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In Association With
Mysteries
Magazine!
11/24/06 #392
http://www.conspiracyjournal.com
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The
darkness, like living flesh corrupted, envelops us with its icy
embrace. Thoughts that once burned fire-like in their complexities, now
smoulders in the stygian emptiness. Invisible terrors, once consigned
to the back roads of consciousness, now eagerly seek prey to feed an
eternal hunger. Horrors of the night now reach out across the
threshold into the once safe light.
But there is one light that pierces the darkness, one shining example
of freedom of information. One weekly, e-mail newsletter that is not
afraid to publish that which everyone else fears to even think. That's
right! Conspiracy Journal is here once again to split the darkness of
ignorance and fill your world with the pure, white light of truth.
This
week, Conspiracy Journal takes a look at such eye-popping stories as:
- Mystery Red
Pentagon Window Discovered at Rosslyn Chapel -
- Scientist
Captures Recording of Mystery Hum -
-
Are UFOs Portrayed in
Classical Art? -
AND: Sheffield Park
Spook or
Spoof?
All these exciting stories and MORE
in this week's issue of
CONSPIRACY JOURNAL!
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New
Mysteries Magazine #15 - Coming Soon!
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Timothy Green Beckley
On The ParaCast
Log on this Sunday
(11/26/06) starting at l0 PM (MST) to hear www.TheParaCast.com as our fearless
editor Timothy Green Beckley engages in a heated discussion with hosts
Gene Steinberg and David Biedny on the current state of UFO research
and the ongoing pattern of disturbing disinformation and hoaxes which
cast its murky shadow onto an already "shady" topic.
Over 50 shows are now archived
on the ParaCast and its all FREE for the unjaded and jaded alike at www.TheParaCast.com
~ And Now, On With The Show! ~
- A REAL INDIANA JONES MOMENT DEPARTMENT -
Mystery Red Pentagon Window Discovered at Rosslyn Chapel
When he caught sight of the
bright red pentagon glowing above the great rose window of Rosslyn
Chapel, Alan Butler almost let out a scream. At that point, he knew
beyond doubt that Rosslyn was far more than just another medieval
church.
By rediscovering the lightbox, forgotten for hundreds of years, Butler
and John Ritchie, co-author of Rosslyn Revealed, moved closer to
illuminating their theory that the truth about the chapel is even
stranger than the fiction made world-famous by Dan Brown.
"It was a real Indiana Jones moment," recalls Ritchie. "Older
inhabitants of Roslin village had told the story of a mysterious light
which appeared in the chapel on St Matthew's Day [21 September]. But
the story had been ignored by successive histories of the chapel."
While some eagle-eyed guides in the chapel had spotted the tiny window
at the top of the east wall, few bothered to point it out to visitors.
The tale of how Ritchie and Butler rediscovered the hidden lightbox and
why it was key to understanding the chapel's secrets is told in Rosslyn
Revealed, out today.
It all began when Ritchie, a resident of Roslin who has had a lifelong
fascination with the chapel, discovered an old Victorian print of
Rosslyn by Hill and Adamson. Taken in 1844, it shows the East wall
before the Rose window was built. When he showed it to Nancy Bruce, a
guide in the chapel and his second cousin, she pointed out the aperture
above the window and said: "That must be where the light comes through
on St Matthew's Day."
Ritchie, a former Reuters cameraman, trained a telephoto lens on the
tiny opening and discovered it was in the shape of a pentagon and
appeared to be lined with some sort of highly reflective material. He
explains: "I thought 'we have got to test this' and went to buy a power
torch." Thanks to the scaffolding currently built around the chapel to
dry it out after disastrous renovation work, he was able to climb up
and shine the torch through the aperture, while Butler stood in the
centre aisle to see the effect. In the book, the authors describe what
happened next: "At most, we expected a small glimmer of white light
from the lamp to show above the East window in the comparative gloom of
the chapel's interior, but we couldn't have been more wrong. Instead of
the faint glimmer we had expected to appear in the lightbox, what met
our eyes was a perfect orb of steady, strong, blood-red light."
Butler struggled to conceal his excitement from other visitors in the
chapel, which included a Chinese film crew. "We were absolutely
stunned. I made such a loud exclamation that my wife Kate, who was with
me, had to shut me up. We knew at that moment that it had been
deliberately created to do this and that the people who built this
church were not Christians in the accepted sense of the word." The
discovery delayed publication of the book until the authors had
explored the implications of the mysterious lightbox. Without erecting
scaffolding inside the chapel, it was not possible to get close enough
to the window to find out exactly what the box was made of. Ritchie
believes the red light may come from a precious gem and that the
reflective sides of the pentagon are made from highly reflective mica.
The shape is significant; the pentagon or its close friend, the
pentagram, or five-pointed star, is a common feature in ancient
civilisations - and an important symbol in Freemasonry. Many associate
it with magic or satanic rituals, but it was once widely used as a
symbol of Christianity, with the five corners representing the five
wounds of Christ. By recreating a scale model using Perspex and
mirrors, the authors managed to demonstrate that the pentagonal
lightbox creates a red doughnut of light, which at a certain angle
refines itself into a beam of pure white light. On 21 September, the
book was at the printers, but Ritchie and Butler returned to the chapel
to see if St Matthew's Light still shone in the chapel.
