

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