With apologies in advance (but bear with it)
________________________________________
From: Classical Greek and Latin Discussion Group [CLASSICS-***@lsv.uky.edu] on behalf of Ralph Hancock [***@GMAIL.COM]
Sent: Tuesday, October 14, 2014 7:48 PM
To: CLASSICS-***@lsv.uky.edu
Subject: Re: [CLASSICS-L] A ley line connecting Stonehenge with Amphipolis
Google's automatic translation of the text adds the final touch to this
confection:
Enviable and elusive is the mathematical precision with which the Ancients
have calculated positions of ancient cities and monuments.
A line connects the large tomb of Amphipolis and the mysterious Stonehenge
in England. Inconceivable that exist these two monuments with reverence
while obeying the dictates of the map.
2720 km separating the two historical parties if we divide by n = 3.14
and the golden number phi = 1.618 shows the result of 535 in a jiffy. 535
if you divide that by the number of ancient favorite 7 and multiply by
4.25, which is the point you were stuck indicators of the Antikythera
Mechanism, resulting in 323, which is the date of death of Alexander the
Great.
The "coincidences" does not stop there! The word Amphipolis has eight
letters and the word Stonehenge has 11 Together they have 19 letters, and
what the word Tzitzimintsikotsira. Asked the famous composer Giannis
Kotsiras of what could be joining his family name Amphipolis and
Stonehenge, narrated:
"I still remember the thrill and history tells me that my grandfather
micro. An ancient ancestor had taken us to connect underground Amphipolis
with Stonehenge. He started digging from England a guy called GG and from
Greece the propropropropropropappous, my Kotsiras. When they met in the
middle of the tunnel dug by two men, the historian of the time wrote: GG
meets Kotsira. "
The underground tunnel has not been discovered yet, but if it is not found
soon, the company that makes Athens Metro successfully the Thessaloniki
Metro in the last 10 years, is willing to take the underground link between
Amphipolis and Stonehenge, to rebuild the online Antiquity between the two
monumen