7 posts tagged “astronomy”
Called many things by many people, we still have no definitive concept of the Templars' Baphomet. According to their accusers and some occultists, the horned goat's head of the winged, sacred hermaphrodite (the Goat of Mendes), worshiped by the Knights Templar in their secret lodges along with myriad other Luciferian rites was known as Baphomet. According to Manly P. Hall, 33rd degree, in The Secret Teachings of All Ages:
The practice of magic -- either white or black -- depends upon the ability of the adept to control the universal life force -- that which Eliphas Levi calls the great magical agent or the astral light. By the manipulation of this fluidic essence the phenomena of transcendentalism are produced. The famous hermaphroditic Goat of Mendes was a composite creature formulated to symbolize this astral light. It is identical with Baphomet, the mystic pantheos of those disciples of ceremonial magic, the Templars, who probably obtained it from the Arabians. [1]
Jennifer Emick describes it as, "one of the most misunderstood religious symbols of all time." She provides the historical background:
The name Baphomet is derived from an enigmatic figure first described at the trials of the Templars, a medieval order of Crusader Monks accused of Heresy, witchcraft, and other crimes against the Catholic Church.
... King Phillip of France, possibly with an eye toward gaining control of Templar finances, issued secret orders to have all of the Templars in France arrested on grounds of heresy and sorcery. Torture elicited confessions of various crimes and heresies from many of the Knights. The laundry list of unlikely confessions included spitting on the cross, denying Christ, and worshipping an idol called Baphomet.
There is another, more esoteric concept of Baphomet first encountered in the Weidner & Bridges book, The Mysteries of the Great Cross of Hendaye: Alchemy and the End of Time. The proposal made here is that the Templars were not worshipping any goats head, but rather it was recognized at the time as a sort of head -- an astrolabe. This explanation, while certainly less publicized, or sensational, makes much more sense. Considering the Templars' pursuit of hermetic knowledge, an astrolabe to track the heavens, perform astrology and prophecy, and meditate upon would fit in quite well with potential Alchemical operations.The Baphomet is still an enigma, and there is of course some debate whether or not it was a real item or the product of torture. Several knights recalled that Baphomet was variously a severed head, or an idol possessing two or four heads, or sometimes, as a goat or goat's head. The name is highly unusual, and many suggestions about the origin of the word have been put forward. Idries Shah has proposed that the name is a corruption of a name of Mohammed. Abufihamat, pronounced "Bufihimat," a word very similar to Baphomet, is Moorish-Spanish for "father of wisdom," an epithet used to describe the Prophet. This seems unlikely, although there seems to be a concerted effort to link the Templars with Islam. The Templars certainly had contact with Muslim ideas, and even incorporated symbols of Islam into their emblems, but Islam forbade Idol worship just as strenuously then as now- creating an image of the prophet in order to worship it would have been a tremendous blasphemy. [2]
The astrolabe is a model of the heavens. Based upon the assumption that the Earth is at the centre of a spherical universe, the ... astrolabe reproduces ... the positions of the Sun and of some of the major stars, as seen by an imaginary observer, outside the sphere looking upwards, at a particular time in a particular latitude.
Because the astrolabe can be set to show the poitions of these heavenly bodies at different times of day or night, on different dates and for different latitudes, the instrument is also a computer, serving to solve problems concerning the position of Sun and stars at any given time. It will therefore resolve problems which depend upon these movements, such as the length of day or night at any specifed time. [3]
Using this information, the astrological and alchemical information that could be derived is plentiful. From The Mysteries of the Great Cross of Hendaye:[Some astronomical uses for this device would have included:] measuring the altitude of the Sun, measuring the altitude of a star, setting the astrolabe from the Sun, setting the astrolabe from the altitude of a star, finding the time in equal hours, and finding the unequal hour by day, finding the unequal hour by night, finding the times of sunrise and sunset, finding the time of rising or setting of a given star, converting equal hours to unequal hours, setting the astrolabe for a given time and date, and using the shadow square [for purposes of surveying or construction]. [4]
The most persistent story, first told in the thirteenth century, has Gerbert, while still archbishop of Rheims, constructing a magical bronze "head" that foretells the future. The "head," of course, announces that Gerbert will indeed be pope, which, considering his shaky position as archbishop, was a bold prediction. A similar story of a bronze head would be told about other medieval magicians, including Roger Bacon and Albertus Magnus. It also suggests, in an indirect way, the "head" the Templars were supposed to have worshiped, the mysterious Baphomet.
These similarities are not accidents, but glimpses of the design behind the symbols. Richer, in his Histories, gives us the clue. In the sentence after he mentions Gerbert's hermetic accomplishments, we are told that Gerbert had also designed an armillary sphere [spherical astrolabe] with which he could determine the location of the sun and the planets in relation to the celestial sphere. Interestingly enough, the earth in this model was round, five hundred years before Columbus.
