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Great Celestial Conjunction Crosses - Souls of Distortion

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Sun on the ecliptic-Milky Way crossing when the Sun resides in its most sacred<br />

place in a precession cycle; the Sun is put on his throne so to speak. Horus is<br />

depicted twice on this throne because there are two ecliptic-Milky Way crossings<br />

on the Galactic Equator, one is the Sagittarius-Scorpio nexus, the other the<br />

Gemini-Taurus nexus. Both crossings appear on opposite sides <strong>of</strong> the Galactic<br />

Equator and may be expressed by the fact that the two Horuses are sitting back<br />

to back. Underneath each <strong>of</strong> the thrones the eye <strong>of</strong> Horus is depicted because as<br />

we have demonstrated above the eye <strong>of</strong> Horus is yet another metaphor for the<br />

ecliptic-Milky Way crossing.<br />

In the centre we see the scarab beetle, symbolizing both the precessing Sun as<br />

well as the Sagittarius-Scorpio nexus. Right below the scarab beetle we see a<br />

winged version <strong>of</strong> Isis. Isis-Hathor must be associated with the ecliptic-Milky Way<br />

crossing at the Gemini-Taurus nexus.<br />

Finally four Ankhs are depicted around the scarab beetle; the four Ankhs in this<br />

decoration are most likely expressing the fact that four times in a precession<br />

cycle the Sun resides on the Milky Way, at the vernal equinox, fall equinox,<br />

summer solstice and winter solstice. These four moments define the four <strong>Great</strong><br />

<strong>Celestial</strong> <strong>Conjunction</strong>s in a <strong>Great</strong> Year.<br />

Sarcophagus decoration<br />

Dutch national museum <strong>of</strong> antiquities, Leiden

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