Interstellar Interference
How Ancient Rome Supported the Supremacy of our Sun
Copyright © Paul V Young 2015
The leaders of ancient Greece and Rome, who were themselves often of Solar origin, found it necessary to assert the dominance of the Sun over our planet, in the face of interference from the ET and ID (Inter-dimensional) visitors from other stars - notably Sirius, Orion and Aldebaran – who came to be revered as competing ‘gods’. In Egyptian history, Akhenaten found it necessary 3,300 years ago to proclaim our own Sun (the ‘Aten’) as being sovereign in our system and over our world. We know that subsequently his son Tutankhamun was murdered by Ay when he became mature enough to rule by himself, and prepared to copy his father in placing the Aten above Amun. Soon after Akhenaten and Tutankhamun left this world, the 19th Dynasty appeared, with Seti and Ramses II being descendants of Osiris and Isis from Sirius. We call this race the Osirians.
The manner in which ETs from Sirius coached the Dogons, how visitors from Aldebaran helped the Germans prior to WWII, and those from Orion made their mark on Egypt, are all now legendary. However it was the Solar entities who wielded the greatest influence in most countries. The Chinese emperors owed their beginnings to Huangdi, the Yellow Emperor who came from the Sun and, at the end of his reign, returned to it. India’s first king Rama was a descendent of the Solar deity Vishnu, and direct guidance by beings from the Sun continued in India through to the time of Ashoka the Great in the third century BC. Japan’s first emperor, Jimmu, who ascended to the throne in 660BC, was a direct descendant of the Sun ‘goddess’, Amaterasu. Japan’s national flag still depicts the rising Sun in honour of this. In the Americas the Sun deities ruled for millennia.
Although there are accounts of interstellar conflict in prehistorical times, by the second millennium BC, disputes were conducted in more civilized terms. Perhaps an appropriate comparison would be to the Antarctic continent today, with several nations claiming their own territory there. Ultimately though, one authority had to be observed in our Solar System - humanity could not have two ‘supreme beings.’
The Osirians
As a relevant opening note, the following is courtesy of the Ancient Explorers’ website:
“It is said that at the time of Atlantis and Rama, the Mediterranean was a large and fertile valley. This ancient civilization, pre-dating dynastic Egypt, was known as the Osirian Civilization.” […] “Egyptian civilization, along with the Minoan and Mycenean in Crete and Greece are, in theory, remnants of this great, ancient culture. The civilization built huge earthquake-proof megalithic structures and had electricity and other conveniences common during the time of Atlantis. Like Atlantis and Rama, they had airships and other modes of transport, often electrical in nature. The mysterious cart tracks of Malta, which go over cliffs and under water, may well be part of some ancient Osirian tram-line, possibly taking quarried stone to cities that are now submerged. Probably the best example of the high technology of the Osirians is the amazing platform found at Ba’albek, Lebanon.” [See more at: http://ancientexplorers.com/blog/ancient-advanced-civilizations]
The Empire of Persia (present-day Iran) was bent on world domination from the sixth to third centuries BC, attempting to control Egypt, Babylon, Greece and India. It was in the 6th century BC that Osirians persuaded the Zoroastrians to usurp the Solar deity Mithra and switch their allegiance to Ahura-Mazda: “I will sacrifice unto Tishtrya (Sirius), the bright and glorious star, whom Ahura Mazda has established as a lord and overseer above all stars.” (Khorda Avesta III, 44). Subsequently Mithra took the Romans under his protective wing and, accepting their allegiance, he guided them into forming the greatest empire known in human history. The Roman–Persian Wars were a series of conflicts between states of the Greco-Roman world and Persia that began in 92BC and continued for several centuries in one form or another.
From the sixth century BC onwards, the Solar deities did not walk among the common people in physical form any more, but continued to work actively with many great world leaders – many of these rulers were in fact hybrid descendants of Solar entities, and it was in their DNA to govern.
The Romans: Hadrian’s Stand
One of the great protagonists of Solar supremacy over the Osirians was Hadrian. When he restored the Pantheon in the second century AD, it conveyed a clear message to Roman citizens, echoing the assertion of Akhenaten almost fifteen hundred years earlier: the Sun is the physical manifestation of our God. A half-century earlier, Nero had set the pattern when he built a Colossus with a Sun-head, which would later be moved to the Amphitheatre, causing it to be renamed as the Colosseum. Nero also built an octagonal room with a dome, which in turn inspired the construction of the Pantheon. He designed this dome with an oculus that used Sunlight to mark his important anniversaries on the walls. Originally built by Agrippa, the Pantheon was destroyed in the fire of AD 80, restored, burned again thirty years later, and was completely rebuilt between AD 118 and AD 128 by Hadrian.
