wow! good thread
+2
Lucid Memes
intrepidpixie
6 posters
Cult of the Turkey Vultures
gwap360- Yellow Belt
- Number of posts : 67
Registration date : 2009-02-14
- Post n°26
Re: Cult of the Turkey Vultures
Extant- Brown Belt
- Number of posts : 555
Registration date : 2009-04-04
Location : The Forge
- Post n°27
Re: Cult of the Turkey Vultures
A correlatory cult here? -> Antiquities of the Illuminati -
The Peacock Angel Cult
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As to the kind of bas relief sculpture, from the Halaf culture, here is an example, from Georges Roux' Ancient Iraq.
I'm really not sold on many of the sources they use but I think the possibilities raised deserve further investigation. As quoted here:
The Peacock Angel Cult - Part One:
The Peacock Angel Cult
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As to the kind of bas relief sculpture, from the Halaf culture, here is an example, from Georges Roux' Ancient Iraq.
I'm really not sold on many of the sources they use but I think the possibilities raised deserve further investigation. As quoted here:
The Peacock Angel Cult - Part One:
The Yezidi from what we gather, are an angelic cultus, the Angels being the Nephilim that we run into in the Book of Enoch. "We have survived on tops of mountains and beneath the feet of mountains" -- consider that the mountainous regions in Northern Iraq / Southern Turkey / North-Eastern Syria / Armenia, N. W. Iran, would facilitate such a statement. Indeed the first post-diluvial cultures in the region were cave communities such as that of Shanidar cave. The Barda-Balka culture goes back 120,000 years. The earliest strata of the Shanidar culture, also goes back that far. But, when the famous Deluge of History took place, circa 10,973 B. C. E., (rather than the 10,500 B. C. E. of the Hancock / Bauval crowd) Shanidar was still going. We recommend the work, Ancient Iraq, by Georges Roux. We have been informed that some of the finds in that place included burials of goats' heads with vulture wings, and that the early priests/shamans of the area wore vulture wings as a part of their uniform, and that this was to signify the appearance of the Nephilim, or the Angels. Did our Nephilim have wings, or does it signify that they flew?
intrepidpixie- Orange Belt
- Number of posts : 107
Registration date : 2009-02-14
Location : Los Angeles
- Post n°28
Re: Cult of the Turkey Vultures
Yeah, these yezidi are an interesting group of people. They fit into Kealeys theory about the Kurdish priest sect who live in caves who ultimately control the eastern faction of the NWO. I did alot of research on them a while back- their beliefs are very similar to Zoroastrianism. Their ancient shrine of Shaihk Adi is certainly interesting with the serpent at the portal and modern day Yezidi dye their hair red and don`t cut it. The relief sculpture you posted above reminds me of the hybrid Pan- perhap Virgils Arcadie was really in the Middle East.
intrepidpixie- Orange Belt
- Number of posts : 107
Registration date : 2009-02-14
Location : Los Angeles
- Post n°29
Re: Cult of the Turkey Vultures
I think too, that the western Order of the Brazen Serpents which was formed at around the time of the Crusades when the Templars were over in this region was a nod to these people.
Extant- Brown Belt
- Number of posts : 555
Registration date : 2009-04-04
Location : The Forge
- Post n°30
Re: Cult of the Turkey Vultures
intrepidpixie wrote:I think too, that the western Order of the Brazen Serpents which was formed at around the time of the Crusades when the Templars were over in this region was a nod to these people.
Maybe more than a nod eh? Well some suggest so. That it was a transmission of a tradition, a viral meme if you like, carried from all those eastern sects through to the Templars and beyond. Lots of eastern influence.
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