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Are the ossuaries the result of a disaster?
Are the ossuaries the result of a disaster?

Video: Are the ossuaries the result of a disaster?

Video: Are the ossuaries the result of a disaster?
Video: Cock-The-Roach by Korney Chukovsky, part 7 dubbed English 2024, May
Anonim

Ossuary - place SECONDARY storage of bones. Relatives were carefully buried in compliance with all formalities, and after a while they were dragged out of their graves and dumped in a disorderly heap - without any respect for gender, age or birth.

Here are the Paris catacombs with the remains of about 6 million people. The construction date of this wall is visible.

Catacombs of paris
Catacombs of paris

Old drawing. The storage of bones is not yet streamlined.

Catacombs of Paris 2
Catacombs of Paris 2

Santa Maria della Conchezione (Santa Maria della Concezione dei Cappuccini) - Capuchin church on Via Veneto in Rome, with the remains of about 4 thousand people.

02
02

Czech. Kutná Hora. Ossuary in Sedlec. About 40,000 human skeletons were used to decorate the chapel. The chapel acquired its present appearance in 1870 (!!!).

sedlec-ossuary-bone-chuch-czech-republic
sedlec-ossuary-bone-chuch-czech-republic

Further Capela dos Ossos Portugal, Evora. 5 thousand skeletons.

Evora12
Evora12

Ossuary in Hallstatt. They write that the Ossuary arose due to a lack of land for burials. Although in reality, problems with land did not arise earlier than in the second half of the 20th century.

Bonehouse1
Bonehouse1

Next Fontanelle Cemetery in Naples. Here the first glimpse of the truth is the plague burial of 1656. The remains are unnamed, hence the dumping nature of the burial.

Napoli - Fontanelle 1030848
Napoli - Fontanelle 1030848

The tomb of the Andreevsky skete on Mount Athos … there is not enough space, "small bones (arms and legs) are stacked in regular piles, like running fathoms of deadwood, close to the wall, almost to the ceiling." How many are there ?!

Ossuary in the Monastery of St. Catherine on Sinai. The only complete skeleton in the ossuary is the relics of the hermit Stephen. Everything else is fragmented. The monastery is closely connected with the activities of the Russian archimandrite Porfiry, who agreed on the subordination of the Copts of Egypt and Ethiopia to the Russian emperor. I have this story described here:

Lavra of Sava the Sanctified in Palestine. A strange place. In the apse are the remains of a fresco depicting three Babylonian youths, their faces erased by Muslim Bedouins. And then the Bedouins had nothing else to do:) The reason is simple: the real Babylon has always been in Egypt, in the area of Lake Fayum. I have about it here:

Ossuary of the Bulgarian Bachkovo Monastery.

In Chersonesos, after the 10th century, on the site of many collapsed large basilicas, dozens of ossuary graves were erected, in which the bones of the dead, previously buried outside the city, were buried. Watch your hands: the ashes of those buried outside the city are disturbed (there is not enough land) to be taken to the center of the city where the land is more expensive.

In Malta, near the megalithic temples of Tarshin, an underground ossuary, Hal-Saflieni, was found.

Ossuaries are found among the so-called menhirs, especially characteristic of England and dating from the time of the construction of the famous Stonehenge (3000-2000 BC)

The burial of Casa de Moura (Portugal), found in 2001, belongs to the early Neolithic era, and is currently the subject of research and dating.

About 4000 BC. e. dates back to the so-called "Yarigol complex of ossuaries" found in East Africa, near Lake Turkana. The complex is a series of low mounds, in each of which … a room is arranged for storing skeletonized remains … skeletonized remains were mixed with each other.

Ossuaries - mass; I'll give you a list of links. Some, alas, no longer work.

  1. L'ossuaire néolithique de Berry-au-Bac (Aisne): étude odontologique // Revue archéologique de Picardie 1995, no. 1-2, pp. 83-86. ISSN 0752-5656B
  2. To the exploration of the Alepotripa cave
  3. Yarigol complex (eng.)
  4. About Casa de Moura cave
  5. Jersey Menhirs
  6. N. Nepomniachtchi. Older than the ancients // One hundred mysteries of the ancient world. M.: Veche, 2002.
  7. History of the Ancient East, vol. 2
  8. Phenicia // Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary: In 86 volumes (82 volumes and 4 additional). - SPb., 1890-1907.
  9. Chichen Itza, tomb of the high priest
  10. Russian Newsweek / Globus
  11. Vladimir Kabo "Tasmanians and the Tasmanian problem"
  12. Pugachenkova G. A. - M., 1984. - No. 28. - S. 79-90.
  13. Kolchenko V. A. On the typology of the ossuaries of the Chui valley
  14. Goryacheva V. D. Nausy of the necropolis of Krasnorechensky settlement
  15. Gudkova A. V. New materials on the funeral rite of the 7th-8th centuries. in Kerdera (North Khorezm)
  16. Yagodin V. Monuments of ancient art of Karakalpakstan
  17. Belyaev L. A. Byzantine archeology
  18. Yurevich D. Archaeological discoveries of the last 50 years, important for the study of Holy Scripture
  19. Ossuary. Electronic Jewish Encyclopedia
  20. Ossuaries // "Bibliological Dictionary" of the priest Alexander Men
  21. 1 2 100 great secrets of the ancient world. M.: Veche, 2005
  22. Ossuary Update: the Storm over the Bone Box // Biblical Archeology Review. 2003. No. 6.
  23. Biblical Archeology. Ossuary of Caiaphas
  24. Village B. Near Evangelical artifacts
  25. The catacombs of paris
  26. Rinaldo Cordovani. The Crypt of the Capuchins. Rome: 2001.
  27. Hallstatt's White Gold - Salt
  28. Dungeons of the city of light Around the world, 2003. No. 6
  29. The secrets of the caves of Fontanelle will be revealed by the camera of the photographer Miguel Invarto RIA Novosti
  30. Boris Zaitsev. Athos
  31. 1 2 The ossuary
  32. Nyametsky monastery
  33. My Chernigov
  34. Ossuary in the Transfiguration Monastery
  35. The Cemetery
  36. General History of Art (Art of Bulgaria)
  37. Separation of Chersonesos from Byzantium and its destruction
  38. 130 years since the capture of Plevna … (Mausoleum-ossuary in Plevna) (inaccessible link - history, copy)
  39. James Cameron found the tomb of Christ?
  40. Is the tomb of Christ truly found?
  41. Center for Apologetic Research News
  42. News - before and after Christmas