The Pantheon[i] is not a conventional Sundial, but a Hema Siklion. This variation of the Sundial can be made inside a hollow hemi-sphere or other hollowed out shape - it is known as a scaphe (from the Greek skaphein, to hollow out). The Hema Siklion is positioned vertically with the hole uppermost and the concave bowl facing the observer. The interior of the Pantheon’s ‘scaphe’ or bowl is engraved with a network of curving lines accompanied by Greek inscriptions, some abbreviated, giving the dates of the Roman calendar. The broadest division corresponds to the summer solstice, 24 June, and the narrowest to the winter solstice, 25 December. The fan of eleven lines dividing the curving sections marks the length of the twelve daytime hours of the Roman day, which were longer in summer and shorter in winter. The hole in the dome let through a ray of Sunlight that marked the month, day, and hour, moving round the bowl as the position of the sun changed.
Visitors to the building could essentially tell time by observing the position of the shaft of light from the oculus, which crosses above or below the entry at noon. Furthermore, the beam hovers directly above the door at the March and September equinoxes, both moments of ceremonial importance for ancient Romans because it was then that emperors—many of whom cultivated an association with the Sun deity—were considered closest to the heavens and gods. The midday Sun on April 21 – the date commemorating the founding of Rome, as declared by Hadrian - spotlights anyone who stands in the open doorway of the Pantheon. The emperor would have entered the Pantheon at that very moment each year, the bright halo around him acting as a striking confirmation of his divine power and the glory of Rome. Emperors before Hadrian had focused their attention on the Sun, but it was Hadrian who demonstrated that he drew his authority from the Solar source and could command in its name, controlling its influence here on Earth.
Another earlier symbol of the Sun’s authority was the obelisk that had been brought from Egypt by Augustus Caesar in 10 BC, alongside the Ara Pacis (Altar of Peace). In its original position (before it was moved) the location of the Egyptian Obelisk allowed it to serve as a Sundial/Calendar – its shadow pierced the Ara Pacis on the Ides of March (15th March).
Hadrian built other Solar related structures with the intention of demonstrating the supremacy of our Sun. In his villa outside Rome stood the three-level Roccabruna, a temple which lined up with the Academia to produce certain Solar effects: in the summer solstice, the Sun illuminated a huge statue, which some historians have erroneously guessed was an image of an Egyptian Osirian deity. Actually the statue was carved with the face of a boy, Antinuus (although there was indeed an Egyptian themed temple on his estate, only unearthed in 1998, boasting another imported obelisk). Young Antinuus was drowned in the Nile during a visit to Egypt, leaving Hadrian in mourning and dedicating a number of shrines to him. In fact, Antinuus was a Solar ‘deity,’ and it was not unheard of for beings from the Sun to take the guise of human youths when they spent short periods on Earth to guide ancient leaders. [In a similar way, the father of Pythagoras, Mnesarchus, found and took in a boy, a Solar entity named Astrasus, who was to grow up as a brother and advisor to Pythagoras. See article: http://www.solarancestor.com/apollos-legacy.html] It seems that Antinuus was actually disposed of by Persian Zoroastrian zealots.
Several buildings around Rome had Solar connections, including Castel St Angelo - Hadrian’s Mausoleum - on the banks of the Tiber river (it would later get its present name from the Solar Archangel Michael, who was said to appear atop it in 590AD and end the plague). In 274AD the emperor Aurelian reaffirmed the supremacy of the Sun by declaring Sol Invictus ("Unconquered Sun") to be the official God, dedicating new temples to the Sun, elevating the status of its priests and placing the Roman army under Sol’s protection. After him, this remained in force until the 4th century AD, when Constantine convened the Nicean Council and changed Sol’s official birthday of 25th December to the birthday of Christ.
Right back in the sixth century BC, the Solar beings had already vowed to take a back seat and turn over governance of the empires to their human and hybrid followers. Thus the worship of the Sun and its deities gave way to Christianity in Rome and Greece, while Persia turned to Islam. However, Solar ‘Watchers’ and “Children of the Sun’ continue to observe and guide us from the fifth dimension, mostly invisibly (see article: http://www.solarancestor.com/invisible-beings.html) and hybrid DNA is in the physical form of many of today’s significant leaders. We are not alone.
Footnote:
[i] The name Pantheon is derived from the Ancient Greek word (Πάνθεον) meaning ‘of, relating to, or common to all the gods’: Pan /’Παν’ meaning ‘all’ + Theon / ‘θεον’ usually meaning ‘gods’ but can also mean ‘superhuman.
