Skip to content Skip to sidebar Skip to footer

LivingNetism.com – Where Consciousness Connects

The Library of Alexandria: What Was Its True Source?

Viewing 1 reply thread
  • Author
    Posts
    • #11466
      1750724726 bpfullNoraSpinnor
      Participant

      Many speak of the burning of the Library of Alexandria as a devastating loss of ancient wisdom, but few ask the deeper question: from where was the Library of Alexandria collecting its information?

      At its height, the Library of Alexandria was said to contain between 400,000 and 700,000 scrolls, though some ancient sources suggest even more. Many were unique manuscripts, collected from across the known world. Ships arriving at the port of Alexandria were required to surrender their books for copying, with the originals often kept and the copies returned. The library was part of the larger Mouseion, a temple to the Muses, which functioned more like a modern research institute, housing scholars, scientists, philosophers, and translators. Though no definitive architectural remains survive, the library is believed to have had multiple wings, specialized reading rooms, cataloging systems, and climate-controlled storage for delicate scrolls, making it the most ambitious intellectual project of the ancient world.

      The Library of Alexandria is believed to have been founded around 295 BCE, during the reign of Ptolemy I Soter, a former general under Alexander the Great. It flourished most notably under his son Ptolemy II Philadelphus (283–246 BCE), who greatly expanded its holdings and brought in scholars from across the ancient world.

      Its scrolls encompassed far more than Greek and Egyptian documents, but if writing had only begun around 3000 BCE, where did half a million scrolls, by conservative estimates, come from? The knowledge it contained on astronomy, geometry, and philosophy extended far beyond the known span of human civilization, which had supposedly only been organized for 3,000 years. The precision of its astronomical records, the alignments of sacred temples, and the mathematical proportions encoded in ancient structures all point to an advanced understanding of stellar systems, with predictive models and sky maps that stretch back at least 10,000 to 15,000 years, if not more.

      Evidence supporting pre-3000 BCE astronomical sophistication includes:

      Göbekli Tepe (ca. 9600 BCE): Alignment with celestial bodies, suggesting star tracking over 12,000 years ago
      Nabta Playa (Egypt, ca. 6000–5000 BCE): Megalithic calendar aligned with Orion and Sirius
      Pyramid complex alignments (Giza, Teotihuacan): Implied star knowledge spanning many precession cycles (~26,000-year clock)

      These examples suggest that Alexandria was the repository of ancient knowledge, not its originator. It gathered fragments from a much older world that was shattered by catastrophe. The priesthoods of Egypt, Babylon, and Chaldea likely served as custodians, preserving and transmitting this knowledge across millennia. Solon’s journey to Sais, as recounted in Plato’s Timaeus, states that Egyptian priests told him of a great flood that wiped out advanced civilizations long before the Greeks had even begun to write.

      It is possible that the scrolls of Alexandria contained translations of tablets from lost Sumerian archives, transcriptions of Atlantean oral traditions, and blueprints of ancient energy systems misunderstood by later interpreters. Pythagoras, who studied in Egypt for over 20 years, discussed numbers as living principles, echoes of a vibrational science forgotten by modern thought. The Hermetica, attributed to Thoth-Hermes, survives only in scraps, yet speaks in the language of resonance, unity, and stellar law.

      The burning of the library caused a sink in the Net. Knowledge that had been concentrated was lost, but so was knowledge worldwide. The world fell into an era of violence, spiritual suppression, and materialism.

      True wisdom, however, cannot be burned and discarded from the human psyche. While materials decay, the energetic imprint remains on the aethereal blueprint of the Net. The patterns known to our most ancient ancestors are still known today. Some are even reappearing in popular culture; others never left.

      What do you think was lost at the Library of Alexandria?
      What do you think is being rediscovered?

    • #11467
      1752967359 bpfullQuantumnomicon33
      Participant

      The astronomical models in those scrolls are the real smoking gun. To have star maps tracking the precession of the equinoxes implies observation over thousands of years. We’re talking about systems that encoded time using 26,000-year cycles. The library had people bringing texts from all over the world. Some probably didn’t even understand their own documents, but they brought it for storage there and translators worked at it. I bet there was knowledge in there that would solve our energy crisis, as well as records of civilizations that existed long before Egypt.

Viewing 1 reply thread
  • You must be logged in to reply to this topic.
E-mail
Password
Confirm Password