... In symbolic terms, this sphere of knowledge became the "head" possessed by all famed students of the art in the Middle Ages.
The mysterious name of the Templar's "head," ... Baphomet, phonetically in Arabic, Aramaic, and Hebrew, is simply bet'amet, or "place of the truth." The root ba or bet is the same as the ba in Baal, and can signify a house, a place, or the action of filling space. The "place of truth" used as a title could well be meant to signify the space-filling "house" of the Cube of Space in the celestial sphere and the value of its prophetic insight. Over time, the simple phrase became a code word for the secret itself. The Templars did not worship their bronze head; they meditated on it and studied it closely for clues about the secret of time and timing of their alchemical operations. [5]
Update: We've received a photo of particular significance to this theory. Noted researcher and author of Living in the Matrix Another Way: Numerology for a New Day and his latest, In These Signs Conquer, Ellis C. Taylor (http://www.ellisctaylor.com/menu.html) sent in a photograph from Rosslyn Chapel, the Scottish home of the Templars, showing a spherical astrolabe! I didn't have any idea about this when writing the above article. It was only once Ellis contacted me that I learned of this astonishing circumstance that goes hand in hand with the evidence offered above to help substantiate the theory. Thank you Ellis!
1. Hall, Manly P. The Secret Teachings of All Ages, Readers' ed. (New York: Tarcher/Penguin, 2003). p. 316.
2. Emick, Jennifer. "Baphomet: Templars and the Origin of Baphomet." http://altreligion.about.com/library/weekly/aa030103a.htm
3. The Planispheric Astrolabe. (National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, England). p. 8.
4. ibid. pp. 25 -31.
5. Weidner, Jay & Bridges, Vincent. The Mysteries of the Great
Cross of Hendaye: Alchemy and the End of Time. (Rochester, VT: Destiny
Books). pp. 130 - 132.
Inspired by Comets Over Albion by Ben Fairhall, 2012: The Return of Quetzalcoatl by Daniel Pinchbeck, and cyberspaceorbit.com by Kent Steadman.
Quetzalcoatl, the feathered serpent, is more accurately, "the serpent veiled in plumes of the paradise-bird" who was adored by the Children of the Sun and identified as a "solar god" and / or "god of the winds" by Manly Hall. [1]
Quetzalcoatl:
... came out of the sea, bringing with him a mysterious cross. On his garments were embellished clouds and red crosses. In his honour, great serpents carved from stone were placed in different parts of Mexico.
The cross of Quetzalcoatl became a sacred symbol among the Mayas, and according to available records the Maya Indian angels had crosses of various pigments painted on their foreheads. Similar crosses were placed over the eyes of those initiated into their Mysteries. When Cortez arrived in Mexico, he brought with him the cross. Recognizing this, the natives believed that he was Quetzalcoatl returned, for the latter had promised to come back in the infinite future and redeem his people. [2]
... The fourth book of the Popol Vuh concludes with an account of the erection of a majestic temple, all white, where was preserved a secret black divining stone, cubical in shape. Quetzalcoatl partakes of many of the attributes of King Solomon: the account of the temple building in the Popol Vuh is a reminder of the story of Solomon's Temple, and undoubtedly has a similar significance. Brassuer de Bourbourg was first attracted to the study of religious parallelisms in the Popol Vuh by the fact that the temple, together with the black stone which it contained, was named the Caabaha, a name astonishingly similar to that of the Temple, or Caaba, which contains the sacred black stone of Islam. [3]
If we look at the similarities of Quetzalcoatl and other stories, the results are remarkable. Quetzalcoatl was known as the solar god who was crucified and would return in the future to redeem his people, as well as the builder of a temple building reminiscent of the Temple of Solomon containing a sacred black stone named Caabaha. How do historians account for these similarities to the Abrahamic religious texts, yet the vast discrepancies in time and distance from the supposed origin of these stories?
