Re: Magdalenian experiment (continuation)
- From: frgn@xxxxxxxxxxx
- Date: Thu, 19 Mar 2009 02:36:03 -0700 (PDT)
Hill of Creation (Göbekli Tepe) part 64
Miscellanea
LUN was the word for the full moon, wherefrom
Latin luna 'moon'. CA LUN was the compound
naming the moon bull, sky CA full moon LUN,
as CA LAB and CA BEL and CA BAL named
the sun horse of winter, spring and summer
respectively, sky cold, sky warm, sky hot.
CA LUN has a derivative in Greek selaenae
'moon'. Selene was also a goddess, and we
may imagine a very ancient myth of a maiden
riding on the moon bull (consider also Europa
riding the Zeus bull). The inverse NUL was the
empty moon, German Leermond, wherefrom
Latin nulla 'none', German Null 'zero'. The sign
for zero 0 was introduced by the Indians and may
originally have alluded to the empty moon.
In the language spoken in the Swiss Alps,
la lingua Romantsch, the word for weather is aura,
bel aura, fine weather, BEL AAR RAA, warm BEL
air AAR sunshine RAA ...
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Hill of Creation (Göbekli Tepe) part 63
East and west, day and night
In my previous message I explained east from
AS TYR, meaning Venus morning star rising over
the eastern horizon, followed by the sun, overcoming
the night and the moon, or the moon bull as ruler
and symbol of the night.
What about west, Greek hespera 'evening, west',
Latin vesper 'evening'? I see the origin in PAS PIR
meaning everywhere PAS, everywhere in a plain,
here, south and north of me, east and west of me,
and fire PIR - when the sun goes down it gets dark
and people light fires everywhere, and the sun sets
in the west, so the same compound was used for
evening and west, as in Greek hespera.
The time between the rise of the sun in the east
and the setting of the sun in the west is called day,
German Tag, from DhAG meaning able, good in
the sense of the able. The sun is able, overcoming
the darkness and coldness of the night, and the sun
enables us to do our work. The time between sunset
and sunrise is called night, from NYG, inverse of
woman GYN. My Magdalenian dictionary explains
NYG as night, as the time one spends with a woman,
when women have the say. Greek nyx means night
while NYX was a powerful goddess, alter ego of
Gaia; her name was taboo and so she was called
Despoina, mistress of the house. Her priestesses
gave oracles which remind of dreams. If NYG was
the goddess of the night, also DhAG as origin of day
and Tag has a connotation to the divine, consider
the supreme Celtic god Dagda, the good god in the
sense of the able god.
The red midsummer horse in the rotunda of Lascaux
is a mare, the sun archer of the Armenian Bronze Age
both a woman and a man, and Greek Helios a man.
The moon bull as ruler and symbol of the night was
male, while NYG as ruler of the night was a woman.
How does this go along? the moon bull was a creature
of the goddess, and in this sense the supreme ruler
of the night was female. My Magdalenian dictionary
also mentions Latin niger 'black' as color of the night,
and nectar as something sweet, a drink, a fragrance,
deriving them from NYG, so the night was a sweet time,
a safe time spent in the camp, cooking and warming
fires burning inside the camp, and fires warding off
animals of prey along the hedge around the camp,
lit in the evening when the sun set in the west, PAS PIR,
everywhere PAS fire PIR.
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Hill of Creation (Göbekli Tepe) part 62
Astarte
Where does Latin sinister 'left' come from?
The word once meant lucky, favorable. In an
Old Roman rite, the augur looked southward
and had the eastern horizon on his left hand
side. The sun rises on the eastern horizon,
but also stars do, and the planet Venus does,
always close to the sun. In sin- of sinister
we might recognize Greek syn- sym- from
Magdalenian SAM meaning together, hunting
a bull as a group, several hunters together.
What bull could Venus morning star and the
sun following Venus possibly hunt? the moon
bull, the ruler and symbol of the night ... So we
have SAM AS TYR as origin of sinister. On
the morning of midsummer, the druids sacrificed
white bulls, and in the rotunda of Lascaux, symbol
of glorious midsummer morning, the red mare
of the rising midsummer sun eclipses a magnificient
white bull by her side: the rising sun extinguishes
the moon as ruler and symbol of the night. In the
Spanish corrida a bull is hunted and finally killed,
a cruel spectacle that keeps a memory of bull hunting
in the Ice Age, and of its celestial equivalent in Venus
morning star followed by the sun rising above the
horizon and overshining the moon. Venus morning
star would have been the original star, AS TYR,
and this compound would have become the word
for all stars. Greek astaer, Latin stella involving
rhotacism, AS TYR, AS TeR, AS Tel, STella.
Interesting is Sanskrit taras 'stars', apparently from
the inverse compound TYR AS.
AS TYR may also be the origin of the Canaanite
fertility goddess Astarte, whorshipped in the Levant
(from Latin levare, lift up, raise, eastern horizon of
the Mediterranean where the sun rises). At home I have
the picture of a Phoenician Astarte raising her arms,
holding a lotos flower in her right hand, Egyptian symbol
of the rising sun. The Egyptian equivalent of Astarte was
As-t, better known in the form of Isis, present in Sirius
according to Rolf Krauss, brightest star in the sky.
Now the heliakal rise of Sirius in summer announced
the all deciding flooding of the Nile, the rise of Sirius
just before the sun comes up, again a case of AS TYR.
AS TYR also accounts for Easter and east. The Christian
festival of Easter follows the sacrifice not of a bull but of
a lamb, the lamb of God, namely Jesus. The symbol of
Easter is the Easter bunny, and the hare was an ancient
symbol of the moon, while the white berries of the mistletoe,
sacred to druids, were regarded as eggs of the moon,
so this may bee the true origin of the Easter egg, while
the persistent aspect of the sacrifice testifies to a deeply
ingrained experience. For millions of years hominids and
humans were exposed to animals of prey, the night was
dangerous, morning a relief: I survived, we survived.
Only one of us has been taken, but we others luckily
survived. Already the bright morning star is visible.
Shortly the sun will follow, come up AS and overcome
TYR the night and the moon, ruler and symbol of the night.
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Hill of Creation (Göbekli Tepe) part 61
Israel / aureole aurora aura
The Merenptah Stela is famous for mentiong
people called Isiraar, the -aa- bording on -eo-
(pronounced in the Latin way). Egyptian R also
conveys L. The Canaanite goddess Astarte
has an Egyptian equivalent in As-t, better known
in the form of Isis, allowing to replace Isi- by As-.
We can then read Isiraar in several ways, Isiraal
Isireol Asraar Asreol, and interpret it as follows:
AS RAA AAR
upward AS toward the one composed
of light RAA and air AAR
AS RAA )
upward AS toward the one appearing
in light RAA who has the say )
AS RAA ) superimposed by REO
upward AS toward the Lord who has the
say ) and appears in light RAA that comes
flowing down REO
The full name of Israel as byname of Jacob would
have been:
AS AAR RAA )
upward AS toward the Lord who has
the say ) and appears in an aureole
of air AAR and light RAA
AAR RAA ) might be the origin of Latin aureolus
English aureole, made visible in paintings of the
(Early) Renaissance that show the Lord in an
aureole, one or two arms and hands raised in
a gesture of blessing or judging, representing Him
as the one who has the say. Latin aurora might come
from AAR RAA RAA, the doubling of light RAA an
emphasis in praise of the glory of early morning,
while aura would come from the simple AAR RAA,
consisting of air and light.
Next time: Astarte
-
(Google forgot my name Franz Gnaedinger)
.
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