Sacred Geometry in Ancient Goddess Cultures: The Divine Science of the Female Priesthood

Sacred Geometry in Ancient Goddess Cultures

The Divine Science of the Female Priesthood
 
Publisher: Inner Traditions
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Number of Volumes: Hardback
 
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Product details:

ISBN13:9781644116555
ISBN10:1644116553
Binding:Hardback
No. of pages:256 pages
Size:254x203x20 mm
Language:English
Illustrations: Full-color throughout
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Short description:

Examines the ancient cosmic science of the female megalithic astronomers.

Long description:
Examines the ancient cosmic science of the female megalithic astronomers.

Long before Pythagoras and Plato, before arithmetic and Christianity, there existed matrilineal societies around the Mediterranean, led by women with a sophisticated understanding of astronomy and sacred science. In this detailed exploration, Richard Heath decodes the cosmological secrets hidden by ancient goddess-centered cultures on the island of Malta, at Gobekli Tepe in Turkey, and on the Greek island of Crete.

Heath reveals how the female astronomers of Malta built megaliths to study the sun, moon, and planets, counting time as lengths and comparing lengths using geometry. He shows how they encoded their cosmological and astronomical discoveries, their “astronomy of the goddesses,” in the geometries of their temples and monuments. Examining Maltese and Cretan artifacts, including secret calendars, he details how the Minoans of Crete transformed Maltese astronomy into a matriarchal religion based upon a Saturnian calendar of 364 days. He also reveals evidence of the precursors of Maltese astronomical knowledge in the monuments of Gobekli Tepe.

Looking at the shift from sacred geometry to arithmetic in ancient Mediterranean cultures, the author parallels this change in mindset with the transition from matriarchal to patriarchal cultures. He reveals how Greek myths present a way to see the matriarchal past through patriarchal eyes, detailing how Saturn’s replacement by Jupiter-Zeus symbolizes the transition from matriarchy to patriarchy. The author examines how the early Christians helped preserve the ancient astronomy of the goddesses, due to its connections to Christ’s cosmological teachings, by encoding it in the artwork of the rock-cut churches and monasteries of the Cappadocia region of Turkey.

Revealing how our planet, with its specific harmonics and geometries within our star system, is uniquely designed to support intelligent life, the author shows how this divine spiritual truth was known to the ancient astronomers.

“Richard Heath’s fascinating and highly readable book presents a decoding of the metrology of G&&&246;bekli Tepe of 10,000 BCE and advances arguments that support its role as a place for the worship of the Goddess. Although the megaliths of Europe were to come nearly 5,000 years later, the book marshals evidence from mathematics, astronomy, sacred architecture, and tone theory to show that these structures were a successor to G&&&246;bekli Tepe. The book disentangles many threads that went into the creation of the Classical Age.”
Table of Contents:
Preface

PART ONE
Megaliths Built by the Goddess

Introduction to Part One
The Atlantic Megalithic
The Mediterranean Megalithic

1 The Language of the Mesolithic
The Northern and Southern Branches of Megalithism
Stepping-Stones to Numeracy
The Geometrical Origins of the Measures
The Numerical Nature of Mesolithic Astronomy
Resequencing Prehistory


2 The Mediterranean Tradition
Initial Analysis of G&&&246;bekli Tepe
A Matriarchal Megalithic
The Sleeping Goddess of Malta
Stellar Astronomy at Malta
Interpreting G&&&246;bekli Tepe


3 Reunion of the Megalithic Latitudes
The Bluestone Culture
The Significance of Latitude for the Megalithic
A Pyramidion for the Great Pyramid
Britain’s Circular Geodetic Monument
The Stonehenge Trilithons as Synods of Venus

PART TWO
The Mediterranean Transmission

Introduction to Part Two

4 Time, Gender, and Human History
Gender Selection within Prehistory
Gender Transformational Themes
Origins of The Mysteries


5 Matriarchal Crete in the Bronze Age
The Monolith Basement at Knossos
The Kernos of Malia Palace
The Horns of Consecration as Alignments
The Oval House
Why Matriarchal Astronomy Happened
The Significance of Form to Megalithic Astronomy
The Iconography of the Double Axe


6 Pythagoras, the Bible, and Plato
Numbers as Multidimensional Symbols, Rather Than Lengths
Pythagoras
The Parthenon
Plato’s Dialogues
The Bible as a Neolithic Tale


PART THREE
The Role of Providential History


Introduction to Part Three


7 Cappadocian Crossroads in Anatolia
Early Christianity and the Four Gospels
The Cappadocian Creed
Secrets within Orthodox Churches
Interpretation of Ayvali Kelise
Interpretation of Ha&&&231;l&&&305; Kelise
Evolution of Orthodox Churches in Cappadocia
Orthodox Transmission of the Perimeter and Area Models
The Cappadocian Cross


8 The Arctic Origins of Astronomical Symbolism
The Phenomenology of Indra
The Arctic Framework and Its Motion


9 The Vedas in Southeast Asia
Angkor Wat
Water, Time, and Irrigation
The Middle Enclosure
The Inner Temple and Enclosure


10 Rome: The Goddess within the Vatican
Rebuilding Saint Peter’s Basilica
Extending the Design
The Vinca and da Vinci

11 Design for a Living Planet
The Chaldean Model
The Moon as Football for the Gods
Integrating Gravity Using Square Areas
The Grand Design

POSTSCRIPT
The Deep Significance of Our Past

APPENDIX
Astronomical Periods and Their Durations

Notes

Bibliography

Index