The pair and a few guides gathered at the back of the chapel in the
early morning to see if the lightbox was still functioning. Even on a
dim Autumn day, the group of witnesses saw the pentagon glowing with a
strong red light. "I was absolutely stunned," says Butler. "I had to
pinch myself; I thought I was having a dream. People don't find these
sorts of things."
The discovery shed new light on another unusual feature of the chapel.
While most medieval churches were built facing east, the precise
direction was determined by the day the sun rose on the relevant
saint's day [the saint to which the church was dedicated]. Rosslyn was
built facing due east, although it was completed before the existence
of accurate compasses.
And there was more. The position of the secret window meant the light
shone through on just two days of the year - 21 March, the first day of
spring, and 21 September, the autumn equinox, or beginning of winter.
Ritchie says: "It is so exact that if it had been an inch either way,
this phenomenon would not have happened on the day it does. That shows
exactly how Rosslyn was built."
Ritchie believes the lightbox was partly obscured by the rose window
created in 1871 but that before this it would have created a light
which illuminated a certain point on the chapel floor. A similar
phenomenon can be found at St Sulpice in Paris [also featured in The Da
Vinci Code], where a light reflects along the Paris meridian at
midsummer, and Chartres Cathedral. The mysterious church of Rennes le
Château, source of the Templar controversy, has dancing blue
lights, which appear in January.
Ritchie also believes the light also has a correlation with the
chapel's founder William Sinclair, whose name translates as Holy Light.
For Butler, an expert on stone circles, megalithic structures and
astro-archeology, the discovery of the lightbox is confirmation the
chapel's roots are in beliefs which predated Christianity by thousands
of years. Both authors believe the rediscovery of the lightbox is a key
to unlocking the true meaning of Rosslyn Chapel. Butler says: "In a
way, this goes back to pre-Christian beliefs, to sun worship. It shows
Rosslyn is unlike any other church in the world - in effect it is a
medieval stone circle."
The full significance of the way Rosslyn was aligned on a true
east-west axis before the existence of accurate compasses has still to
be explored - but it fits with Ritchie and Butler's belief that Gilbert
Haye and William Sinclair, who built the chapel, were masters of
astrology. Unlike any other church, the inside of Rosslyn Chapel was
once fitted with shutters, suggesting it may have been used as a secret
observatory.
The authors also believe the foundation stone for the chapel was laid
on the day of a rare conjunction between Venus and the Sun which is
associated with the Shekinah, the female aspect of God. The hidden
window may have been used as a way of measuring the movements of the
planets, particularly of Venus. And, if the authors' experiments are
correct, the light the secret window projected on to the back of the
chapel casts a shape remarkably similar to the Eye of Horus, the
all-seeing symbol of Freemasonry.
Even a person looking at Rosslyn Chapel with an untrained eye can see
aspects unusual for a Christian church. The roof is sprinkled with
roses and stars, and there are more Green Men - symbols of paganism -
than any other church in the world. Carvings in the chapel encompass
symbols of Judaism, Hinduism, Islam - and encompass the nature and sun
worship of the earliest human religions.
The authors are certain there is much more to discover about the
secrets of chapel. After almost a decade of research for the book,
Ritchie says: "We feel as if we have only written the introduction."
The conventional story of Rosslyn Chapel says Earl William Sinclair
created it in the woods to thank God for a long and prosperous life.
But John Ritchie and Alan Butler believe Gilbert Hay, listed in
histories as "tutor to the Sinclair children," was key to the creation
of the chapel.
The authors believe Sinclair and Hay were Ebionites, followers of a
pre-Christian mystery tradition which had survived since biblical times.
Previously, Hay had been an adviser at the French court, personally
knighted by the King of France and a confidant of French duke Rene
D'Anjou. Hay was one of the most educated men in Europe and, while at
Rosslyn, assembled one of the world's great libraries.
Ritchie and Butler believe Hay's real motive in settling at Rosslyn was
to supervise the building of the chapel, which, far from being a
conventional Christian church, enshrined the beliefs of the Ebionite
sect. The Ebionites, who denied the divinity of Jesus and exalted John
the Baptist, were persecuted and outlawed under the Inquisition. But
they still had powerful friends, including Pope Pius II, below, who
before becoming pontiff travelled on a secret mission to Scotland.
As a diplomat, the future pope fathered an illegitimate child, which,
according to expert historians, he left with Sinclair to raise as his
own.
Having friends in high places was just one of the reasons Sinclair and
Hay were left alone to fill their chapel with symbolism wildly
different from that of the orthodox Christian Church.
As Ebionites, their beliefs were a fusion of Pantheism, Persian dualism
and Judaism. The feminine principle was acknowledged alongside the
masculine and the individual was encouraged to have his or her own
experience of God.
Look around Rosslyn Chapel and the evidence is there, in the carvings
of feminine symbols of roses, in the portrayals of the Veil of
Veronica, the Virgin Mary and Mary Magdalene.
In Rosslyn Revealed, Ritchie and Butler argue the Sinclair family, who
are often taken to have been Knights Templar, were, in fact, Ebionites.
