Here is
an excerpt from my book which provides powerful archeological evidence for an
ancient lost global civilization more than 12,000 years ago. A Lost Civilization of Light Workers. This evidence meets archeological standards
indicting that there was a civilization that reached across oceans and
continents building sacred sites to raise consciousness.
Chapter
2: The map from Egypt to around the world and through time
Part of
the beginning, for me, was with ancient Egypt. Today Egyptologists estimate
that about two-thirds of ancient Egypt is still hidden beneath the sands. In
researching the work done over the ages by a large array of explorers and
Egyptologists, I felt it was the same case in finding their results; there is
so much to all that has been found already and written about. Rather than
digging through the sands of time in Egypt, I was digging through the dusty
archives on Egypt and ancient measurements, their importance, derivations, and
symbolism. I will start with Sir Flinders Petrie, considered the father of
modern Egyptology, who brought detailed scientific methods and recording into
the field. Sir Petrie states: The study of ancient measures used in a country
is a basis of discovering the movements of civilization between countries.
As Sir
Petrie lays out the importance of shared measurements as indicators of shared
communications and connections between different cultures, Iain Morley and
Colin Renfrew, both acknowledged experts in archeology and Fellows of the
McDonald Institute for Archeological Research write that measurement systems go
further than communication and thought processes to include metaphysical belief
systems.
Measurement systems have
provided the structure for addressing key concerns of cosmological belief
systems, as well as the means for articulating relationships between human
form, human action, and the world—and new understanding of relationships
between events in the terrestrial world and beyond.ii
Presented
between these covers is the evidence of Sir Petrie’s statement; written here is
the recognition and demonstration of an ancient unit of measurement from such a
civilization with its sharing and movements among multiple peoples across the
globe. A measurement whose possible origin symbolizes a multicultural shared
spiritual philosophy for a universal journey of humanity toward unity and
higher consciousness. Again, the length of this measurement, this
“spirit/light” cubit, is 27.5 inches (70 cm).
What is
explored in detail and compelling evidence is offered for is a unit of
measurement that unites both science and spiritual philosophy, Heaven and
Earth, space and time. Such a statement should give one reason to pause, for it
is tantamount; it did me, from the ancient civilizations to the modern physics
search for the “Theory of Everything” (TOE). In ancient times spirit and
science were not approached as separate avenues of the understanding of our
existence, the world, and the cosmos, but one united and synergized in an
encompassing unity of the physical and metaphysical. The unit of measurement
presented meets all these requirements.
Early on
I realized it is important to ask; from where units of ancient measurements
were derived. The answer is straightforward: body proportions. Think of the
ubiquitous term used in the study of ancient metrology, the cubit. The cubit is
a catchall term used for multiple units of measurements from multiple
civilizations. Cubit is Latin for elbow and is a term used, in
umbrella fashion, to categorize measurements approximately the length from
elbow to fingertip, though these lengths range from anywhere around fifteen
inches to twenty-eight inches. It is believed that almost all ancient linear
measurements resulted from body proportions. This concept is exampled in Da
Vinci’s “The Vitruvian Man,” an ink and paper drawing.
DaVinci’s Vitruvian Man
with units of measure (PD0)
This is
DaVinci’s homage to the Roman engineer and architect Vitruvius, who wrote in
volume III of his work on art and architecture:
The
design of Temples depends on symmetry… Hence no building can be said to be well
designed which wants symmetry and proportion. In truth they are as necessary to
the beauty of a building as to that of a well-formed human figure…
If
Nature, therefore, has made the human body so that the different members of it
are measures of the whole, so the ancients have, with great propriety,
determined that in all perfect works, each part should be some aliquot (Author
note: aliquot means a portion of the larger whole: I had to look it up) part
of the whole; and since they direct, that this be observed in all works, it
must be most strictly attended to in temples of the gods…iii
Vitruvius is basically stating that sacred
structures should use body proportions in their design and construction. Since
the human body was divinely designed, these are the best proportions and
measurements to design a sacred site, to create an axis mundi; a place where Heaven
and Earth come together.
The
linchpin at the heart of these sacred structures, these “cosmic engines”
uniting Heaven and Earth, is the unit of measurement of 27.5 inches (70 cm).
This unit of measurement seems to have its origins in ancient Egypt, yet there
is compelling evidence that this unit of measurement or multiples of it was
also used by other cultures on multiple continents, and so it presents itself
as an ancient international unit of measurement commensurate to the modern
international unit of measure, the meter.
Body
proportions were codified into specific measures, such as the foot, the hand,
or a yard. So from what proportions
could 27.5 inches (70 cm) be codified from? Posited here is that this measurement comes from the length of the
spine, with initial evidence from research in the medical textbook Gray’s
Anatomy (1918) that shows the average length of the human spine (male)
is 27.9 inches (71 cm)—statistically valid to a measurement unit of 27.5
inches. In answer to the reader’s thought, yes, there were many people of such
height through ancient times. Some will debate that 27½ inches is close to the
average step length and hence then where this measurement came from. What will
be shared as we continue is clear and compelling evidence that this is not the
case for multiple reasons. For now, let it suffice, using Vitruvius’
recommendations of using body proportions since the body was divinely created,
that a step length is not a body proportion. Further, there is an intrinsic
elegance in representing the spine in sacred sites as the physical avenue of
consciousness.
