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Thoth: Architect of the Universe

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The megalithic monuments of the world, including Stonehenge and the Great Pyramid, can be understood as maps of the Earth. While researching the metrology of the megalithic monuments of Britain and Egypt, the author made this important and previously unnoticed these monuments are, in fact, maps! Many of these maps include within their structure the latitudes of specific topographical features on the surface of the vEarth. Some specific • The Avebury Henge is a map of the Earth • Stonehenge is a map of Earth's orbit • The Great Pyramid is a map of the continents • The Imperial Measurement System is based on the Great the mile measures 1760 yards and the pyramid, 1760 cubits

280 pages, Paperback

First published April 15, 2002

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Ralph Ellis

37 books65 followers

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Jason.
1,330 reviews145 followers
December 13, 2015
I loved this book, one of those rare books that will completely blow your mind and change how you think about things. It covers two interesting areas:

1. The Pyramids, all the maths involved in it, I never knew just how much of Pi and Pythagoras theorem was already known by the Egyptians.

2. Stonehenge. So much I never knew about Stonehenge and the stones at Amesbury and how they match up with a set of islands on the other side of the world.

I pretty much read this book with my mouth open the whole time, i've no idea of how much of it is true... but still.

Well written and the maths is explained well so a non-expert will understand. One day this will get a re-read by me.
Profile Image for Paula.
532 reviews4 followers
March 17, 2013
A pretty fascinating read about how Stonehenge, Avebury, Giza and Teotihuacan could all be related. As a Christian, I wouldn't recommend this one if you're the type to get all flustered and offended by suggestions that the Bible is a spin-off and God an attempt to explain a humanoid being of higher-than-human intelligence. Despite my ingrained discomfort at the conclusions drawn at the end of this book, I can understand the author's excitement over his findings. It has certainly given me some stuff to think about, but I won't be changing my core beliefs over it.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews