0  items | Rs    0
Atlantis And 2012: The Science Of The Lost Civilization And The Prophecies Of The Maya

Atlantis And 2012: The Science Of The Lost Civilization And The Prophecies Of The Maya

(Paperback)
by Frank Joseph  
Language: English
Available (Delivered in 2-4 working days.) See Details
Stated Delivery time is for Major Metros
Other Locations might take more time depending on the courier coverage
We accept payment by:
Credit Cards
Cash Cards
Debit Cards
Cheques/DD
Net Banking
Cash on delivery service
Price:   Rs.894
Our Price   Rs.694
Discount   Rs.200 (22% Off)
(Prices are inclusive of all taxes)
 
Click 'Like' and get an additional Rs 5 discount!  
 

Book Summary of Atlantis And 2012: The Science Of The Lost Civiliz...

ANCIENT MYSTERIES / NEW AGE

“I have reviewed dozens of books on the year 2012, but Frank Joseph’s Atlantis and 2012 presents us with many facts and research ignored by most of the other guides. Thanks to the Atlantis code (which we know as the Mayan calendar), he shows that we still have hope that we might be able to avoid what the Atlanteans failed to avoid. You must read this book--today!”
--Robert R. Hieronimus, Ph.D., author of United Symbolism of America and host of 21st Century Radio

“Once again Frank Joseph has shown that when it comes to Atlantis and related subjects, no one else knows as much. In this case he has taken on two very difficult subjects but has succeeded in extracting some of the most fascinating history anyone has seen in a long time.”
--J. Douglas Kenyon, editor of Forbidden History and Atlantis Rising

Based on more than 25 years of research around the globe and statements from Edgar Cayce about Atlantis and its Pacific sister civilization of Lemuria, Frank Joseph reveals that the Mayan calendar was brought to Mexico by survivors of Atlantis. Uncovering the Atlantean influences in both ancient Mesoamerican culture and ancient Egyptian culture, he links the demise of Atlantis with the birth of the Olmec civilization in Mexico (the progenitors of the Maya), the beginning of the first Egyptian dynasty, and the start of the Mayan calendar.

Joseph explains that the Mayan calendar was invented by the combined genius of Atlantis and Lemuria and describes how it predicts an eternal cycle of global creation, destruction, and renewal. Correlating this recurring cycle with scientific studies on glacial ice cores and predictions from the Hopi, the Incas, and the Scandinavian Norse, Joseph reveals that 2012 could be the start of a new ice age and the advent of a massive solar storm. However, Joseph shows that the Maya knew the way to reestablish civilization’s cosmic balance before time runs out.

FRANK JOSEPH was the editor in chief of Ancient American magazine from 1993 until 2009. He is the author of Advanced Civilizations of Prehistoric America, The Destruction of Atlantis, The Lost Civilization of Lemuria, Survivors of Atlantis, and The Lost Treasure of King Juba. He lives in Minnesota

About The Author:

Frank Joseph is the editor in chief of Ancient American magazine and the author of Atlantis and 2012, The Destruction of Atlantis, The Lost Civilization of Lemuria, Survivors of Atlantis, and The Lost Treasure of King Juba. He lives in Minnesota.


Table Of Contents:

Countdown to 2012 vii

Introduction: End Times or Golden Age? 1

Part 1 2012

1 What Was Atlantis? 12

2 The Other Side of the Mirror 25

3 Sacred Numerals 29

4 The Atlanta-Mayan Calendar 33

5 A Rebellion of the Earth 58

6 The Great Winter 67

7 The Super Solar Storm 79

8 The Coming of the Blue Star 88

9 The Inca Calendar 97

10 Doom Number 103

11 How Could They Have Possibly Known? 108

Part 2 The Seer

12 Plato or Cayce? 116

13 Lost Motherland, Drowned Fatherland 128

14 Edgar Cayce's Dream of Lemuria 134

15 He Saw Atlantis 140

16 The Terrible, Mighty Crystal 148

17 North America's Atlanto-Lemurian Legacy 152

18 Middle American Crucible 161

19 The Incas' Atlanto-Lemurian Heritage 168

20 Edgar Cayce's Atlanteans and Lemurians 175

21 Last Chance or Judgment in 2012? 204

Glossary 213

Notes 216

Bibliography 230

Index 238

Read an Excerpt

Chapter 4

THE ATLANTO MAYA CALENDAR

The form that Atlantean astrology or its predictive procedures took may, in fact, have best survived in the Maya calendar or, more properly, Mesoamerican calendrics, of which the Maya were a part.

