A Seafarer's Decoding of the Irish Symbols by Donald McMahon

A Seafarer's Decoding of the Irish Symbols by Donald McMahon

Author:Donald McMahon
Language: eng
Format: azw3
ISBN: 9781497395206
Published: 2014-12-30T05:00:00+00:00


Knockmany

Latitude: 54.45° N

Longitude: 7.16° W

Knockmany is a sight in Ireland that has many kerbstones. It is a myth that King Menes from a Nile River Dynasty is buried at Knockmany. King Menes is alleged to be the founder of the first dynasty on the Nile River, 3200/3000 BCE.

Hieroglyphic text inscribed on the empty “tomb” of King Menes at Abydos describes how King Menes had embarked on a voyage of exploration with his fleet “to the Sunset Land in the Western Ocean” (Urani Land). The text reads

“King Menes, the Ruler of Mizraim [Egypt], the Land of the Two Crowns, the perished dead one in the West of the Horus race…The Commander-in-Chief of Ships made the complete course to the end of the Sunset Land. Sailing in ships, he completed the inspection of the Western Land. He built there a holding in Urani Land at the Lake of the Peak…” (Reference 61).

I was astounded when reading a book by Daniel O’Riordain (Reference 41) to find a kerbstone having eleven passageways carved in the same orientation as the eleven passageways found at the oldest structure in Europe at Barnenez, Brittany, c. 4200 BCE. This book was suggested by and then bought from Michael Slavin at the Hill of Tara. Figure 9-20 is a key Knockmany kerbstone, showing the eleven-passageway mound at Barnenez, Brittany.



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