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8.) Surveillance of Phoenicia

 All Latin histories freely admit that they owe the Phoenicians for their foundational structures. While Hyksos culture disappeared, the Phoenicians who founded Carthage flourished in Northwest Africa. It supervised the mining of iron and precious metals from Iberia. Carthage protected the agent's commercial interests until Rome was 1st destroyed at the end of the Punic Wars. This period came to an end with the annexations of the world by the Roman Republic, which established the Latin province of Macedonia in Greece and later the region of Achaea during Roman times.

™ regarded mathematics as an art and a science. I believe that cryptic messages within the sites he designed show a maritime navigational purpose. These megalithic structures were built upon a "world grid” that can be clearly seen in Albertian architecture.

Teotihuacan and Easter Island (sites separated by the Atlantic ocean, have somewhat similar architecture); the Pyramids at Giza, Thornborough Henges, and old Hopi cities (all 3 configured to resemble Orion); the straight-line alignments of sites such as Trelleborg, Delphi, and Giza; and stone carvings at Gavrinis (3500 BC) accurately calculating the circumference of Earth and π. π is why the circle served as Alberti's primary architectural template.


™ began his treatise, Della Pittura (On Painting), with "I will take 1st from the math those things with which I'm concerned." He seems to have anticipated the principle of architectural hierarchy, with complete main streets connected to crossroads and buildings of equal height. His so-called prehistoric monuments evidence this. 

Sites like Baalbek megaliths were impossible to build in the Bronze Age. We know Renaissance technology could have facilitated the movement of such large stones. These interconnected pyramidal structures are not the handiwork of locals but the Agency. I don't think ley lines were used to access Earth energies. Alberti's family chose sacred landscapes to build megalithic monuments as shipping markers under the guise of quasi-religious beliefs. 

Although astronomers like Fomenko are right by saying many astronomical events described in old texts are dated between 1404 and 1472, I don't wholly reject commonly accepted dating methods. Scientists extensively use such techniques rigorously examined and refined during decades of service. That said, falsifying this theory only enhances my suspicions that the same events can recur at any time, an approach spearheaded by Zeno of Citium, the Phoenician founder of Stoicism.

Phoenicians originated from the Hyksos, who viewed the scarab as a sign of the rebirth of life. These "rulers of foreign lands" were a people of diverse origins; the elite were Northerners who settled in the Eastern Nile Delta sometime in the mid-15th-century AD, nowhere near 1650 BC.

As to the "conquest," some archaeologists depict them as an invading horde of Asiatics. Their chronology is further beset by a lack of differentiation between linguistic, ethnic, and political groups. Yet, a gradual infiltration of migrating agents slowly took over control of the country. In self-defense, it seems they did a swift coup to put themselves at the top of the Pyramid.

Two of Apepi's sisters are known: Tani and Ziwat. Tani is mentioned on the door of a shrine in Avaris. She was the sister of the King referred to on a bowl found in Spain. Apepi's daughter Herit's vase was found in a tomb at Thebes, sometimes regarded as the tomb of King Amenhotep I, indicating that at some point, his daughter married a Theban Pharoah. Neferneferuaten Nefertiti (1370 BC-1330 BC) was the Mitanni Princess Tadukhipa aka Kiya, a Queen of Akhenaten, Amenhotep IV. Again these dates provide us with chronological sequences of events, not the accurate time. Most of recorded world history is an encrypted version of only a few hundred years.

Tadukhipa, in the Hurrian language Tadu-Hepa, was the daughter of Tushratta, King of Mitanni (1382 BC-1342 BC) and his Queen Juni and niece of Artashumara. Tadukhipa's aunty Gilukhipa (sister of Tushratta) had married Pharaoh Amenhotep III in his 10th regnal year. Tadukhipa was to marry Amenhotep III more than 2 decades later. Seamlessly, the Plague of Megiddo in 1350 BC occurred in Canaan. In the Amarna letters of EA 244, the mayor tells Amenhotep III of his area being "consumed by plague."

