The History of The World in 496 Words by Peter Wakefield Sault 6th January 2008

The History of The World in 496 Words by Peter Wakefield Sault

Torkh (i.e. 'torch'), 'The Guiding Light', was the ancient Greek name for the star we know now as Aldebaran, 'The Follower', so called because it follows the Seven Sisters (the Plaeides) across the sky. The Plaeides were an object of star-worship, as evidenced by the number of ancient Egyptian temples which were oriented to their point of heliacal rising. The ancient Egyptians, of course, invented both Greece and Rome, although you will find no mention of this in the Official History.

The method employed was the gift of GRAMMAR. It was grammatical speech and writing which distinguished the civilized man from the barbarian - and it was the ancient Egyptians who invented grammar, calling it HE-KA (commonly mistranslated as 'word magic', or 'magic spelling'). The first consequence of this gift to the Greeks were the works of Homer. This parallels the appearances of both Virgil and William Shakespeare. The work of the last could not have existed without the prior work of John Dee, for it was Dee who invented the English grammar - for the purpose of translating the Bible into English from Greek, as decreed by King James. Prior to that, English people spoke Saxony, which had no grammar (e.g. verbs had only a single tense - the present - from which the intended meaning had to be inferred by context or time-words such as 'yesterday').

The evidence for the ancient Egyptian origin of Rome is embedded in the name of its principal god, Jupiter (or IVPITER, as the Romans wrote it). This is a Latinization of the ancient Egyptian phrase 'JU-PTAH', meaning Spirit of Ptah. This is, of course, part of the name of Egypt itself; AE-JU-PTAH, or 'Land of the Spirit of Ptah'.

Ptah is the original creator god, who was not only the Architect of the Universe but who also created all the other gods, such as the one called 'God'.

Ptah is actually the revered ancestor deified and the architect of the Great Pyramid, although the Egytians invented the character IM-HO-TEP - the 'Son of Ptah' (and, of course, an Egyptian) and credited him with building the GP and giving Egypt its letters. The name Imhotep is actually a syllabic reversal of the Egyptian phrase 'Son of Ptah' (i.e. PETOH-MI). In actual fact, the Land of Egypt was the
creation of the Emin, or Librarians of On (Heliopolis), who had been there for "a myriad" years (Plato). Heliopolis bore exactly the same relationship to the state of Egypt that the Vatican City now bears to
the state of Italy. It was a protectorate which existed before the state that grew up around it.

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