They ask: "Could it be possible Earl William Sinclair was a member of a
family that had maintained its Ebionite, Jewish roots across 1,400
years of history?"
The evidence presented by Rosslyn Chapel seemed to indicate this could
indeed be the case.
Factfile
• Rosslyn Chapel was built between 1456 and 1496. Master masons came
from all over the world to build it.
• The chapel has attracted some illustrious visitors over the years,
including Sir Walter Scott, Dorothy Wordsworth, Queen Victoria, Robert
Burns, Samuel Johnson, JMW Turner and Mary Queen of Scots. More
recently, Michael Bentine, one of the original Goons, was a great
enthusiast. He was a keen dowser and convinced Rosslyn was the centre
of an unusually strong energy field. Rosslyn Revealed is dedicated to
Bentine, below, while another unlikely expert is Rat Scabies, drummer
with punk band The Damned. He wrote Rat Scabies and the Holy Grail with
a journalist friend.
• In the 1560s a mob fuelled by John Knox and hatred of idolatry
marched on the chapel to destroy it, but it was saved by local man
Thomas Cochrane, who diverted the mob to Rosslyn Castle and its cellars
of fine wine.
• The restoration in 1871 by the 4th Earl of Rosslyn was inspired by
Queen Victoria. She was seduced by the chapel and appalled by its state
of disrepair.
• The chapel is covered by a canopy and scaffolding, a result of
disastrous repair work in the 50s. The inside of the chapel was coated
in cement and became waterlogged. Rosslyn Chapel Trust, chaired by the
current Earl, has applied for £11m of public money to restore the
chapel.
• Some claim to have counted 110 green men in the chapel, as well as
one highly unusual green woman. The men of the woods, with foliage
emerging from the corners of their mouths, are an ancient symbol of
man's interdependence with the natural world, and are also found in
Hinduism.
• In The Lay of the Last Minstrel, Sir Walter Scott told the legend of
the glowing red light which is said to emanate from the chapel when one
of the Sinclairs is close to death. "O'er Roslin all that dreary night,
a wondrous blaze was seen to gleam; 'twas broader than the watch-fire's
light, And redder than the bright moonbeam."
Source: The Scotsman
http://heritage.scotsman.com/myths.cfm?id=1587572006
- THE MAGIC MYSTERY TOUR DEPARTMENT -
Mushrooms Take a Trip Back to the Lab
Banned hallucinogens may have
medical benefits, but results are unpredictable.
Resting on a hospital bed beneath a tie-dyed wall hanging, Pamela
Sakuda felt a tingling sensation. Then bright colors started shimmering
in her head.
She had been depressed since being diagnosed with colon cancer two
years earlier, but as the experimental drug took hold, she felt the
sadness sweep away from her, leaving in its wake an overpowering sense
of connection to loved ones, followed by an inner calm.
"It was like an epiphany," said Sakuda, 59, recalling the 2005 drug
treatment.
Sakuda, a Long Beach software developer, was under the influence of the
hallucinogen psilocybin, which she took during a UCLA study exploring
the therapeutic effects of the active compound in "magic" mushrooms.
Although illegal for general use, the drug has been approved for
medical experiments such as this one.
Scientists suspect the hallucinogen, whose use dates back to ancient
Mexico, may have properties that could improve treatments for some
psychological conditions and forms of physical pain.
Long dismissed as medically useless, the banned mushrooms — a staple of
the psychedelic 1960s — are taking a long, strange trip back to the lab.
The medical journal Neurology in June reported on more than 20 cases in
which mushroom ingestion prevented or stopped cluster headaches, a rare
neurological disorder, more reliably than prescription pharmaceuticals.
In July, researchers at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore reported
that mushrooms could instill a sense of spirituality and connection, a
finding that scientists said could lead to treatments for patients
suffering from mental anguish or addiction.
The research has been driven in part by the success of mood-altering
pharmaceuticals, such as the antidepressant Prozac, which work on the
same brain chemicals and pathways.
Nothing scientists have learned so far indicates that recreational use
of mushrooms is safe. The psychological effects remain unpredictable.
Deaths have been linked to mushroom intoxication. A Ventura County teen
was killed by a car two years ago as she wandered naked across the 101
Freeway after eating mushrooms.
Even under the tightly controlled conditions of a clinical trial, some
patients have had terrifying experiences marked by anxiety and
paranoia; two people in the Johns Hopkins study likened the experience
to being in a war.
The drug "takes your thoughts through a prism and turns them around,"
Sakuda said.
Her drug trip left her with a sense of peace — a serenity she hadn't
felt since her diagnosis.
"It was like rebooting a computer," she said.
Forty years ago, the study of hallucinogens in therapy was a mainstream
endeavor. The Swiss drug company Sandoz provided pharmaceutical-grade
tablets of psilocybin and various researchers explored its use as a
treatment for depression and other psychological problems.
Used for centuries during spiritual ceremonies by the Mazatec Indians
in southern Mexico, mushrooms helped fuel the counterculture of the
1960s. Author Carlos Castaneda, while a graduate student at UCLA, wrote
of his "magical time" with a Mexican shaman who introduced him to
mushrooms and other hallucinogens.
In 1970, Congress made it illegal to posses hallucinogens, including
psilocybin and LSD, by classifying them as Schedule I, meaning they had
no legitimate medical use.
"All research was shut down," said UCLA psychiatrist Dr. Charles S.
Grob.
In the late 1990s, regulators began approving experiments again,
sparked by discoveries in neuroscience that illuminated the biochemical
basis of mood and consciousness. The advances focused on the complex
role of the brain chemical serotonin — a neurotransmitter that passes
signals between cells.
Spread throughout the brain are a variety of receptors that respond to
serotonin. In some instances, a flow of serotonin can alter moods, such
as depression, euphoria, anxiety and aggression. The chemical is also
believed to be involved with nausea, body temperature and appetite
control.
Many hallucinogens, including psilocybin, mimic the action of serotonin
on various receptors. When the drugs circulate in the brain, they can
amplify, distort and cross signals. Sounds have colors, and motions
become out-of-body experiences.
The drugs can trigger emotionally charged states and potentially
dangerous behavior. Even the most optimistic psychedelic researchers
acknowledge that at best psilocybin will become a special-purpose drug
administered under tight supervision because reactions vary.
In addition to the sensory effects, hallucinogens create mental states
in which patients become unusually open to suggestion, Grob said.
He wanted to test whether that ability could be used to alleviate the
suffering of terminal cancer patients overcome with a sense of
hopelessness.
Grob modeled his study after one conducted at Spring Grove Medical
Center, a psychiatric hospital near Baltimore.
The Spring Grove patients took LSD. Grob is using psilocybin, which is
shorter-acting and considered somewhat less risky. The drug is produced
in small quantities under special Drug Enforcement Administration
permits.
Grob has given the drug to seven terminally ill cancer patients.
In Sakuda's case, weeks of counseling planted a desire to overcome her
fears and sense of isolation. Since her diagnosis, she had avoided
friends and kept her feelings bottled up.
The experiment took place in a comfortable hospital room, under the
close watch of a medical team. She wore eyeshades and headphones with
soft music playing.
Sakuda recalled sensing her husband's sadness over her illness and
feeling a burden lifted from her.
"It is not logical. It comes to you like that," she said.
Sakuda died Nov. 10. Her husband, Norbert Litzinger, feels that the
drug made a difference. "There was a rebirth around her and it didn't
stop."
The power of the drug extends beyond psychological effects. Dr. John
Halpern and colleagues at McLean Hospital in Boston have been looking
at the ability of magic mushrooms to treat cluster headaches, which
affect about 1 million Americans, mostly men.
The pain can be so severe that they are known as "suicide" headaches,
occurring like clockwork at the same time each day, or the same month
each year. No treatment has been shown to extend remissions from pain.
Halpern examined medical records of 48 patients who had taken
hallucinogenic mushrooms and reported in Neurology that the majority of
them found partial or complete relief from cluster attacks.
He speculated that the drug acts on the thalamus, a brain region
populated with serotonin receptors. A clinical trial is needed to
establish whether the mushrooms really work, Halpern said.
"These are not people you'd expect from the drug culture," he said.
"They are lawyers, teachers, business owners. They have a painful and
debilitating condition, and found meaningful relief."
Those who have used hallucinegenic mushrooms in the U.S. to ease their
headaches are all lawbreakers.
They have become part of a new mushroom underground. Many of its
denizens are like Bob Wold — a 53-year-old maintenance worker and
Little League coach who had never taken hallucinogenic drugs before. He
knew they could be dangerous.
Wold, who lives near Chicago, said his headaches felt like an ice pick
being jammed through his eye. Once, they made him drive his fist
through a plaster wall at home. Another time he pounded his head
against the shower tiles so hard some of them cracked.
Seeking help, Wold stumbled across a website for cluster headache
sufferers touting hallucinogenic mushrooms.
A man he met on the Internet mailed Wold 20 dried brown mushrooms. The
recipe called for a very light tea, not strong enough to cause
hallucinations. After that, Wold started growing his own mushrooms.
Wold has formed an organization to fund research aimed at developing a
pharmaceutical version of psilocybin. But at home, he must make sure
his crop is well hidden from his young grandchildren.
Former Washington lobbyist Stuart Miller, 49, described his secret life
as a mushroom user as "bizarre."
Miller had frequent cluster headaches and carried capsules containing
ground mushrooms everywhere. As he passed through security daily on
Capitol Hill, or made his way through an airport, Miller worried that a
search would uncover the capsules "and my career would be gone."
He was never caught. He has moved to Mexico to care for an aging parent.
Magic mushrooms grow wild in a nearby field.
Source: LA Times
http://www.latimes.com/news/science/la-sci-mushroom19nov19,0,2429638.story?page=3
- A REAL HUMDINGER DEPARTMENT -
Scientist Captures Recording of Mystery Hum
A New Zealand scientist
believes he's captured a recording of the mystery hum that has been
heard by scores of people living and in and around the city of Auckland.
Dr Tom Moir, a computer engineer at Massey University's Institute of
Information and Mathematical Sciences, made the recording at a house in
Auckland's North Shore suburb of Glenfield earlier this week.
Dr Moir and his colleague Dr Fakhrul Alam have dubbed the sound an
unidentified acoustic phenomena.
Four people who previously reported hearing the low-level hum have
confirmed that this is the sound they can hear in their homes.
"If this is indeed the hum, then it's acoustical and not
electromagnetic," Dr Moir said.
Dr Moir previously pinpointed the low-level drone at a frequency of
56Hz, which is very close to the 50Hz frequency produced by the 240
volt AC main electricity supply delivered to homes in New Zealand (and
Australia).
Although 56Hz is within the standard range of human hearing - which can
range from 20 to 20,000Hz - it is too low for many people to pick up.
One of Dr Moir's students, Ms Nair Tsuji, who is able to hear the
sound, has acted as Dr Moir's "ears". She also confirmed that the sound
they heard in the Glenfield home was the same as the one she hears in
her home in Whangaparaoa, about 30 minutes' drive north of Auckland.
All the 30-plus cases reported to Dr Moir are occurring in Auckland's
north.
Dr Moir said the next step was to triangulate the sound in the hope of
pinpointing the source.
He said that although there was a "high probability" that this was the
sound, he's doubtful that he would ever be able to track its source.
According to a theory put forward by Professor Rod Cross, at Sydney
University's department of Physics, the sound could be the humming of
sand dunes, as described in the latest issue of Physics World, a
monthly academic journal.
Professor Cross said he hadn't yet read the article, only heard about
it. But it is available online here.
"The sound file on the web sounds like someone blowing over the top of
an empty bottle," Professor Cross wrote in an email. "The New Zealand
hum sound might therefore be due to wind blowing over hills and
valleys. It may not actually require strong winds to cause the effect.
Perhaps slowly moving air could do it."
Taking another informed guess, Professor Cross said the sound could be
due to the motion under the earth. For example, hot gases or liquids
rising through cavities could cause an organ pipe effect.
"Organ pipes can start humming just by small changes in temperature,"
he wrote. "There could be some subtle natural geological organ pipes in
the hills."
For those who are able to hear it, the sound has become the bane of
their lives, driving some to distraction and others to take drastic
action.
Dr Moir said one sufferer, a man, was so desperate to stop hearing the
sound he deliberately tried to damage his own hearing by starting up a
chainsaw close to his ears.
The affliction appears to be similar to tinnitus, a condition in which
sufferers hear a constant, high-pitched ringing sound.
Take this link to listen to mystery hum:
http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2006/11/17/1163266756133.html?page=2
Source: The Sunday Morning Herald
http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2006/11/17/1163266756133.html
-
PAINT IT AS SEEN DEPARTMENT -
Are UFOs Portrayed in
Classical Art?
The desire to communicate is inherent in the man. It is a part of his
own nature. Since the first graffito to the Renaissance, since the
Baroque to the Impressionism, Art has been and it is the first form of
communication, base of our civilization. Only with this Muse is
possible to express totally our reality in a spontaneous way.
It is almost unbelievable as by artworks or signs gushed from an hand
one can know enough thoroughly aspect of cultural, social and political
situation of the environment surrounding the artist.
Actually Art can be considered as a book of history, culture and
science telling the man in many of his aspects in a more complete form
than an unique branch of knowledge.
Since the beginning of man, humans have always felt a need to reproduce
celestial events, first on the wall of caves, and then on canvas. It is
not a case that sometimes History, Arts, Archaeology and Anthropology
have been often rewritten on occasion in light of new elements whose
existence no one had previously suspected.
From the past we receive strange signals of interference in our life
and in our culture. Strange flying objects depicted in ancient works of
art raise disturbing questions about our history and the role of man in
the Universe.
A flying device in Palazzo Vecchio
Enigmatical images from our distant past arrive silently to the Man of
the 20th century. They provoke curiosity and perplexity. They have been
always there, in front of our eyes, as expressions of real experiences
or as anomalous allegoric and symbolic representations arising forth
from the hands of, more or less, famous artists telling us of their
epoch. We have never noticed these images – or it is better to say we
have not observed them carefully – because they are not the main
subject of the artwork. They lie in the background as if the authors
wanted to communicate their particular experiences “with discretion”.
For a long time a painting has been displayed at Palazzo Vecchio,
Florence, in the Elements section. This 15th century painting made on
wood is still in the news. It is known as “La Madonna e San Giovannino”
(The Virgin Mary and Saint Giovannino), a nativity ascribed to the
Florence painter Filippo Lippi (1406-1469) or his school. The round
medium-size wood painting placed inside the Saturno Hall does not,
however, have a sure attribution. In the Palazzo Vecchio list it is
classified as artwork n. 344, by an unknown Florence author and
originating from an abandoned Saint Orsola monastery.
The sweetness and the sacredness of this image do not equal the
curiosity it rouses when one observes a detail in the upper right part
of the depiction – near the head of the Virgin Mary. It is a gray-lead
object, sloping to the left, provided with a “dome” or a “turret”,
apparently identifiable as a flying object with an oval shape in
motion. This “mysterious” object is characterized by the presence of
bright rays, colored in yellow-gold, which seem to emanate from the
hull. Below is some kind of barely visible spheroidal structure.
On the opposite side of the round wood is a sun and immediately below
“three little fires”. These details show that the artist well knew the
difference between a mystic-symbolic representation and a real event.
In confirmation of his will to communicate through his work something
of special emotional intensity, one can note a little human figure
below observing the object in the sky with his hand shielding his eyes
– a sign of attention. Near the figure is a dog barking at the
mysterious flying object.
In the 15th century flying machines did not exist, and therefore the
question arises of what the artist wished to represent.
As in the comics
Likewise emblematic is “La Tebaide” by Paolo Uccello (nee Paolo di
Dono, 1397-1475) kept at the Gallery of Academy in Florence. It must be
stated this artist has given remarkable notes on the development of the
perspective as method of representation. In this artwork he has hidden
an object shaped as a dish overhanging a dome between the detached
umbrella-like sections of some very high cluster-pines. The ovoid top
of the trees makes a corollary to the crucifixion in the background. To
underline this “information”, he illustrates the motion of the object
with some semicircular swirl, as if to indicate a turning – something
similar to the manner in which motion is represented in the comics.
Moreover, the mordant effect of the color used (red) by the Aretinian
artist makes one think that he wished to underline the possible
incandescence of the object.
The ambition of flying has existed in the mind of the man ever since he
was capable of observation and actively perceived the world around him
and his place in the mankind’s progress (see the Icaro myth). But the
development of the flying shape and its aerodynamic consequences are a
technological process, something that has been conquered step by step
only in this last century. A Renaissance painting from 1595, ascribed
to Bonaventura Salimbeni, resides at the church of Saint Peter in
Montalcino. It illustrates perfectly the symbolic evolution of forms.
According to the historiographers of Art, this altar piece represents
the Holy Trinity - the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit – in
accordance with the canons of the Roman Catholic apostolic tradition.
But the object reigning over the center of the painting – under the
large wings of a fading dove, usually a classic symbolic reproduction
of the Holy Spirit – is an image reminding us of the 1950s in our
century, when the Russian began to explore space by putting in orbit
the first artificial satellites called Sputnik, marked usually with a
progressive number.
“Missiles” and “montgolfiers”
There is also a tapestry by Charles Le Brun (1619-1690), Parisian
painter, sculptor and one of the greatest representative of French
academic classicism in the 17° century, who also directed the
manufacture the “Gobelin”, which has a detail found outside of its
historical age. As part of the decoration surrounding the main subject
of the artwork entitled “The four elements: the fire”, there is a
medallion reproducing something that remind us not only of a missile in
flight but of an ogive. In addition, the artist has encircled the image
with the Latin words “Splendet et Ascendit” (Shine and Ascend).
A miniature excerpted from a French text of 1453 could also represent
some unusual experience the artist lived through: a noble medieval lady
wearing a conical hat meets a group of knights while in the background
a huge and mysterious gilded sphere, richly decorated, hovers in the
sky and impends over the scene. It could be also the pictorial
representation of an allegoric image if not for the detail on the right
of a man observing the object with surprise.
“La Contemplazione di San Geremia” (Saint Geremia’s Contemplation), an
other miniature from Renaissance period, this time excerpted from the
“Bibbia (Bible) Urbinate” kept in Vatican Museums, is an example that
mystic representation, the anomalous factor and the daily reality are
very clear in the artist knowledge.
Since the mountains, the surrounding countryside, the town, the men and
the horses are perfect representations of objective reality, and the
divine image falls in the classic patterns of the religious
iconography, the object represented on the upper right side seems to be
a representation of an unusual visual experience. It is a sphere
emitting blazing rays – dissimilar and “undulating” respective to those
divine images in the painting – and a “clear straight beam” of light
comes from the object. Does it represent perhaps a fireball of meteoric
origin with a very unusual train?
Comments and suppositions, specially for those who know the behavior of
the light, can never state for certain what the artist has seen in
reality, but one thing seems to be clear: he wanted to tell us
something.
And, finally, what can one say about the fresco painted on the vault of
the Aleksander Nevski Cathedral - erected in Sofia, Bulgaria in 1882,
and titled “To Almighty God”? To the side of the almighty God,
surrounded by bright rays, and the little Jesus, there is an object in
direction of the God’s forefinger that is without precedent in the
religious iconography. The object is round, and it is also possible to
see a spheroidal structure in the lower part of the object.
There are still many artworks whose meaning is not clear, as, for
instance, the Roman epoch fresco on the Augusto Home wall, at
Capitolino Hill, in Rome, representing a huge object like a rocket
ready to take off observed by patricians with surprised expressions on
the faces.
Without setting ourselves so many questions, we could justify the
pictorial representations of the objects we have introduced – aliens to
the culture of the epochs in which they have been painted – as
allegoric images due to the inspiration of those who painted them. But
in such a case we would not know what they symbolize.
However, it seems that these paintings depict devices suited to the
flight, devices unknown by the technology of those centuries.
If we can make a supposition as to what the authors of the paintings
had observed in the skies, we could state that they witnessed some kind
of unusual events they wanted to hand down to the future generations.
If we think the painted objects represent real flying devices able to
fly, we cannot ascribed to any civilization from those centuries their
construction; on the other hand, we do not have any scientifically
valid proof to claim they came from other worlds.
As we await in hope an Art expert who will provide a concrete
explanation about the meaning of the objects described in these pages,
what remain are some disquieting questions to which there are no
possible answers . (D.G.)
Year 776 Sigiburg Castle, France. This sighting happened as the Saxons
were attempting to invade Emperor Charlemagne’s Sigiburg castle. A
French garrison was attacking them from behind. Suddenly two flaming
shields were witnessed hovering above a nearby church. * The Saxons
became frightened and fled. They thought the knights were piloting the
two objects and were leading the French into battle! The description
and two images of this event are from an eighth century book entitled
“Annales Laurissenses” (books about historical and religious events.)
They are possibly the earliest illustrations of UFOs in book form. The
first picture represents a French soldier with his arms up, and object
is above him in the sky. It is shaped like a sphere with little circles
like portholes around it. The artist is trying to convey the movement
of the object by drawing flame-like shapes from it. The second image
depicts a nobleman or even Charlemagne riding a horse and pointing
directly at a disc shaped object. Again the object has porthole like
circles around it. Imagine back then what the witnesses must have
though on viewing two UFOs. Today a witness would think it was a secret
military aircraft or an extraterrestrial device. Back then it was
assumed knights bringing them into battle piloted the disks. On
reflection we are left wandering whether the UFOs appearance was by
accident or whether whoever was behind the objects had the intention to
influence the course of events.
The church plays an interesting part in our story because prior to the
sighting another strange event took place. During one of the
innumerable raids by the Saxons on the French, they reached the place
of Frisdilar where there was a chapel founded by Saint Bonifacio,
preacher, then martyr. He predicted the chapel would never be burnt.
The Saxons surrounded the chapel, entered and attempted to set fire to
it. Suddenly, two men dressed in white appeared in the sky. They were
seen by the Christians who had taken refuge in the castle and the
Saxons who were outside. These pair of strange beings protected the
chapel in such a way that the Saxons were unable to set fire to it,
neither from the inside nor outside. This terrified them so much they
ran away even though no one pursued them. One crusader who decided not
to flee was found dead, resting on his knees and elbows, with his mouth
covered by his hands. He showed clear signs of death from asphyxia.
Source: Daniela Giordano/American Chronicle
http://www.americanchronicle.com/articles/viewArticle.asp?articleID=16589
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MERRY-GO-ROUND OF THE GODS DEPARTMENT -
No Mystery Why von
Däniken's Mystery Park Closes

The demise of the Mystery Park in the Bernese Oberland resort of
Interlaken, which closed on Sunday, is no enigma but the result of bad
decisions, experts say.
They argue that the main reasons for the closure are the static nature
of the exhibition, the slow involvement of local tourism and the stock
exchange decline between 2001 and 2003.
"Mystery Park needs extraterrestrial saviour" and "Career dreamer Erich
von Däniken pulls back" were just two of the sarcastic headlines
journalists made in a long series of negative reports.
The criticism stepped up in 2005 and was particularly heavy in the
spring of 2006 when the park had to ask for a delay in bankruptcy
proceedings and protection from its creditors.
It all began in 1997 with ambitious plans. Best:selling Swiss author
Erich von Däniken announced he wanted to open a theme park devoted
to unsolved terrestrial mysteries on the site of the former local
military airport.
As an international personality and mystery expert whose books have
been translated into numerous languages, von Däniken appeared to
be a guarantee that the park would be managed professionally.
But Hannes Imboden, the former Bernese Oberland tourism director, said
the communications department of the Mystery Park did not correct the
one:sided UFO image that most people have of von Däniken.
A similar assessment comes from the current director, Fritz Zemp, who
has been at the mystery park since April 2005.
"The marketing segment to target was not systematically approached at
the outset," Zemp said. "What was more important ? entertainment,
focusing on the UFO element of the hard core of von Däniken
followers, or learning and education aspects?"
After critical financial questions, the park opened its doors in May
2003. As the banks declined to provide money, the finances came from a
group of private investors and the public who bought shares at a low
par value despite the troubles at the stock exchange.
"Von Däniken was unable to put into place what he'd really
wanted," Thomas Vaszary, a lecturer at Lucerne's tourism college, told
swissinfo.
"It seemed a bad realisation of von Däniken's ideas. It lacked
life and interaction."
At the beginning Imboden had advised that at least a third of the
park's exhibition should be changeable, a strategy that might have
encouraged people to make return visits.
Zemp also felt there was a lack of life in the park. "Technically it
would have been easy to change the software and hardware to counter the
statics of the exhibition," he said.
Christian Laesser, deputy director of the St Gallen Institute for
Tourism, criticised a lack of innovation after the park had been built.
He said that successful parks were those that continuously developed,
like, for example, the Europa Park in Rust, Germany. "Only that [kind
of development] maintains a steady flow of visitors," he told swissinfo.
Zemp said there were many professional providers of tourist services in
the Bernese Oberland, the Jungfrau Railways, many hotels, adventure
firms and tour operators that would have been possible partners for the
park.
He said the Mystery Park had only begun very late to offer packages
that included meals and overnight stays.
The park's financing ran into difficulties and was not helped by falls
at the stock market. There were also groups of small and large
shareholders that had different interests, according to Zemp.
The fate of the Mystery Park now lies with the liquidator, who Zemp
feels will probably put forward a number of proposals at next month's
meeting of creditors.
Insolvency proceedings are due to end on January 10. If none of the
suggestions is accepted by the creditors, the park will be auctioned.
Source: NZZ Online
http://www.nzz.ch/2006/11/19/eng/article7266028.html
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SMILE FOR THE CAMERA DEPARTMENT -
Sheffield Park Spook or
Spoof?
Christopher Petty and his brother decided to spend a day outdoors,
enjoying the warm Sussex sunshine. Little did they know when they
started out that they would be joined by someone or something else.
Sunday May 16th started like any other day in early Summer.
The sun was shining and like many of us, Southern Counties web surfer
Christopher Petty decided to make the most of the weather and get out
and about.
He and his brother decided to visit the National Trust's historic
Sheffield Park Gardens in Sussex. They took their cameras; it is a
particularly beautiful spot afterall, and a few photographs of the day
would serve as a nice reminder. So, when they started snapping away,
neither of them expected the following results, once the pictures were
developed...
Chris explains:
"On the photo there appears to be a shadowy figure of a woman to my
right which I can't explain as:
a) There was no-one beside me at the time and
b) There was no statue in that part of the garden.
On the picture there is a mark on the subject's shirt which looks
similar to the sunlit leaves on the shrub behind, as visible to the
right of the picture.
After much consideration I can only guess that there is either a
photographic explanation for this, or that the shadow is in fact a
ghost".
At first glance we agreed with Chris.
There does appear to be a statue behind him, but he says there was
nothing there when the photo was taken.
A National Trust representative has confirmed with us that there are no
statues in the park. So we subjected the image to a series of rigorous
scientific tests, conducted by our leading paranormal experts....(well,
Heather and Ed) Our advanced testing methods have proved it to be....
er....um, not quite as spooky as it first appears....
We have decided, after much learned discussion, that the "paranormal
phenomenon" which haunts Chris' photo is in fact somebody's granny.
How we came to this conclusion:
1) We lightened the photo.
2) We sharpened the photo.
3) We took the background out.
4) We increased the colour saturation, which showed the ghostly
apparition to have a pink face, a blue rinse and fuchsia lippy. So not
your average ghoul.
5) The "spook" also appears to be wearing a rather fetching V-necked,
smart but casual pullover, which is as far removed as you can get from
the usual long white robes and chains etc...
However, the plot thickens...
Chris says there was no-one beside him at the time of the photo being
taken, and who are we to disbelieve him? So how did this nice old lady
get into the photograph unnoticed? Did she leap out from behind a bush
only to hop back into the shubbery again once the flash had gone off?
Possibly.
Was she wearing a Cloak of Invisibility, which she whipped off, to
reveal herself at the very second the camera took the photo? Highly
unlikely. Or is she, as Chris suggests, a ghost?
When Chris Petty and his brother visited Sheffield Park and took the
photo, in which they claim to have captured a ghostly image, they had
no idea what they had started.
We have recently been given information about an event that occurred in
Sheffield Park a few years before Chris' photo was taken.
Whether what you are about to read, is connected to the image that
Chris took, is entirely for you to decide. But one local family is now
appealing to Chris to reveal the truth about the image. Was this
picture a hoax, sent to us as an elaborate joke, in the hope we would
fall for it? If not, the family in question suggest they will have to
come to terms with something far more unsettling....
The latest developments occurred when we received details of a tragedy
that happened in Sheffield Park on Saturday 4th August 2001. 87 year
old Mrs Florence Bristow had gone to the gardens, with her son John and
his wife, for an afternoon out.
Once there, they hired a motorised buggy, intending to travel around
the edge of the lake. Unfortunately, Florence suffered a heart attack
and fell across her son who lost control of the buggy, which then
plunged into the water. John's wife dived into the lake in an attempt
to save her and although first reports suggested Florence had drowned,
later tests showed that she had died before entering the water.
Resuscitation attempts were tried at the lake side but to no effect.
Until recently, Mrs Bristows family had not seen Chris' "ghost"
picture, but when they did spot it on our website, they were shocked.
John contacted us to say he believed the picture "Shows a resemblance
to my mother".
Further contact with the family revealed they believe "the lady in the
photograph bears a striking resemblance to her [Florence] even down to
the type of top she is wearing". John has kindly given us a photograph
of Mrs Bristow, with permission to post it here on the website.
So we are asking, is Chris' photo a hoax? His brother Paul, the person
who took the original photograph, says it's not! Maybe you know the
person in his photo? Could it be you? Were you in Sheffield Park on
Sunday May 16th 2004 and can you remember seeing anyone who could
possibly be the person in the background? Or is there another
explanation for the image?
Source: BBC
http://www.bbc.co.uk/southerncounties/content/articles/2005/08/12/
sheffield_park_spook_feature.shtml
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MYSTERIES MAGAZINE
It's Time to
Question Your Beliefs!
If you have a
voracious appetite for stories of lost treasure, are
fascinated by the occult, or savor tales of the unexplained,
conspiracies, and other strange stories of the weird world we live in,
then Mysteries
Magazine is for you.
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