12-07-2014, 10:47 AM
The World's First Temple
I believe you are correct. It would make sense that those of Turkey would move out into Sumer which is now modern day Iran. The above link proves that there is an ancient stone ring going back to 12,000 BC which fits the time line that Ra gave back in the 1980s perfectly.
The religion and teachings is what you would think of as Zoroastrianism.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zoroastrianism
I believe you are correct. It would make sense that those of Turkey would move out into Sumer which is now modern day Iran. The above link proves that there is an ancient stone ring going back to 12,000 BC which fits the time line that Ra gave back in the 1980s perfectly.
Quote:At first glance, the fox on the surface of the limestone pillar appears to be a trick of the bright sunlight. But as I move closer to the large, T-shaped megalith, I find it is carved with an improbable menagerie. A bull and a crane join the fox in an animal parade etched across the surface of the pillar, one of dozens erected by early Neolithic people at Göbekli Tepe in southeastern Turkey. The press here is fond of calling the site "the Turkish Stonehenge," but the comparison hardly does justice to this 25-acre arrangement of at least seven stone circles. The first structures at Göbekli Tepe were built as early as 10,000 B.C., predating their famous British counterpart by about 7,000 years
Quote:Approximately eleven thousand [11,000] of your years ago, the first of the, what you call, wars, caused approximately forty percent of this population to leave the density by means of disintegration of the body. The second and most devastating of the conflicts occurred approximately one oh eight two one, ten thousand eight hundred twenty-one [10,821] years in the past according to your illusion. This created an earth-changing configuration and the large part of Atlantis was no more, having been inundated. Three of the positively oriented of the Atlantean groups left this geographical locus before that devastation, placing themselves in the mountain areas of what you call Tibet, what you call Peru, and what you call Turkey.
The religion and teachings is what you would think of as Zoroastrianism.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zoroastrianism
Quote:Zoroastrianism arose in the eastern region of the ancient Persian Empire, when the religious philosopher Zoroaster simplified the pantheon of early Iranian gods[
Quote:Zoroaster's ideas led to a formal religion bearing his name by about the 6th century BCE and have influenced other later religions including Judaism, Gnosticism, Christianity and Islam.[3]