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05-20-2008, 02:11 PM | #301 |
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Just so we're clear, Horus never died, Osiris was never crucified, and Osiris never was brought back to life in order to conquer death. The real parallels just aren't there. You're finding parallels where they don't exist. No one has been able to find one solid parallel. Robert Price even goes so far to think the evidence is lost (I wonder where we heard that before *cough*xtianapologists*cough*).
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05-20-2008, 02:19 PM | #302 | |
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05-20-2008, 02:39 PM | #303 | ||
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05-20-2008, 06:10 PM | #304 | |
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05-20-2008, 10:43 PM | #305 | |||
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05-20-2008, 11:05 PM | #306 | ||
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05-21-2008, 06:30 AM | #307 | ||
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05-21-2008, 09:59 AM | #308 | |
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05-21-2008, 10:15 AM | #309 | |
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Wealthy amateur archeologist Heinrich Schliemann claimed that Hisarlik Turkey was the site of ancient Troy in the 1870's. The Iliad is an ancient epic poem. Such poems are usually fiction - most of them are the adventures of heros and gods that are obviously purely fictional. The Iliad contains lots of things that are clearly fictional. Why should we assume that there is a real Troy? Homer may have simply made up the description of Troy's geography. Whenever there is a fictional description of some place, then there must be some real place that most closely parallels that fictional place. There are hundreds of ancient cities and ruins along the Meditaranian coast. If Homer was aware of an ancient destroyed city at Hisarlik Turkey, he may have modeled his Troy after it, much like the author of the Book of Joshua used the ancient ruins called Jericho in his story. Whether Homer made up the geography or modeled his story after some ancient ruins, I think it would be fair to say that Troy was a myth. What are the geographic parallels and differences between the description of Troy in the Iliad and the ancient geography of Hisarlik? For example, On the ocean vs. 10 Km from the sea. Uncrossable rivers in deep goarges vs. small surface rivers that a child could walk across. Harbors fill up, rivers change their course, seismic activity raises and lowers land significantly changing geography. How do we know that 3500 years ago another site did not have better geographic parallels than present day Hisarlik. What are the historic parallels and differences between the description of Troy in the Iliad and the history of Hisarlik? We have lots of writing from ancient Persia, and the location of Hisarlik would have been in the Persian empire. Why is there no mention of "Troy" in the ancient Persian Literature? Why is Troy described as a city state with a king in charge, when there were no independent city states or kings in the Persian empire. |
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05-21-2008, 10:43 AM | #310 |
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Troy was long before the Persians came around, probably in the 13th century BC if at all.
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