The main thing: numerous graves-ossicles, located among residential areas, were a characteristic feature of the city during the late Middle Ages

Ossuaries are used for mass graves of those killed in major battles, often when the remains cannot be identified. Thus, the remains of more than 130 thousand French and German soldiers who died in the battle of Verdun are kept in the ossuary of Douaumont, opened in 1932.

The evidence is more than dubious … The battle killed 162 thousand French and 143 thousand Germans. They also write that during the Battle of Verdun, both sides lost about a million people, among whom were killed - up to 430 thousand people. Near Verdun, for the first time, light machine guns, rifle grenade launchers, flamethrowers and chemical shells. The difference in the estimated death toll is 125 thousand people. An unrealistic discrepancy, given that clerical work at the beginning of the 20th century was carried out in a completely civilized manner.

Falsifications are taking place right now - in particular, the encyclopedias sharply underestimate (against the data of the encyclopedias of the 1930s) the losses of Belgium, namely in Belgium there are tectonic faults that can throw out a deadly amount of hydrocarbons.

By the way, there is evidence that in 1872 there was a terrible fire in the catacombs of Paris.… What could burn there - bones or limestone? Or maybe underground gases bursting out due to tectonic shifts?

CONCLUSION: ossuaries are the result of a catastrophe of a universal scale. This, in particular, is indicated by the categorical contradiction between the traditional (deeply religious) culture of burials and the dumping nature of the ossuaries.

EGYPT … It is known that storage of skeletonized remains was not actually an Egyptian tradition … However, the discovery in 1914 in Giza of the burial place of Idu II, who apparently belonged to the Badari culture (about 4150 BC), showed.. otherwise. Research by Ulrich Weser at the University of Tübingen, carried out at the end of the 20th century, proved that … the bones were "smoked" - that is, fumigated with smoke (!)

I'll tell you where there are traces of "kopechnia" on the remains in Idu. Here is a cyclist who was completely burned out during the "firestorm" in Hamburg in 1943. Exactly the same fire tornadoes were formed as a result of the mysterious "Peshtigo horror" - the "plague" horror in the USA in 1871. Link:

hamburg18
hamburg18

JUDEA … They write that the tradition of keeping bones after their skeleton appeared in Judea during the time of the Second Temple, which is associated with a lack of space in family crypts due to an increase in population. Tradition secondary burial in ossuaries not remained among the Jews in the period after the destruction of the Second Temple and the dispersion.

As far as I remember, among the Jews (like many others) it is not customary to disturb the remains. The term "secondary burial" was introduced to explain the paradoxically massive nature of burials without respect for status. In my opinion, this nature of the burials is a direct indication of a catastrophe.

SO CONCLUSIONS

1. The funeral is always individual. Ossuary - Mass Grave Indicating Massive Deaths

2. Relatives are buried next to relatives. In the ossuary, the remains are faceless and jumbled, as if all the relatives had disappeared.

3. The remains of ancestors are treated with respect. In the ossuary, the remains are, in fact, mocked, sculpting chandeliers and coats of arms from them

sedlecossuarycoatofarms
sedlecossuarycoatofarms

4. In ossuaries, as a rule, there are no clothes and jewelry, which indicates the looting of those who buried, they are strangers to each other

5. There are no results of genetic or anthropological examination of remains from ossuaries in the public domain

6. The bones in ossuaries, as a rule, were ordered already in the 19th century, in particular, around 1870 - this is the date of the catastrophe

7. Traces of "smoking" on bones in ossuaries indicate that people died in fires similar to those of 1870-1871.

8. The number of Parisians and Czechs who died in the fires of 1870-1871 is hushed up. How the bones of the ossuaries were dated is unclear.

9. The age of Russian forests is usually 130 years, and Russia is a huge territory. What we had was all over the planet

Here it is, Paris in 1871.

Paris 1
Paris 1

But how contemporaries saw France in 1871. Corpses to the horizon.

1871 11
1871 11

However, these corpses are not in the official statistics. Burnt Paris is there, but no dead. Only 40 communards.

communa
communa

And here is Strasbourg of the same time.

Strassburg
Strassburg

The same thing happened all over the planet - from Japan to the USA.

VERSION: The Parisian catacombs really developed thanks to the massive development of Baron Haussmann. Simultaneously, the bodies collected in the city were buried there as the rubble was cleared. Stone up, bones down. For 1871, 6 million corpses - with a creak, but an acceptable figure.

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