The return of Cortez noted above, and hinted at in the recent movie "Apocalypto," is portrayed as occurring during a time of human sacrifice. Again, Manly Hall:
The meager available native records contain abundant evidence that the later civilizations of Central and South America were hopelessly dominated by the black arts of their priestcrafts. In the convexities of their magnetized mirrors the Indian sorcerers captured the intelligences of elemental beings and, gazing into the depths of these abominable devices, eventually made the scepter subservient to the wand. Robed in garments of sable hue, the neophytes in their search for truth were led by their sinister guides through the confused passageways of necromancy. By the left-hand path they descended into the somber depths of the infernal world, where they learned to endow stones with the power of speech and to subtly ensnare the minds of men with their chants and fetishes. As typical of the perversion which prevailed, none could acheive to the greater Mysteries until a human being had suffered immolation at his hand and the bleeding heart of the victim had been elevated before the luring face of the stone idol fabricated by a priestcraft the members of which realized more fully than they dared to admit the true nature of the man-made demon. The sanguinary and indescribable rites practiced by many of the Central American Indians may represent remnants of the later Atlantean perversion of the ancient sun Mysteries. According to the secret tradition, it was during the later Atlantean epoch that black magic and sorcery dominated the esoteric schools, resulting in the bloody sacrificial rites and gruesome idolatry which ultimately overthrew the Atlantean empire and even penetrated the Aryan religious world. [4]
So these similarities are between not only the allegorical stories surrounding Quetzalcoatl, but also the historical record of a turn to the dark side after the golden age and a false savior. After a time of high spirituality and technology, the Mayan people went from being victimized by their preistarchy, to being victimized by the Spanish conquistador - out of the frying pan and into the fire. The desire for some kind of saviour seems to be a characteristic that some are only too willing to exploit. How much do these similarities feel familiar to us now? And what of the return of Quetzalcoatl? Could it be now?
http://www.spaceweather.com/comets/gallery_mcnaught_page12.htm
McNaught comet images: Jamie Newman,
1. Hall, Manly P. The Secret Teachings of All Ages (New York: Tarcher/Penguin, 2003), p. 137, 637.
2. ibid, p. 603.
3. ibid, p. 645.
4. ibid, p. 638.
Copyright 2007 by Occult of Personality.
Regardless of opinions, the philosophical basis for the foundation of the United States was not necessarily what would be termed "religious." The age of enlightenment and reason (read occultism) was one of the main influences on those engaged in that grand endeavour.
One indication of this fact is the research of David Ovason. In his book The Secret Architecture of Our Nation's Capital, he concludes:
Washington, D.C., which I had thought had only two or three zodiacs in its center, soon revealed itself as teeming with zodiac and zodiacal images -- many of them in official buildings where one would never have expected to find such symbols of the spiritual world. Now I know that there are 23 important zodiacs in the city, and at least 1,000 zodiacal and planetary symbols. These figures may beggar belief, but the story behind them is even more incredible. It was only after some considerable time that I began to see the thing which drew most of these zodiacs together -- the mystery of the zodiacal sign Virgo. ... the Christian Virgin Mother in a later guise, a representative of Isis and Minerva.
"The philosophers of Greece and Egypt divided the life of the sun during the year into four parts; therefore they symbolized the Solar Man by four different figures. When He was born in the winter solstice, the Sun God was symbolized as a dependent infant who in some mysterious manner had managed to escape the Powers of Darkness seeking to destroy Him while He was still in the cradle of winter. The sun, being weak at this season of the year, had no golden rays (or locks of hair), but the survival of the light through the darkness of winter was symbolized by one tiny hair which alone adorned the head of the Celestial Child.
"At the vernal equinox, the sun had grown to be a beautiful youth. His golden hair hung in ringlets on his shoulders and his light ... extended to all parts of infinity. At the summer solstice, the sun became a strong man, heavily bearded, who, in the prime of maturity, symbolized the fact that Nature at this period of the year is strongest and most fecund. At the autumnal equinox, the sun was pictured as an aged man, shuffling along with bended back and whitened locks into the oblivion of winter darkness. Thus, twelve months were assigned to the sun as the length of its life. During this period it circled the twelve signs of the zodiac in a magnificent triumphal march. When fall came, it entered, like Samson, into the house of Delilah (Virgo), where its rays were cut off and it lost its strength. In Masonry, the cruel winter months are symbolized by three murderers who sought to destroy the God of Light and Truth.
"The coming of the sun was hailed with joy; the time of its departure was viewed as a period to be set
aside for sorrow and unhappiness. This glorious, radiant orb of day, the true light "which lighteth every
man who cometh into the world ... ""
According to Wayne's research, all of these ancient stone megaliths are giant star maps, pointing to a "mystery star" located near the Pleiades constellation! In addition, the human codex is encoded in the sacred geometry of these structures!
The Hidden Records is a compelling and impressive book. The research is quite original and well-documented. Its thick, glossy paper displays the brilliant color photos and maps very nicely. I also find myself returning to the book as I read other works.
Wayne was kind enough to agree to answer some questions about himself and his work:
1. Would you please describe the incidents in your earlier life that provided you insight into the 'paranormal'?
I had two life altering experiences in my life. The first was seeing a classic UFO sighting in my city in Rhodesia when I was a child. It was one of those events where people stop on the road and stare with amazement as the mysterious objects pass by. It was even in the local papers the next day and from that moment on I knew we were not possibly alone in the universe. I wondered if UFO's had been seen in history, so that was the seed that was planted so to speak. My second life altering event was in my twenties and it was a near death experience where one feels ones thoughts and consciousness outside of the body. It happened in a serious motorcycle accident. From that point on, more than ever I had the burning obsession to prove that the soul moves on after death to another realm or life event. Put my two paranormal 'fact' experiences together as a ground base to build on and as a researcher you have the advantage of knowing not guessing when re-looking at history from ground zero.
2. How long did it take you to realize the theory that you developed, from inception to thesis?
Nineteen years ago I started making huge files from books and research material of events that seemed more than coincidence. But a few months after Robert Bauval brought out his book,'The Orion Mystery', as an amateur astronomer I could see there was something wrong with his theory and that there was a lot more to it.
Within six months I had the 50 Egypt pyramids figured out. 49 correlated with all the stars of the known constellations and only one star was sun-like. It correlated in the epi-centre of the pyramid layout field with their ultimate monument called a solar temple. Hmmmm! Same name even. I began testing all ancient pyramid cultures to see if they reproduced the same pattern. In 1999 I had my manuscript ready for publishing.
3. Have people had the same reaction to your book that I did?
Thanks for your encouraging words on what you felt about the book and the answer is that yes it has inspired hundreds of people to write to me.
The great thing is that my material has been tested by scholars on a TV program and believe me if there was any clear mistake or illogical interpretation then they would have been quick to comment. The fact is that no scholar wants to make an official comment that associates with us not being alone in the universe. Not even now two years since the TV program.
4. How would you characterize the efforts made to prevent your book from being published? Am I assuming too much in even asking this question?
That is a story that might sound far fetched and from advice by our attorney we have to say as little as possible. We have had nothing but interference from book data listing to wholesaler dealings where our title listing data gets erased and listed as out of print. This has happened so many times that the people I deal with now are trying to set up tracer programs to track the intrusions. It originates from the USA and many have said we being blocked by a well known society. Readers can make up their own mind by clicking the all seeing golden pyramid icon on my site. I will not say anything negative about these folks and it might all be just a coincidence.
5. Do you believe that the 'mystery star' area described so amazingly in your book from ancient structures and their geographic layout is an actual physical location or a metaphysical realm that is being pointed to, or perhaps both?
The proverbial "x" that marks the spot is a real physical G spectrum star. It is also the only star that crosses the target area between now and 17250 years ago. Out of 100 or more stars in this massive area around the Pleiades only three are nearby sun-like stars. Two of them fit two prime target areas. More importantly they are measurable, and I have listed them on my website with astronomy catalogue.
The so-called gods of the ancients associate with these two stars and it strongly suggests here we are talking about flesh and blood gods with the technology advantage to create all the amazing things our ancestors have claimed.
6. Much of your work is truly original. Many other researchers cannot make that claim. How has this affected your success?
Due to the necessity to self-publish I have had a lot of rejection by bookstores. In 1999 when I was ready to publish, my material was going from one publisher to the next and while I was waiting three years had gone by without a reply, while copies of my manuscript were being out to universities all over the world. Why I knew this was because they were contacting me to discuss the detail. I realised my copyright was as safe as a cracked open chest of gold coins in the middle of a crowded market square.
Other researchers have now started writing on the new Pleiades correlations. In fact the guy who wrote the Orion Mystery has now agreed with my interpretation on the Abusir pyramids in Egypt that match the Pleiades stars and the importance of the solar temple is the reason for the star map. He has therefore revised his old correlation theory completely since my book was released.
7. Can you please describe your writing relationship with your co-author, Birgitt Lederer?
I met Birgitt at a magical moment just when I needed to rewrite the whole book with more updates before we printed the final proof. Serendipity best describes the strange meeting and we clicked and are now quite committed in a relationship. Birgitt is an ex journalist so has a very good idea of how to tell a story so it is easy to read and understand.
8. What are your impressions of the latest images of Cydonia? Has it introduced any changes into your theory?
You have to go to my Mars page update on that because it is going to sound as though I am trying to keep the Face on Mars theory alive.
There is a new anomaly that has more recently been discovered on the face forehead which and now is exactly like the Sphinx in Egypt. See my site. The story gets better every day. You must also take a peek at the new NASA emblem for the Mars mission program. I'll say no more.
Stonehenge too has a breaking story soon to be released. All is there to ponder on. www.thehiddenrecords.com
If you have any interest in these topics, I'd encourage you to check out Wayne's book. His ideas will truly shed some new light on the ancient civilizations...
by Occult of Personality. Licensed under Creative Commons. 2006
Hancock and Bauval put some amazing pieces together in this book. Here are a couple of short video clips featuring Hancock and his work.
Ben Fairhall has some rather interesting praise for it-- http://ben-fairhall.blogspot.com/2006/10/its-bigger-than-you-think.html
As well as writer David Ovason, who wrote this book, which is next on the list!