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The Issue with Antiquity. (History; Fiction or Science? Book 5) PDF

270 Pages·2015·5.08 MB·English
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HISTORY: FICTION OR SCIENCE? l BOOK 5 THE ISSUE WITH ANTIQUITY ANATOLY FOMENKO THE ISSUE WITH ANTIQUITY By Anatoly Fomenko Book 5 of History: Fiction or Science? series. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the prior permission of the publisher. Critics are welcome, of course, to quote brief passages by way of criticism and review. Anatoly Fomenko asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work. Translated from Russian by Mikhail Yagupov Design & layout: Paul Bondarovski Project management: Franck Tamdhu On the cover: Photo John Foxx Images. Copyright © 2003-2015 Delamere Resources LLC Published by Delamere Resources LLC Publisher’s website: http://history.mithec.com ABOUT THE AUTHOR Fomenko, Anatoly Timofeevich (b. 1945). Full Member (Academician) of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Full Member of the Russian Academy of Natural Sciences, Full Member of the International Higher Education Academy of Sciences, Doctor of Physics and Mathematics, Professor, Head of the Moscow State University Section of Mathematics of the Department of Mathematics and Mechanics. Solved Plateau’s Problem from the theory of minimal spectral surfaces. Author of the theory of invariants and topological classification of integrable Hamiltonian dynamic systems. Laureate of the 1996 National Premium of the Russian Federation (in Mathematics) for a cycle of works on the Hamiltonian dynamical systems and manifolds’ invariants theory. Author of 200 scientific publications, 28 monographs and textbooks on mathematics, a specialist in geometry and topology, calculus of variations, symplectic topology, Hamiltonian geometry and mechanics, computer geometry. Author of a number of books on the development of new empirico-statistical methods and their application to the analysis of historical chronicles as well as the chronology of antiquity and the Middle Ages. From the publisher Hideous inconsistencies of history History only makes sense to us when we don’t reflect upon it too much. Otherwise we would expire of cognitive dissonance caused by the sheer lack of logic in how randomly the chronological layers are shuffled together, interspersed by many centuries when humans were apparently immersed into utter hibernation and didn’t bother with fighting, inventing, migrating or trifles like that. Nonsensical, is it? But this is what the very concept of the Dark Ages implies, just as the popular belief in Father Christmas implies believing in reindeer-driven celestial sleighs as well. One wonders how the minds of professional historians appear unaffected by all of these hideous inconsistencies of history. The Orwellian concept of doublethink comes to mind. Roman senators congregating among the ruins of the Capitol whose roof appears to have been made of concrete (which apparently hadn’t been invented until the XVI century), Gothic cathedrals that it took several centuries to erect, and so on, and so forth. The most rational humans can invent the most implausible explanations where simple ones would mean taking their holy cows to the altar of Reason, a most intimidating deity. History as we know it now is just too bloated and too nonsequential to fit it into your head for proper conceptualization. So we become experts in short historical periods; should those, in turn, prove to contain insoluble problems or paradoxical occurrences, these can always be blamed on the ignorant scribes or the peculiar and idiosyncratic perception of our venerable ancestors. It took one brilliant mind to notice that the inconsistencies all fit together in the most bizarre way. A mathematician’s mind. Anatoly Fomenko, one of the world’s leading experts in the field of mathematical statistics, has spent thirty years studying all the ambiguities of human history using nothing but natural scientific methods for his research. He is the first to have conceptualized an alternative chronological scale for human history; a scale so short that it frightens poor historians into frenzy. The new version of history is extremely logical in addition to its brevity, and can finally fit into the cranium of a logical human being without causing too many pains; however, it leaves no room for your old dogma, so be warned before you embark on your journey to the crystalline peaks of the Professor’s logic. You won’t be the same after his latest fundamental work entitled History: Fiction or Science? now available in English. You won’t be able to hear the word “Troy” ever again without a smirk of righteous derision upon your face. Judging by the successes of the modern cinematographic industry, it is just as well. The Da Vinci code broken for good Unnerving as the idea might seem, popular fiction dealing with conspiracies of one sort or another is actually quite tame as compared to reality. The Roman Catholic Church, for instance, is involved in a much greater hoax than the most daring writer could possibly conceive of – one that deals with the