At the zenith of its power, Atlantis was the capital of an imperial enterprise that extended from “the opposite continent,” as Plato referenced America, to Western Europe as far as Italy and North Africa on the Egyptian border. As Plato cited, Azaes, one of Kleito’s sons, ruled a province of the Atlantean empire. Azaes’s name bears a striking resemblance to the Itzás, a Maya people who occupied coastal Yucatán, where they are most famously remembered for their impressive ceremonial city, Chichén Itzá. Its centerpiece is the pyramidal Temple of Kukulcán, the Feathered Serpent.

While the term serpent was often used as a title signifying “power,” the Mayas were unable to grow facial hair, and therefore possessed no word to describe Kukulcán’s bearded appearance. They had to rely on their next closest adjective--feathered--to characterize the bearded founding father of Mesoamerican civilization. Had they not seen this foreigner from the ancient Old World with their own eyes, they would never have been able to dream up such a figure.

Kukulcán’s conception as a bearded white man is by no means confined to pre-Columbian oral traditions. The walls inside a small, masonry structure at the north end of Chichén Itzá’s Great Ball Court are covered with bas relief carvings clustered around the representation of Kukulcán as a male figure with a Semitic nose and long, full beard. This structure itself is known as the Temple of the Bearded Man.

The Itzás were a Maya people named after a variant of the Feathered Serpent, Itzamna. In a Maya cosmology known as the Chilam Balam and Juan Darreygosa’s sixteenth-century Historia de Zodzil, Itzamna bears the title Serpent from the East and is described as “the first after the flood” that engulfed his island kingdom in the Atlantic Ocean.

He arrived first on the island of Cozumel, off the Yucatán coast, where some temples dedicated to him still stand. Proceeding to the Mexican mainland, he built Chichén Itzá, or Mouth of the Well of Itzá, and one hundred forty-nine other cities. In temple art such as friezes at the Maya ceremonial center of Tikal, in Guatemala, he is portrayed as a long-nosed, bearded man rowing his boat across the sea from which he came. In the background of this sculpted frieze running around the top exterior of the acropolis is a volcanic island in the process of a major eruption while a stone city topples into the sea and a blond-haired man drowns in the foreground.

The identity of this scene could hardly be more self-evident. When Teobert Maler, the Austrian archaeological photographer who found the frieze, saw it for the first time in 1915, he exclaimed, “Until that moment, I dismissed Atlantis as a baseless myth. I knew at once that I had been mistaken.”

Itzamna’s followers from the Red and Black Land of Tutulxiu, the Land of Abundance or the Bountiful, far across the sea, “where the sun rises,” were the Ah-Auab: “foreigners to the land,” “white men,” or the True Men. On the twenty-seventh stele at Yaxchilan, the eleventh stele at Piedras Negras, and on the Temple of Warriors at Chichén Itzá, they are portrayed as bearded, with long, thin noses and European facial features.

The Chilam Balam tells of life in the Red and Black Land as ideal for many centuries. One day, however, “a fiery rain fell, ashes fell, rocks and trees crashed to the ground. Then the waters rose in a terrible flood. The sky fell in, and the dry land sank into the sea”--doubtless the same event depicted on the acropolis at Tikal.

The Red and Black Land was also known as Tayasal and described in the Popol Vuh as “the lost homeland of the Ah-Auab, who came from the other part of ocean, from where the sun rises, a place called Patulan-Pa-Civan.” These oceanic origins were naturally embedded in the very name of the people that built Chichén Itzá. It stems from the Mayan itz, for “magic,” and (h)á, meaning “water,” to form “magicians of (or from) the water (i.e., sea).”

