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Ancient Mysteries is a television series that was produced by FilmRoos and originally broadcast on A&E between January 7, 1994 and May 3, 1998 with reruns airing until 2000. Reruns were also re-broadcast on The Biography Channel during the 2000s.
America's Book of Secrets [11] America's Greatest Prison Breaks; Ancient Discoveries; Ancient Empires; Ancient Impossible; Ancient Mysteries; Ancients Behaving Badly; Andrew Jackson; Angels and Demons: Decoded [12] [13] Ape to Man; Armageddon; Assembly Required; Auschwitz Untold; Automobiles; Back to the Blueprint; Banned from the Bible [14 ...
An Ancient Evil (1994) A Tapestry of Murders (1994) A Tournament of Murders (1996) Ghostly Murders (1997) The Hangman's Hymn (2001) A Haunt of Murder (2002) The Midnight Man (2012) Mystery of Alexander the Great (writing as Anna Apostolou) Set in 4th-century B.C. ancient Greece. A Murder in Macedon (1997) A Murder in Thebes (1998) The Egyptian ...
Mysteries of the Bible is an hour-long television series that was originally broadcast by A&E from March 25, 1994, until June 13, 1998, and A&E aired reruns of it until 2002. The series was about biblical mysteries and was produced by FilmRoos. The Discovery Channel and BBC also released a series of the same name in 2003. [1]
David Hatcher Childress (born June 1, 1957) is an American author, and the owner of Adventures Unlimited Press, a publishing house established in 1984 specializing in books on unusual topics such as ancient mysteries, unexplained phenomena, pseudohistory, and historical revisionism.
An internationally bestselling book by Clifford Wilson, Crash Go the Chariots, was published in 1972. Ronald Story's 1976 book rebutting von Däniken's ideas was titled The Space Gods Revealed. Another negative criticism of von Däniken's book came from archeologist Kenneth Feder in his book Frauds, Myths, and Mysteries in 2018.
The eschatology of the book is rather unusual. The end time described by the author does not manifest itself in the normal culmination of a battle, judgment or catastrophe, but rather as "a steady increase of light, [through which] darkness is made to disappear or in which iniquity dissolves and just as the smoke rising into the air eventually dissipates". [5]
[17] [18] [19] In 1944, Agatha Christie published Death Comes as the End, a mystery novel set in ancient Egypt and the first full-length historical whodunit. [ 1 ] [ 19 ] [ 20 ] [ 21 ] In 1950, John Dickson Carr published the second full-length historical mystery novel called The Bride of Newgate , set at the close of the Napoleonic Wars .