very foundations of history itself. The above statement is neither an exaggeration, nor a metaphor. Very few people are aware that the B.C./A.D. chronology as we know it was created by a handful of Jesuits in the XVI-XVII century – Joseph Scaliger, Dionysius Petavius, and their successors. We have grown so accustomed to a timeline that runs through many millennia, from the Egyptian pyramids to the present day, that the mere thought of questioning its veracity seems perfectly preposterous – just like the notion of a rotating earth must have seemed in the epoch of Galileo Galilei, and just as heretical. But nevertheless, the entire conception of ancient and mediaeval history known to us today owes its existence to a XVI century Jesuit hoax. A hoax that has finally been exposed with the aid of astronomy, mathematical statistics and modern computational facilities. * * * The material of The Issue with Antiquity book crowns scores of years of meticulous and extensive research performed by the eminent mathematician Anatoly Fomenko and his colleagues. This book is also the 5th volume in History: Fiction or Science? e- series, the fundamental oeuvre that exposes and expounds the numerous inveracities of the traditional version of history. The e-series History: Fiction or Science? contains data and conclusions that aren’t anything short of revolutionary. The alternatives offered to classical history are stunning, unorthodox to the extent of being labelled heretical by virtually every scholar of history, and daring enough to be considered preposterous at first sight, although this impression never lasts longer than it takes one to read a few pages attentively. The author dissects every historical age and analyses the data from every source imaginable – concensual chronology takes a good beating, and it goes rapidly downhill from there. The Issue with Antiquity is actually the result of creation in XV-XVII centuries of a mythical Classical Age that never was by misdating mediaeval events by hundreds and thousands of years as very ancient ones. Franck Tamdhu July 2015 Contents About the author From the publisher Are History and Astronomy incompatible? By Béla Lukács Preface by Anatoly T. Fomenko PART ONE: The Middle Ages referred to as the “Antiquity”. Mutual superimposition of the Second and the Third Roman Empire... 1. Identifying the Second and the Third “ancient” Roman Empire as the same state. A chronological shift of 330 years 1.1. A dynastic description of the Second and the Third Roman Empire 1.2. Biographical parallelism between the Second and Third Roman Empires. The 330-year shift 2. The correlation between two different dating methods illustrated by the superimposition of two epochs from the history of Roman Papacy one over the other. A brief scheme 3. The superimposition of the Israelite (Theomachist) Kingdom over the Third Roman Empire in the West. A shift of circa 1230 years 4. Identifying the theocratic Kingdom of Judah as the Third Roman Empire in the East. A shift of circa 1230 years (short diagram) 5. Saint Basil the Great in the alleged IV century a.d. and his prototype in the XII century A.D. – Jesus Christ. The resulting shift of 820 years PART TWO: The famous reform of the Occidental Church in the XI century by “Pope Gregory Hildebrand” as the reflection of the XII century reforms of Andronicus (Christ). The Trojan war of the XIII century A.D. 6. “Pope Gregory Hildebrand” from the XI century A.D. as a replica of Jesus Christ (Andronicus) from the XII century. 6.1 Astronomy in the Gospels 6.1.1. The true dating of the evangelical eclipse 6.1.2. The Gospels apparently reflect a sufficiently advanced level of astronomical eclipse theories, which contradicts the consensual evangelical history 6.2. The Roman John Crescentius of the alleged X century a.d. as a reflection of the Evangelical John the Baptist from the XII century a.d. A biographical parallelism 6.3. “Pope” Gregory VII Hildebrand from the Roman chronicles dated to the XI century a.d. as the reflection of Jesus Christ (Andronicus) from the XI century a.d. A biographical parallelism 6.4. The Bethlehem Star of the alleged I century and the famous supernova explosion of circa 1150 (subsequently shifted to 1054 by the chronologists) 6.5. The Crucifixion of Jesus on Mount Beykos, or the evangelical Golgotha, which is located outside Constantinople, near the shore of the Bosporus 7. Identifying Livy’s “Ancient Imperial Rome” as the Third Roman Empire after a 1053- year shift Overview of the e-Series Bibliography “Who controls the past controls the future; who controls the present controls the past.” George Orwell, 1984. “History is a pack of lies about events that never happened told by people who weren’t there.” George Santayana, American philosopher.

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PART ONE: The Middle Ages referred to as the “Antiquity”. “Antiquity”. Mutual superimposition of the Second and the Third Roman Empire, both of which become identified as the respective kingdoms of Israel and instead an uproar was starting, he took water and washed his hands in front of t
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