Given their city’s abundant Atlantean pedigree, evidence for the sacred numerals in its ceremonial architecture might be expected, such as the Temple of Kukulcán’s ten levels. Buried in the heart of the step pyramid, directly beneath the summit’s Bacabs positioned at the Cardinal Directions on the four walls of its shrine, reposes a blueeyed statue, known as a chac-mool, to create the sacred center and fifth numeral.

A few paces to the northwest, a sculpted panel in the Great Ball Court depicts a decapitated victim from whom six streams of blood transform into serpents. Feathered serpents from Atlantis carried the technology and spirituality of their overseas homeland to establish a colony in Middle America at Yucatán--Plato’s Azaes--from which their descendants, the Itzás, derived their name and identity. As such, they were culture bearers who sparked Mesoamerican civilization, a synthesis of introduced Atlantean know-how and indigenous influences.

Among the most important gifts carried away from the island kingdom of Atlas was a scientific reckoning of time. Its original configuration was gradually eroded and eventually lost through the influence of successive, native inflections from the late fourth millennium B.C. Olmec and third century B.C. Maya, over the millennia to its last custodians, the Aztecs, in the early sixteenth century A.D. Yet its core mechanism remained intact as developing cultural variations replaced one another. The better known of these are the Maya calendar and the so-called Aztec Calendar Stone.

Read a Sample Chapter

Atlantis and 2012

The Science of the Lost Civilization and the Prophecies of the Maya
By Frank Joseph

Bear & Company

Copyright © 2010 Frank Joseph
All right reserved.

ISBN: 9781591431121

Chapter 4

THE ATLANTO MAYA CALENDAR


The form that Atlantean astrology or its predictive procedures took may, in fact, have best survived in the Maya calendar or, more properly, Mesoamerican calendrics, of which the Maya were a part.

At the zenith of its power, Atlantis was the capital of an imperial enterprise that extended from “the opposite continent,” as Plato referenced America, to Western Europe as far as Italy and North Africa on the Egyptian border. As Plato cited, Azaes, one of Kleito’s sons, ruled a province of the Atlantean empire. Azaes’s name bears a striking resemblance to the Itzás, a Maya people who occupied coastal Yucatán, where they are most famously remembered for their impressive ceremonial city, Chichén Itzá. Its centerpiece is the pyramidal Temple of Kukulcán, the Feathered Serpent.

While the term serpent was often used as a title signifying “power,” the Mayas were unable to grow facial hair, and therefore possessed no word to describe Kukulcán’s bearded appearance. They had to rely on their next closest adjective--feathered--to characterize the beardedfounding father of Mesoamerican civilization. Had they not seen this foreigner from the ancient Old World with their own eyes, they would never have been able to dream up such a figure.

Kukulcán’s conception as a bearded white man is by no means confined to pre-Columbian oral traditions. The walls inside a small, masonry structure at the north end of Chichén Itzá’s Great Ball Court are covered with bas relief carvings clustered around the representation of Kukulcán as a male figure with a Semitic nose and long, full beard. This structure itself is known as the Temple of the Bearded Man.

The Itzás were a Maya people named after a variant of the Feathered Serpent, Itzamna. In a Maya cosmology known as the Chilam Balam and Juan Darreygosa’s sixteenth-century Historia de Zodzil, Itzamna bears the title Serpent from the East and is described as “the first after the flood” that engulfed his island kingdom in the Atlantic Ocean.

He arrived first on the island of Cozumel, off the Yucatán coast, where some temples dedicated to him still stand. Proceeding to the Mexican mainland, he built Chichén Itzá, or Mouth of the Well of Itzá, and one hundred forty-nine other cities. In temple art such as friezes at the Maya ceremonial center of Tikal, in Guatemala, he is portrayed as a long-nosed, bearded man rowing his boat across the sea from which he came. In the background of this sculpted frieze running around the top exterior of the acropolis is a volcanic island in the process of a major eruption while a stone city topples into the sea and a blond-haired man drowns in the foreground.