How Ancient Rome Supported the Supremacy of our Sun
Copyright © Paul V Young 2015
The leaders of ancient Greece and Rome, who were themselves often of Solar origin, found it necessary to assert the dominance of the Sun over our planet, in the face of interference from the ET and ID (Inter-dimensional) visitors from other stars - notably Sirius, Orion and Aldebaran – who came to be revered as competing ‘gods’. In Egyptian history, Akhenaten found it necessary 3,300 years ago to proclaim our own Sun (the ‘Aten’) as being sovereign in our system and over our world. We know that subsequently his son Tutankhamun was murdered by Ay when he became mature enough to rule by himself, and prepared to copy his father in placing the Aten above Amun. Soon after Akhenaten and Tutankhamun left this world, the 19th Dynasty appeared, with Seti and Ramses II being descendants of Osiris and Isis from Sirius. We call this race the Osirians.
The manner in which ETs from Sirius coached the Dogons, how visitors from Aldebaran helped the Germans prior to WWII, and those from Orion made their mark on Egypt, are all now legendary. However it was the Solar entities who wielded the greatest influence in most countries. The Chinese emperors owed their beginnings to Huangdi, the Yellow Emperor who came from the Sun and, at the end of his reign, returned to it. India’s first king Rama was a descendent of the Solar deity Vishnu, and direct guidance by beings from the Sun continued in India through to the time of Ashoka the Great in the third century BC. Japan’s first emperor, Jimmu, who ascended to the throne in 660BC, was a direct descendant of the Sun ‘goddess’, Amaterasu. Japan’s national flag still depicts the rising Sun in honour of this. In the Americas the Sun deities ruled for millennia.
Although there are accounts of interstellar conflict in prehistorical times, by the second millennium BC, disputes were conducted in more civilized terms. Perhaps an appropriate comparison would be to the Antarctic continent today, with several nations claiming their own territory there. Ultimately though, one authority had to be observed in our Solar System - humanity could not have two ‘supreme beings.’
The Osirians
As a relevant opening note, the following is courtesy of the Ancient Explorers’ website:
“It is said that at the time of Atlantis and Rama, the Mediterranean was a large and fertile valley. This ancient civilization, pre-dating dynastic Egypt, was known as the Osirian Civilization.” […] “Egyptian civilization, along with the Minoan and Mycenean in Crete and Greece are, in theory, remnants of this great, ancient culture. The civilization built huge earthquake-proof megalithic structures and had electricity and other conveniences common during the time of Atlantis. Like Atlantis and Rama, they had airships and other modes of transport, often electrical in nature. The mysterious cart tracks of Malta, which go over cliffs and under water, may well be part of some ancient Osirian tram-line, possibly taking quarried stone to cities that are now submerged. Probably the best example of the high technology of the Osirians is the amazing platform found at Ba’albek, Lebanon.” [See more at: http://ancientexplorers.com/blog/ancient-advanced-civilizations]
The Empire of Persia (present-day Iran) was bent on world domination from the sixth to third centuries BC, attempting to control Egypt, Babylon, Greece and India. It was in the 6th century BC that Osirians persuaded the Zoroastrians to usurp the Solar deity Mithra and switch their allegiance to Ahura-Mazda: “I will sacrifice unto Tishtrya (Sirius), the bright and glorious star, whom Ahura Mazda has established as a lord and overseer above all stars.” (Khorda Avesta III, 44). Subsequently Mithra took the Romans under his protective wing and, accepting their allegiance, he guided them into forming the greatest empire known in human history. The Roman–Persian Wars were a series of conflicts between states of the Greco-Roman world and Persia that began in 92BC and continued for several centuries in one form or another.
From the sixth century BC onwards, the Solar deities did not walk among the common people in physical form any more, but continued to work actively with many great world leaders – many of these rulers were in fact hybrid descendants of Solar entities, and it was in their DNA to govern.
The Romans: Hadrian’s Stand
One of the great protagonists of Solar supremacy over the Osirians was Hadrian. When he restored the Pantheon in the second century AD, it conveyed a clear message to Roman citizens, echoing the assertion of Akhenaten almost fifteen hundred years earlier: the Sun is the physical manifestation of our God. A half-century earlier, Nero had set the pattern when he built a Colossus with a Sun-head, which would later be moved to the Amphitheatre, causing it to be renamed as the Colosseum. Nero also built an octagonal room with a dome, which in turn inspired the construction of the Pantheon. He designed this dome with an oculus that used Sunlight to mark his important anniversaries on the walls. Originally built by Agrippa, the Pantheon was destroyed in the fire of AD 80, restored, burned again thirty years later, and was completely rebuilt between AD 118 and AD 128 by Hadrian.
