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The Dragon’s Triangle has a reputation for mystery dating back decades, possibly centuries if ancient records are included in the analysis. Native Japanese people call the area Ma-no Umi (the Sea of the Devil) and oral histories tell a tale of how local fishermen would avoid the area at all costs. Another story tells the tale of Kublai Khan ...
The burning of the Yule Log is an integral part of the celebration of Yule, an ancient pagan festival practiced across the pre-Christian world. Yule is the celebration of the rebirth of the Sun God and coincides with the winter solstice. On the night of Yule, a carefully selected log would be brought into the home and ritualistically burned ...
A small church, Maria Santissima del Carmine, was built at the entrance to the ossuary at the time. This Fontanelle cult existed until 1969, when the Archbishop of Naples, Cardinal Ursi, closed the cemetery down as it was in direct conflict to the church’s teachings. The cemetery was restored and only reopened to the public full-time in 2010.
In 1992, a Chinese villager named Wu Anai, made an amazing discovery near the small village of Shiyan Beicun in the Zhejiang province (People’s Republic of China). While pumping water from a pool that everyone claimed had an endless bottom, Anai discovered an entrance way to a series of underground man-made caverns.
The drawings were first discovered in the 1920’s when commercial plane flights began flying over the plain and were believed to have been created between 500 BC and 500 AD. Now, utilizing drone technology, Archeologists have discovered over 50 additional drawings in the neighboring Palpa province. These previously undiscovered Nazca carvings ...
The world’s oldest cave art dates back over 40,000 years and hail from the Maros and Pangkep regions of Indonesia. In those caves, paintings of pig-deer and human hands plus physical evidence of human occupation are the only remnants of a long-since-dead society. The most recent discovery of cave paintings was made in May, 2016 in the ...
It is celebrated sometime between March 19th and March 22nd in the Northern Hemisphere. Ostara is also known as Lady Day, Egg Day, or Alban Eiler (Druidic). Modern-day celebrations include, but aren’t exclusive to fertility rituals, celebrations of new growth/planting, spring, and the sacred marriage of the Goddess and the God.
The Dragon’s Triangle – Surrounded in Mysteries of History by thegypsy The area of the North Atlantic known as the Bermuda Triangle has been a part of maritime and aviation history for hundreds of years….
Flying Machine Carvings found in Abydos at the Temple of Seti I. A hieroglyphic panel discovered at the Temple of Seti I in Abydos, Egypt, has long been used to support the theory that ancient Egyptian’s had advanced technology. It’s clear that the depictions resemble modern-day helicopters, spacecraft, and even a jet plane.
A bold and honorable knight, one who has made a long and difficult trek over inhospitable terrain arrives to vanquish the dragon, but only after an epic battle that taxes the knight’s every sinew. When he finally plunges his sword into the single spot of vulnerability on the huge dragon’s body, the spot where but a single scale has been ...