Tadukhipa, now Nefertiti, became an African Queen. The Great Royal Wife of Akhenaten. Nefertiti and Akhenaten were known for a proto-monotheistic revolution in which they worshiped one deity only, Aten (the sun disc). Many have compared Akhenaten's Hymn to Aten with the biblical Psalms of Solomon. 

With Akhenaten, Nefertiti reigned in what was arguably the wealthiest period of early African records. She is depicted as equal in stature to male Pharaohs, riding chariots and worshiping the Sun. References to spies are found throughout the Amarna letters of Akhenaten, sent by governors and Princes of Canaan to their Agency overlord. 

Tutankhamun's father was Akhenaten, and Nefertiti was his mother. According to Japan's Chiba Institute of Technology (CIT), Tutankhamun's meteorite dagger came from Mitanni. 

After their death, Africa is linked to reflections of foreign invasions. During the Seth-worshiping Ramesses III's long tenure, Africa was beset by a group of mysterious Southern Italian ocean raiders (calling themselves Sea Peoples). 

The 1st documented instances of pirates were when the "Proto-Roman" Sea Peoples attacked the ships of the Aegean and Mediterranean civilizations; acts of criminal violence by boat-borne attackers upon another ship or a coastal area, typically intending to steal stuff, business as usual. This caused the final Bronze Age Collapse. 

The predominant extra-Canaanite cultural influence came from the Minoan civilization, around 1450 BC, on the Aegean Islands. Mainly associated with Romans, aqueducts came from these Minoans (2000 BC). 

Agents were rebranded as Sea Peoples.The 1st recorded use of foreign auxiliaries dates back to Medieval Africa, the 13th-century AD, when Pharaoh Ramesses II used these Mediterranean seafarers during his battles. 

From the 12th-century BC until 604 BC, the Philistines (Greek Sea Peoples) lived on the coast of Canaan by paying the Neo-Assyrian Empire for protection. Goliath was a Philistine giant (Rephaim) killed by David. It signified Saul's lack of leadership and David’s ability to be King. However, Goliath was murdered by Elhanan. The whole narrative seems like a biblical redaction to credit David with Goliath's death. Perversely, the Babylonian Talmud lists Goliath as a relative of Ruth, David's great-grandmother. 

Neo-Babylonian Nebuchadnezzar II eventually conquered the Philistines. In 135, Roman Emperor Hadrian rebranded the entire region "Syria Palaestina". This new province was the merger of Syria and Judaea after the Romans took over. Jerusalem became Aelia Capitolina.

Phoenician art is indistinguishable from Agency art, highly influenced by Apepi and thus Sargon. These pirates controlled the Strait of Malacca, waters of Gibraltar, the English Channel, Madagascar, and the Gulf of Aden. Their "fingerprints" are all over Puma Punku, Stonehenge, Easter Island, Teotihuacan, Palenque, Chichen Itza, Göbekli Tepe, Zorats Karer, the Nazca Lines, the Chinese pyramids, the Megalithic Temples of Malta, the Yonaguni Monument, and Çatalhöyük - just to name a few.

Phoenician spies came from the banks of the Nile, and the Euphrates gained broad architectural experience and finally came to create structures that were an amalgam of foreign viewpoints. They are a significant reason why legitimate archaeology is often subject to speculation. Phoenician technological advancements are reflected during the Age of Exploration; the only real difference seems to be the adoption of guns.

™ had the world thinking others spread the alphabet when it was he who extended literacy beyond hierarchical priests. After a long hiatus, he re-opened the trade routes that connected Africa to other civilizations, beginning the "Orientalising" trend later seen in Greco-Roman art. The Agency invented a democratic structure before the Athenian revolution, and this was his inspiration for the Roman constitutional government's layer of history. 

Phoenician spies pioneered the development of multi-tiered oared shipping throughout the Mediterranean, 1st exploring beyond the Straits of Gibraltar. I think these agents, in particular, were the 1st to colonize the world in any significant way.

Herodotus said the Phoenician Prince Cadmus brought the Phoenician alphabet to Greece. Before the Black Death, there was a relationship between the Agency and the Phoenicians, reflected in their mythologies. The 2 cultures rarely clashed, mainly in the Sicilian Wars. The Agency eventually settled into 3 spheres of regional influence, Phoenicia in the West, Greece to the East, and Persia to the North.