The Pantheon[i] is not a conventional Sundial, but a Hema Siklion. This variation of the Sundial can be made inside a hollow hemi-sphere or other hollowed out shape - it is known as a scaphe (from the Greek skaphein, to hollow out). The Hema Siklion is positioned vertically with the hole uppermost and the concave bowl facing the observer. The interior of the Pantheon’s ‘scaphe’ or bowl is engraved with a network of curving lines accompanied by Greek inscriptions, some abbreviated, giving the dates of the Roman calendar. The broadest division corresponds to the summer solstice, 24 June, and the narrowest to the winter solstice, 25 December. The fan of eleven lines dividing the curving sections marks the length of the twelve daytime hours of the Roman day, which were longer in summer and shorter in winter. The hole in the dome let through a ray of Sunlight that marked the month, day, and hour, moving round the bowl as the position of the sun changed.
Visitors to the building could essentially tell time by observing the position of the shaft of light from the oculus, which crosses above or below the entry at noon. Furthermore, the beam hovers directly above the door at the March and September equinoxes, both moments of ceremonial importance for ancient Romans because it was then that emperors—many of whom cultivated an association with the Sun deity—were considered closest to the heavens and gods. The midday Sun on April 21 – the date commemorating the founding of Rome, as declared by Hadrian - spotlights anyone who stands in the open doorway of the Pantheon. The emperor would have entered the Pantheon at that very moment each year, the bright halo around him acting as a striking confirmation of his divine power and the glory of Rome. Emperors before Hadrian had focused their attention on the Sun, but it was Hadrian who demonstrated that he drew his authority from the Solar source and could command in its name, controlling its influence here on Earth.
Another earlier symbol of the Sun’s authority was the obelisk that had been brought from Egypt by Augustus Caesar in 10 BC, alongside the Ara Pacis (Altar of Peace). In its original position (before it was moved) the location of the Egyptian Obelisk allowed it to serve as a Sundial/Calendar – its shadow pierced the Ara Pacis on the Ides of March (15th March).
Hadrian built other Solar related structures with the intention of demonstrating the supremacy of our Sun. In his villa outside Rome stood the three-level Roccabruna, a temple which lined up with the Academia to produce certain Solar effects: in the summer solstice, the Sun illuminated a huge statue, which some historians have erroneously guessed was an image of an Egyptian Osirian deity. Actually the statue was carved with the face of a boy, Antinuus (although there was indeed an Egyptian themed temple on his estate, only unearthed in 1998, boasting another imported obelisk). Young Antinuus was drowned in the Nile during a visit to Egypt, leaving Hadrian in mourning and dedicating a number of shrines to him. In fact, Antinuus was a Solar ‘deity,’ and it was not unheard of for beings from the Sun to take the guise of human youths when they spent short periods on Earth to guide ancient leaders. [In a similar way, the father of Pythagoras, Mnesarchus, found and took in a boy, a Solar entity named Astrasus, who was to grow up as a brother and advisor to Pythagoras. See article: http://www.solarancestor.com/apollos-legacy.html] It seems that Antinuus was actually disposed of by Persian Zoroastrian zealots.
Several buildings around Rome had Solar connections, including Castel St Angelo - Hadrian’s Mausoleum - on the banks of the Tiber river (it would later get its present name from the Solar Archangel Michael, who was said to appear atop it in 590AD and end the plague). In 274AD the emperor Aurelian reaffirmed the supremacy of the Sun by declaring Sol Invictus ("Unconquered Sun") to be the official God, dedicating new temples to the Sun, elevating the status of its priests and placing the Roman army under Sol’s protection. After him, this remained in force until the 4th century AD, when Constantine convened the Nicean Council and changed Sol’s official birthday of 25th December to the birthday of Christ.
Right back in the sixth century BC, the Solar beings had already vowed to take a back seat and turn over governance of the empires to their human and hybrid followers. Thus the worship of the Sun and its deities gave way to Christianity in Rome and Greece, while Persia turned to Islam. However, Solar ‘Watchers’ and “Children of the Sun’ continue to observe and guide us from the fifth dimension, mostly invisibly (see article: http://www.solarancestor.com/invisible-beings.html) and hybrid DNA is in the physical form of many of today’s significant leaders. We are not alone.
Footnote:
[i] The name Pantheon is derived from the Ancient Greek word (Πάνθεον) meaning ‘of, relating to, or common to all the gods’: Pan /’Παν’ meaning ‘all’ + Theon / ‘θεον’ usually meaning ‘gods’ but can also mean ‘superhuman.