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Wobei ich aber einige Buchstaben geraten habe.
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Das L von Castle hast du dir aber ausgedacht.
Imperative, Solstice, Modifier, Artesan!?!
Kann ich mit leben. Sehr cool danke. Oder ich bin einfach blind
Ahaaaaa…dann poste doch mal bitte das ganze rechts oben
The codex was written by eight different scribes, each with their own distinctive style, type of glyphs and subject matter. It is linked to the Yucatecan Maya in Chichén Itzá, the extraordinary ancient Maya city situated in the north of the Yucatán Peninsula. It was made between A.D. 1200-1250, and was still possible in use when the conquistadors arrived. The "Codex Dresdensis" as one of the few pre-Columbian Mayan hieroglyphic writings (most of them on stelas found in Palenque, one of the ancient cities of Yucatán) contains astronomical calculations of exceptional accuracy.
There are almanacs and day counts for worship and prophecies; two astronomical and astrological tables, one dealing with eclipses and the other Venus and katún (a 20-year period) prophecies. It contains references and predictions for time and agriculture, favorable days for pre- dictions, as well as texts about sickness, medicine, and seemingly, conjunctions of constellations, planets and the Moon. It also contains a page about a flood, a prophecy or maybe a reference to the rainy seasons so vital to the Maya.
The text has auguries that helped priests make predictions. It is devided into 11 sections: the first includes rit- uals for the gods Kukulcán and Itzamn : the second refers to bad omens concerning crops and offerings that should be made to regularize rain; the third is devoted to a katn of 52 ritual years; and the final eight parts refer to hunting, calendars, death and purification, among other themes.
Für die ersten 3 Blöcke habe ich die richtigen Texte im Internet gefunden: Zitat von Block 1: The codex was written by eight different scribes, each with their own distinctive style, type of glyphs and subject matter. It is linked to the Yucatecan Maya in Chichén Itzá, the extraordinary ancient Maya city situated in the north of the Yucatán Peninsula. It was made between A.D. 1200-1250, and was still possible in use when the conquistadors arrived. The "Codex Dresdensis" as one of the few pre-Columbian Mayan hieroglyphic writings (most of them on stelas found in Palenque, one of the ancient cities of Yucatán) contains astronomical calculations of exceptional accuracy. Zitat von Block 2: There are almanacs and day counts for worship and prophecies; two astronomical and astrological tables, one dealing with eclipses and the other Venus and katún (a 20-year period) prophecies. It contains references and predictions for time and agriculture, favorable days for pre- dictions, as well as texts about sickness, medicine, and seemingly, conjunctions of constellations, planets and the Moon. It also contains a page about a flood, a prophecy or maybe a reference to the rainy seasons so vital to the Maya. Zitat von Block 3: The text has auguries that helped priests make predictions. It is devided into 11 sections: the first includes rit- uals for the gods Kukulcán and Itzamn : the second refers to bad omens concerning crops and offerings that should be made to regularize rain; the third is devoted to a katn of 52 ritual years; and the final eight parts refer to hunting, calendars, death and purification, among other themes. ("katn" = "katún" mit Schreibfehler) ("Itzamn" = "Itzamná" mit Schreibfehler)
Ok cool! Wo hastn die gefunden?
Zitat von Fabilousfab:Ok cool! Wo hastn die gefunden? Teile des Texts in Google eingegeben und dann auf obstrusen Esoterik-Seiten öfters gesehen (dort aber leider immer ohne Quellenangabe), z.B. das E-Book "The Phoenicians and The Mayans" von Dr. Frank Tifus, 2012
Aaah! Hab ich auch als E-Book geholt. muss ich gleich mal schauen Danke fürs Finden.