In the Bible, a Moshiach (messiah) is a High-Priestly King traditionally anointed with holy oil. Messiahs were not only Jewish: Isaiah refers to the Persian ruler Cyrus the Great as Moshiach for his patronage of the Jerusalem Temple. Cyrus conquered Phoenicia in 539 BC. Most scholars agree that this was when the Hebrew Bible began to become compiled. 

The earliest cryptography is found in non-standard Hyksos hieroglyphs and Akkadian clay tablets. By the time of Cyrus (539 BC), Jewish scribes were using monoalphabetic substitution ciphers for the Bible.

Speaking of the Bible. The holy book was named after a Phoenician city in Lebanon. Occupied since 8,800 BC, Byblos is one of the oldest continuously inhabited cities on Earth. Based on their architecture, the professor of Egyptology at the University of Vienna (Manfred Bietak) displayed how the religion of the Hyksos is reflected in Byblos and Ugarit.

The 1st recorded archive of written materials came from Kish around 3400 BC. Scholarly curation of literary texts began in Kish Shortly after. The later spy networks had long traditions of book collecting, namely illuminated manuscripts. The Hittites (later Assyrians) erected massive archives of made-up history containing forged records written in many different languages. The most famous was constructed by the Assyrian King Ashurbanipal (668-627 BC). An extensive library of counterfeits was built in Babylon by Nebuchadnezzar II (605-562 BC). 

The biblical Tower of Babel is the ziggurat of Etemenanki in Babylon, restored by Nebuchadnezzar II. Notice Nebuchadnezzar II's captivity set off in Babylon, and slavery in Egypt's New Kingdom came from disobedience to Yahweh. It's the Source using Babylonians and Egyptians to punish them. Interestingly, both regions served as the earliest cradles for civilization. 

We see a "Babylonian Captivity of the Papacy" during the Avignon Papacy, as it parallelled the Kingdom of Judah when it was captive in Babylon after the destruction of Solomon's Temple. During the exile, the Canaanite religion of Israel died, and Judaism was born. Similarly, this period saw the transformation of Catholics into a group that could survive without a Church.

The Captivity ended officially under Cyrus the Great (539 BC). Like the Jews, Pythagoras was forced to relocate to Babylon 10 years after they left. Many Jews stayed however. Ezra, for example, didn’t return until the reign of King Artaxerxes” (458 BC). During this period, Pythagoras was able to further extract Hyksos intel for the Greeks.

Manfred Bietak places the "religious center" of the Hyksos in Syria and Mesopotamia, regions controlled by Amorites at the time. The Hyksos agents were known to the natives. They attempted to identify them within their mythology with the expulsion from Africa of Belos (Baal) and the daughters of Danaos, progenitors of the Argeads. The most well known of them was Philip II of Macedon and his son Alexander the Great. Shortly before, the Plague of Athens was said to have devastated the city. The outbreak also affected much of the Eastern Mediterranean region.

Philip II's settlement of Greco-Roman colonists and the spread of spy culture in the East resulted in a new civilization, aspects of which began with the traditions of the Byzantines in the mid-Renaissance. Similar to Nezahualcoyotl’s father, Philip II of Macedon’s assignation ushered in his son’s reign. 

As the history books read, in 334 BC, Alexander the Great conquered the Persians and began a series of campaigns that lasted a decade. Espionage was prevalent here; Alexander's spies even employed illiterate locals in civil services. 

The Antikythera mechanism is the 1st analog computing device to calculate astronomical positions. It was discovered by Crete, near the Phaistos disc. Conveniently, tools of a level of complexity comparable would not reappear until ™'s polyalphabetic cipher disc. We're taught the Athenians founded the 1st primary public library in the 6th-century BC. For all that, the idea for the Library of Alexandria was built out of Renaissance heritage.

Like Sargon and Apepi, Alexander features prominently in several mythic traditions from various cultures, deified as Achilles, Dhul Qarnayn, etc. Alexander the Great endeavored to reach the "ends of the world and the Great Outer Sea" and invaded India centuries after the agents set off the Vedic period and were exiled. Alexander's narrative concludes with him eventually turning back, dying in Kish around "323 BC", the city he planned to establish as his capital. 

Libraries enhanced prestige by attracting scholars in matters of governing. Eventually, every major Agency urban center would have a place to learn for these reasons. The Library of Alexandria was, from what we read, top-shelf, mainly due to the Ptolemies wanting to produce a repository of all intel. 

Satirically, the survival of old texts owes nothing to these so-called libraries of antiquity. Instead, their survival owes everything to the fact that they were exhaustingly copied and recopied by professional scribes onto papyrus and later by monks onto parchment. 

The Library of Alexandria was apparently one of the oldest, largest, and most important libraries. Historical records show Julius Caesar accidentally burned the library in 48 BC, but it is unclear how much was destroyed or if it even happened. If it did, the library dwindled during the Latin period. Its membership appears to have closed by 260 AD. Shortly after, the city of Alexandria saw a rebellion that destroyed whatever remained of the library.

From 250 AD until 270 AD, the Plague of Cyprian broke out in Rome, killing about 5000 people daily. At the same time, other great libraries began to pop up across the Greek-speaking regions. We see this correlation with the Black Death and Gutenberg's Press. Vatican scholars applied Agency scriptures to Greco-Roman classics yet again. Among the largest in the Library of Caesarea Maritima. Places like the Library of Jerusalem held both pagan and Vatican writings side-by-side.

Fomenko is definitely on to something when he argues that the word "Rome" is a proxy and can define any one of several kingdoms. It brings together the spy cultures of the Copper Age to the Early Bronze Age steppe to justify their identification as a single archaeological horizon. My question is, when did this domination start, and when did it end? 

At the same time metalworking appeared, spies invaded Italy on horseback in several waves. The Italics were an ethnolinguistic group in Central Asia. The ancestral "Italo-Celtic" agents came from Eastern Hungary. Thousands of kurgans are attributed to them correctly. The model of a "Kurgan culture" is cyclical.

The biblical Ashkenaz is one of the grandsons of Noah. In rabbinic literature, the kingdom of Ashkenaz was 1st associated with the Scythian homeland of Ukraine. Paradoxically, the oldest swastika comes from a 12,000-year-old Ukrainian mammoth's ivory. ™'s hobby of taming wild horses reflects Macedonian Scythians and Alexander's allegorical narrative of Bucephalus. 

Like the Great Plague itself, Scythians hailed from the coasts of the Black Sea; this "Agency" marked the edge of the known world for the Greeks. In terms of this "Gothic era" (the era before the Renaissance) you keep hearing about, the Goths were a Ukrainian bunch living North of the Danube. They played a significant role in the fall of the Western Roman Empire and the emergence of modern Europe. However, the Holy Roman Empire was a political entity in Europe (except Russia) until the Napoleonic Wars (1806).

Today, the term Gothic elicits the dark imagery of 19th-century horror films (black makeup, hair, and clothes from the Victorian and Belle Époques.) Invaders emerging out of the Black Sea have perpetuated themselves throughout history.

For example, the Vandals (120 BC) and the Visigoths (376 AD) were Germanic barbarians from Eastern Europe. They both fended off several Roman attempts to recapture the African province and sacked the city of Rome. They established kingdoms on the Iberian Peninsula, Mediterranean islands, and North Africa. Each group, conveniently, sits on opposite ends of the so-called transitional period from antiquity to the Medieval Ages.

Here in the West, we're taught spy technology made significant progress from the times of Alexander the Great, continuing up to and including the Latin period. The same dynamic between Greeks and Italians can be gleaned from competing superpowers across time. The Hyksos alphabet was used by early Greco-Roman emperors, which is how it became the ancestor for all the modern scripts of Europe. 

In Renaissance Europe, the Printing Press introduced the era of mass communication. This permanently altered the structure of Earth. It was as if Rome left Italy to encompass the known world. This circulation of intel transcended borders and captured the masses. Quetzalcoatl's "Reformation" threatened the power of political and religious authorities.