The identity of this scene could hardly be more self-evident. When Teobert Maler, the Austrian archaeological photographer who found the frieze, saw it for the first time in 1915, he exclaimed, “Until that moment, I dismissed Atlantis as a baseless myth. I knew at once that I had been mistaken.”

Itzamna’s followers from the Red and Black Land of Tutulxiu, the Land of Abundance or the Bountiful, far across the sea, “where the sun rises,” were the Ah-Auab: “foreigners to the land,” “white men,” or the True Men. On the twenty-seventh stele at Yaxchilan, the eleventh stele at Piedras Negras, and on the Temple of Warriors at Chichén Itzá, they are portrayed as bearded, with long, thin noses and European facial features.

The Chilam Balam tells of life in the Red and Black Land as ideal for many centuries. One day, however, “a fiery rain fell, ashes fell, rocks and trees crashed to the ground. Then the waters rose in a terrible flood. The sky fell in, and the dry land sank into the sea”--doubtless the same event depicted on the acropolis at Tikal.

The Red and Black Land was also known as Tayasal and described in the Popol Vuh as “the lost homeland of the Ah-Auab, who came from the other part of ocean, from where the sun rises, a place called Patulan-Pa-Civan.” These oceanic origins were naturally embedded in the very name of the people that built Chichén Itzá. It stems from the Mayan itz, for “magic,” and (h)á, meaning “water,” to form “magicians of (or from) the water (i.e., sea).”

Given their city’s abundant Atlantean pedigree, evidence for the sacred numerals in its ceremonial architecture might be expected, such as the Temple of Kukulcán’s ten levels. Buried in the heart of the step pyramid, directly beneath the summit’s Bacabs positioned at the Cardinal Directions on the four walls of its shrine, reposes a blueeyed statue, known as a chac-mool, to create the sacred center and fifth numeral.

A few paces to the northwest, a sculpted panel in the Great Ball Court depicts a decapitated victim from whom six streams of blood transform into serpents. Feathered serpents from Atlantis carried the technology and spirituality of their overseas homeland to establish a colony in Middle America at Yucatán--Plato’s Azaes--from which their descendants, the Itzás, derived their name and identity. As such, they were culture bearers who sparked Mesoamerican civilization, a synthesis of introduced Atlantean know-how and indigenous influences.

Among the most important gifts carried away from the island kingdom of Atlas was a scientific reckoning of time. Its original configuration was gradually eroded and eventually lost through the influence of successive, native inflections from the late fourth millennium B.C. Olmec and third century B.C. Maya, over the millennia to its last custodians, the Aztecs, in the early sixteenth century A.D. Yet its core mechanism remained intact as developing cultural variations replaced one another. The better known of these are the Maya calendar and the so-called Aztec Calendar Stone.


Continues...

Excerpted from Atlantis and 2012 by Frank Joseph Copyright © 2010 by Frank Joseph. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.


Special Features:

Atlantis and 2012

 

Details Of Book : Atlantis And 2012: The Science Of The Lost Civiliz...

Book: Atlantis And 2012: The Science Of The Lost Civilization And The Prophecies Of The Maya
Author: Frank Joseph 
ISBN: 1591431123
ISBN-13: 9781591431121
Binding: Paperback
Publishing Date: 2010-02-17
Publisher: Inner Traditions/Bear & Company
Language: English
Please Note -

* We sell only NEW book and do NOT sell old or used books.
* The book images and summary displayed may be of a different edition or binding of the same title.
* Book reviews are not added by BookAdda.
* Price can change due to reprinting, price change by publisher / distributor.

BookAdda (www.bookadda.com) is a premier online book store in selling books online across India at the most competitive prices. BookAdda sells fiction, business, non fiction, literature, AIEEE, medical, engineering, computer book, etc. The books are delivered across India FREE of cost.

Follow us on facebook

Best Sellers Books

View All

Book deliveries are categorized as:

Note: