How the Universe Was Created & Galactic History
Syrian beings contributed to the Earth Genome Project, establishing mystery schools that profoundly influenced human knowledge in science, spirituality, and medicine.
The Gods of the Phœnician also Kings of Atlantis
Upon the Syrian sea the people liveWho style themselves Phœnicians.
The Deluge Legends of Other Nations
The author of the treatise "On the Syrian Goddess" acquaints us with the diluvian tradition of the Arameans, directly derived from that of Chaldea, as it was narrated in the celebrated Sanctuary of Hierapolis, or Bambyce.
At Athens, in memory of the event, and to appease the manes of its victims, a ceremony called Hydrophoria was observed, having so close a resemblance to that in use at Hierapolis, in Syria, that we can hardly fail to look upon it as a Syro-Phœnician importation, and the result of an assimilation established in remote antiquity between the Deluge of Deucalion and that of Khasisatra, as described by the author of the treatise 'On the Syrian Goddess.' Close to the temple of the Olympian Zeus a fissure in the soil was shown, in length but one cubit, through which it was said the waters of the Deluge had been swallowed tip.
Matias De Stefano Channels Multi-Dimensional Beings at Ancient Salt Flats
The night before, Matias had vivid dreams of another planet inhabited by tall beings, resembling the Syrian people.
The Phoenicians
Phoenician art was influenced by neighboring cultures, including Egyptian, Assyrian, and Northern Syrian styles.
The Deluge Legends (I)
Chaldean and Syrian Traditions:
Syrian Legend: Deucalion Sisythes builds a vessel and survives the flood with animals seeking refuge.
Nabatean Agriculture
The philosophical views of the author are similar to those of the Syrian Neoplatonist school founded by Iamblichus in the 4th century.
The Jinn
Some maintain that the Arabic word jinn is older, and that the Palmyran (ancient Syrian) word jny' or gny', which we shall encounter later, derives from the earlier Arabic form.
Syrian Islamic scholar Muhammad Amin ibn Abdin (d.1836), of the Hanafi 28 Sunni school, believed it was lawful to prohibit the marriage of:
Amorite
The Amorites originally inhabited the Syrian desert.
Göbekli Tepe
Göbekli Tepe: Located near the Syrian border in Turkey, it consists of a series of stone circles and pillars, which are believed to have been used for ceremonial or religious purposes.