Difference between revisions of "Talk:Fragment Regarding 'Mu' from a Greek Miscellany"
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Hal: Maybe you should read those texts again... | Hal: Maybe you should read those texts again... | ||
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+ | Noah: Ok, so after consulting [[Eorl's Grand Unified Timeline (as Calculated by Abner)]], I guess this text, or the events discussed therein, are as old as any of them. The flood occurred ~3800 years ago or so. My point, I guess, is that if Besna is Drelzna (which it easily could be, considering some idiots think the [[Moritanya]] is actually called the 'Martinyak,' which is ridiculous), she doesn't play a role in the whole Mu business, and the last sentence deals with events taking place more recently. |
Revision as of 08:36, 6 September 2007
Noah: Sounds like another flood myth, but I can't place the culture. Assyrian? Akkadian? Hittite? Gehenna is a Jewish concept, but that's probably a choice of words made by the translator.
Kerry: Good ol' Besna. I wonder how else you might spell that?
Noah: Yes, I was thinking that too, but how would it work? This is clearly an old, old text.
Hal: Baffle of Armageddon? What kind of scanner is this, anyway?
Noah: Sorry, copyists error.
Noah: So, Arben identified Kesare and Bithos as the Greekified spellings of Ceasara and Bittus as mentioned in the Letter from Cn. Julius Agricola to his grandson, M. Claudius Cornelius Tacitus, making the origin of the flood myth Irish, and thus not so old at all. Hmm... Orm destroyed a mountain in Ireland, didn't he?
Hal: Maybe you should read those texts again...
Noah: Ok, so after consulting Eorl's Grand Unified Timeline (as Calculated by Abner), I guess this text, or the events discussed therein, are as old as any of them. The flood occurred ~3800 years ago or so. My point, I guess, is that if Besna is Drelzna (which it easily could be, considering some idiots think the Moritanya is actually called the 'Martinyak,' which is ridiculous), she doesn't play a role in the whole Mu business, and the last sentence deals with events taking place more recently.