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  1. Silveryou

    Chronology: how old is America?

    Originally, as you know, he thought Jesus was born in 1052/1053 (don't remember) and died in 1085. Then he changed by 100 years. I have the suspect that he did it to sincronize it with Russian/Tartarian history beginning with the so-called Mongol invasion, thus claiming that the Russians were...
  2. Silveryou

    Boyars and the Clothes of Giants

    I showed you here: Welcome to Tenochtitlan as it was in 1520 In Italy Lombards' and Normans' history frequently overlaps, like the history of Normans and Franks. Norman can be seen as the anagram of Roman. The Salians were a "tribe" of Franks and a group of "Roman priests". The Romans attacked...
  3. Silveryou

    Comment by 'Silveryou' in media '1650 Plan of Rome'

    "L'anno del sanctissimo giubileo il papa apre la porta santa" means "In the most holy year of the jubilee, the Pope opens the holy door". The door has a cross on it. The same closed door was before Heraclius when he went to Jerusalem with the Holy Cross and the door opened when he repented and...
  4. Silveryou

    1516: Noah in Tartary

    By the way, a Roman cohort was made up of 600 men and 10 cohorts made up a legion (Coorte - Wikipedia - in Italian language). Therefore it should be implied the existence of other 9 cohorts somewhere. The commander of the cohort was the primus pilus and one of the sub-sections of the cohort was...
  5. Silveryou

    Comment by 'Silveryou' in media 'The Adventures of Ulysses'

    Here Nausicaa is called Inaco, who in Greek myth is a male and doesn't appear in Odysseus' adventure (Inachus - Wikipedia)
  6. Silveryou

    1516: Noah in Tartary

    I think it says roughly "Here Noah, prince of the Tartars and imperator (in the litteral sense of highest commander/general) of 600 armed men (not completely sure about the word preceding 600, therefore the meaning could be different), commands and moves (in the sense that this is his...
  7. Silveryou

    Comment by 'Silveryou' in media '52 BC Battle of Alesia by Melchior Feselen'

    Yeah. Take a look at his articles. They are all worth a reading
  8. Silveryou

    Comment by 'Silveryou' in media '52 BC Battle of Alesia by Melchior Feselen'

    Take a look to this article by this French recentist (must be translated) Alesia I think he gives some interesting answers.
  9. Silveryou

    Comment by 'Silveryou' in media '52 BC Battle of Alesia by Melchior Feselen'

    Everything weird! It's incredible how these artists are trying to tell us a story we no longer understand. It seems that the Romans with the double-eagle are dressed as knights and soldiers of the epoch of the artist. But the Gauls are dressed partly as ancient Romans/Byzantines and partly as...
  10. Silveryou

    Norumbega: Washington Monument and the Roman Empire

    I think it's "From Rome to America"
  11. Silveryou

    Boyars and the Clothes of Giants

    Don't know about the sleeves behind the back, but I'm pretty sure the long left sleeve served the purpose of keeping the right hand/arm warm. I cannot fnd a picture of oriental people with arms folded though
  12. Silveryou

    Comment by 'Silveryou' in media 'Grand Vizier Ibrahim Pasha, his Giants and tiny Frenchmen'

    Should be the Kubbealtı, a place in the Topkapı Palace, Istanbul - Imperial Council (Ottoman Empire) By the way... what is going on here? It seems many fake paintings have been spread all over the internet. I remember clearly that the first is the original one though. Here an article from 2014...
  13. Silveryou

    How old is the Aral Sea?

    It's an interesting idea. My only problem is that by the superimposition you did, the sea was upon regions way above sea level nowadays, while the southern part of the Caspian should have been submerged because way below sea level. Don't know if I am clear
  14. Silveryou

    How old is the Aral Sea?

    Some settlements I identified (maybe) sometime ago on this map in that region: Sakashick = Sarayshyk (Saray-Jük) Ocerra = Akzhar (Akzhar District) Kizan/Risan = Kyzan (Kyzan) Astracan = Astrakhan (Astrakhan) Rast = Rasht (Rasht) Buccara = Bukhara (Bukhara) Goride = Gori (Gori, Georgia) Bachu...
  15. Silveryou

    Comment by 'Silveryou' in media 'Grand Vizier Ibrahim Pasha, his Giants and tiny Frenchmen'

    I think this painting confirms the other one with turkish giants parading in Paris. I think this Ibrahim Pasha should be this one though (maybe) Nevşehirli Damat Ibrahim Pasha. And the ambassador this one Jean-Baptiste Louis Picon. The gold rush begins. :D
  16. Silveryou

    Comment by 'Silveryou' in media 'Giant door #13'

    It looks like the little doors were impossible to "carve" in the bronze doors. If the little ones are only in wooden doors that would be proof enough that they were "carved" later in time.
  17. Silveryou

    Comment by 'Silveryou' in media 'Two men and a captive giraffe'

    That monkey is extremely big too though
  18. Silveryou

    The Staff of Saint Bernardine of Siena

    This is the other part of the Melun Diptych. Do you guys think that this tits and blood painting is an original one? I have my doubts. The wiki says: "Until 1775, the diptych remained in the church of Notre Dame in Melun. In need of funds for restoration, the cathedral chapter decided to...
  19. Silveryou

    Siena trumps Rome, or Wolf vs Elephant

    This is Mary Magdalene and the Senese She-wolf with the twins Aschius and Senius...
  20. Silveryou

    Comment by 'Silveryou' in media 'Festivities organized in Paris in the spring of 1612 on the Place des Vosges'

    This is amazing. But now I wonder what the captions say. Have you found something? Anyway on letters BB - DD - EE I see ancient Romans with their captives during a triumph parade. They also carry the Roman insignia. Near HH those seem to be Winged Hussars from Poland. T and C are obviously...
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