9 May, 2014
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MessageToEagle.com - Ancient Egyptians called the saucers "fire circles", the Bible referred to them as fiery chariots.
One of the earliest known records of a fleet of flying saucers was written very long time ago in Ancient Egypt circa 1504-1450 BC.
The ancients spotted "two glowing wheels", beam of lights, luminous spheres and bright dots in the sky because extraterrestrials influenced Earth through out the history.
"Lights" observed in the sky in antiquity were recorded in chronicles.
The Venerable Bede (673-738) AD, the Father of English History wrote 40 books. In some parts of his "Ecclesiastical History of the English Nation" he mentioned some interesting UFO sightings.
One of them was reported from a monastery where suddenly a light "sent from heaven like a great sheet came upon them, and the light lifted up, moved to the other side of the monastery, then withdrew to the heights of heaven."
The observed "light" was of course a UFO and as described by Bede, its intense brightness made the sun at midday look like nothing but dark.
Another sighting reported also from a monastery at Barking, one of the oldest Benedictine abbeys located in Essex, near London, described a some kind of a "glorious body" that "was lifted upon high as it were by cords brighter than gold until it was taken into the open heavens" and could not be seen any longer.
For example in 634 A.D. "a long star seen in the south... which the people called a besom-star", and in 637 A.D. there was reported that a large "star" was floating from East to West causing a thunder-like noise.
There were many sightings in Britain and Japan during the seventh century.
The ancient "Chronicles of Japan" known as "The Nihongi" or Nihonshoki (Chronicles of Japan), are the earliest and most important sources of useful information about ancient Japan from the Earliest Times to A.D. 697.
In the Book Two of the Nihongi there are mentioned strange objects different from the sky patterns usually observed.
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On the 7th day of the second month of Spring, 640 A.D. people saw a "star" that entered the Moon. and another "guest star" entered the Moon on the 9th July 642 A.D.
On the 1st November 680 A.D. many observed an eclipse of the Sun but 3 days later people saw unusual brightness in the eastern sky, from the hour of the Dog to the hour of the Rat. (8 pm to midnight).
Strange "traffic" in the sky was observed on the 28th July 692 A.D. On this night Mars and Jupiter approached and receded from one another four times in the room of one pace, all the time shining and then disappearing.
In the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle of Gaimar there is a description of Coldingham village, on the East coast in the borders of Scotland. In 680 A.D. at the time when Coldingham was burning, a "fire" from heaven lighted it.
The great Anglo-Saxon chronicler Bede the Venerable gave in his books, an account of a strange visitation...
A young Saxon boy from the monastery at Bosham near Chichester, a small cathedral city in the south of England, was ill. He described a visitation by "two men altogether notable in their array and countenance, one shaven like a clerk, the other had a long beard... sent from heaven itself."
Fifteen years later in 696 A.D. King of the East Saxons known as Sebbi, reported that three men arrayed in bright apparel appeared to him as he lay sick. Three days later he died.
Of course, many skeptics oppose immediately dismissing these apparitions as hallucinations. But it seems to be a startling similarity between the above mentioned apparitions and that which happened once to the father of the famous philosopher, Jerome Cardan.
In his book "De Subtilitate" he recorded that on August 13, 1491, in Milan, his father was visited by seven men clothed in colorful silken garments...
A rather remarkable happening described by the chronicler Bede occurred in 690 A.D. When two English priests were murdered in Saxony and their bodies thrown into the Rhine river, Germany, a great beam of light reaching up to heaven followed their bodies as they floated in the river.
There are hundreds of ancient historical records describing "golden globes" flying in the skies; large shields in reddish color moving above observing them people; burning shields scattering sparks and running across the sky at sunset from east to west and hovering "orange glow".
Advanced extraterrestrial aircraft, varying in colors and shapes, were constantly present in the ancient skies.
In December 1200, in the province of York, Britain, "five Moons" were observed in the night sky. The first Moon appeared in the North, the second in the South, the third in the West, the fourth was seen in the East and the fifth Moon was visible in the midst of those four. The fifth "Moon" had "company" in form of many "stars" and made five or six cuircuits around the above mentioned four "Moons".
From a book entitled Prodigiorum Ac Ostentorum Chronicon by Conrad Lycosthenes (1518-1561). Basel: Henricpteri, 1557. It depicts a UFO sighting in Arabia in 1479. The book is held at the Australian Museum Research Library.
The "show" lasted approximately an hour and afterwards all "moons and stars" just...disappeared. Sightings of this kind were reported in many chronicles of highly respectable persons of ancient times.
Conrad Lycosthenes, a great humanist, encyclopedist and philosopher chronicles experienced many ufo sightings in his own century. He reported that in 1523, three "suns" and various "circles" were seen in the sky of Switzerland; also in Switzerland many "suns" and three haloes were spotted in the month of June.
Were these "suns" sundogs, moondogs, illusions or dellusions? Sometimes the ancients could simply observe atmospheric phenomena.
Sundogs that form only in cold regions, give the illusion that there are two or three suns in the sky, but what about the "five Moons" people observed in December 1200, in the province of York, Britain.
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