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The Lost Civilization of the North.: ReDiscovering the Ancient World.
Contributor(s): Joramo, Morten Alexander (Author)
ISBN: 1514251310     ISBN-13: 9781514251317
Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
OUR PRICE:   $18.95  
Product Type: Paperback
Published: June 2015
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- History | Civilization
Physical Information: 0.61" H x 6" W x 9" (0.87 lbs) 292 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
The Lost Civilization of the North Through two of my previous books, (The Homer Code and Atlantis Unveiled) what had been accomplished was not just a most plausible recreation of Odysseus' and Jason's voyages in the North, but also the discovery of an interlocking logic which simply proves way beyond reasonable doubt that the origin of the tales of Greek Mythology actually was in the High North. In this new book all relevant previous material pertaining to the localization of the Lost Civilization of the North is collected and updated with new details and realizations in this ongoing discovery. It is a discovery, and not a theory, because it proves itself by its inner logic. It proves that the only geography actually fitting the World of Homer and Apollonius of Rhodes is in the North of Europe. I discovered through this that not only Ancient Greece, but also Ancient Egypt, as well as part of Genesis, show undeniable signs of deep and early influence from the High North. This lost civilization in Northern Europe is, of course, absent from the History books. It did exist, however, just like the late Finnish Storyteller Ior Bock used to say it did. Initially to my utmost disbelief, but then again, how could it not be? Now it is provably so. Implying that just like the Roman mythology came out of the Greek, the Greek mythology came out of the Norse. This book includes all my previously published material on this particular topic, as well as new and previously unpublished updates. Including new chapters, more and updated maps, and a new list of over 200 ancient place names, with their modern counterparts, as far as these are presently known. Morten Alexander Joramo