An
Egyptian measuring rod of 27.5 inches (70 cm) was discovered at the pyramids of
Lisht and is on display in the Metropolitan Museum of New York; Egyptologists
link the pyramids of Lisht to the pyramids on the Giza Plateau through portions
of the Giza complex being incorporated into Lisht to infuse them with the
spiritual energy of the Giza complex. The Giza Plateau was dedicated to the
Egyptian deity Osiris, whose symbol was the “Djed” hieroglyph, meaning
“Osiris’s spine.” The ancient Egyptians even had a specific ceremony rite of
“Raising the Djed.”
The
recognition of the importance of the spine both physically and spiritually was
not confined to the ancient philosophies of the Far East and Egypt. Its
significance was acknowledged in the cultures of the New World also.
Unambiguously this can be seen in the Hopi, Native American traditions. The
Hopis are the descendants of the Ancient Puebloans, whose culture is considered
to have spanned the Southwest area of what is now the United States: Colorado,
Utah, Arizona, and New Mexico. One of the major beautiful and significant
centers of the Ancient Puebloans is in Chaco Canyon located in northern New
Mexico. Archeology research has confirmed that the Ancient Puebloans had trade
and communications with Mesoamerica with the discovery of macaw feathers and
remains of cacao traced back to Mexico.
The Hopi,
descendants of the Ancient Puebloans, in their customs understood the
importance of the spine both for their physical world and spiritual journey.
This is recounted by Frank Waters:
The First People then
understood the mystery of their parenthood. In their pristine wisdom they also
understood their own structure and functions—the nature of man himself.
The living of man and the
living body of earth were constructed in same way. Through each ran an axis,
man’s axis being the backbone, the vertebral column… Along this axis were
several vibratory centers which echoed the primordial sound of life throughout
the universe…iv
…Palongawhoya
(sacred twin), traveling throughout the earth, sounded out his call as he was
bidden. All the vibratory centers along the earth’s axis from pole to pole
responded to his call; the whole earth trembled: the universe quivered in tune.v
It is
abundantly evident the descendants of the Ancient Puebloan understood the
symbolism of the human spine for uniting Heaven and Earth along with time and
space.
The use
and representation of the spine in the design construction and reason of sacred
sites bespeaks of the elegance of purpose; to connect and commune with the
Divine with the assistance of temple-structures designed for just such a
consciousness-raising purpose. The
Eastern traditions present this in a more straightforward fashion in attaining
such a goal; through meditation and raising the Kundalini (coiled serpent), the
spiritual cosmic energy, toward an awakening and spiritual transformation into
higher consciousness. This occurs by raising this energy through the
physical avenue from the base of the spine through the spinal canal to the
brain. This concept and purpose of meditations is not the venue of the Eastern
traditions alone; they were only the most straightforward in describing it.
This purpose and the act of meditation is also in Western traditions, called by
many appellations: contemplative prayer, Lectio Divina, and studying under the
fig tree, to cite some examples. (See Cistercian monks, St. Bernard, St.
Malachi, St. John of the Cross, St. Teresa of Avila, mystic Judaism, Pierre
Teilhard de Chardin, Thomas Keating, Aldous Huxley.) Meditation is being used
today by businesses and corporations to assist their employees, only the
practice has had stripped away any metaphysical connotations and is labeled
“mindfulness,” In any case its original purpose was to commune with the Divine
and bring Heaven and Earth together within oneself.
What is
written above has outlined the designs in constructing sacred sites to focus
and assist people in connecting to the divine in consciousness, and it should
be implicit such sites’ designers and builders understood the totality of the
journey, not just in spiritual consciousness, but also in physicality and in time
and space. Many such ancient sites are known to be heavenly timepiece engines
measuring seasons, solstices, equinoxes, moon phases, and more to great
accuracy. Further, ancient time was measured by more than just seasons. Ancient
Egypt is credited with creating the 24-hour day and the world’s oldest hourly
water clock was discovered in Egypt. These ancient architects and scientists
had a clear grasp of time at many levels and linked Heaven and Earth through
these sacred sites not only in consciousness but, in this manner, through
physical space and time. What the following chapters will show is that ancient
civilizations had an even more incredible grasp of time than previously
thought. A grasp they incorporated into a much greater sense of cosmic unity.
Prior to continuing further in this journey,
allow me to briefly provide some examples of this ancient unit of measurement
(27½ inches/70 cm) from ancient cultures that will be detailed later on:
–Egyptian
unit: Nebiu (NB) – 27.5 inches (70 cm)… Possibly linked to aakhu
meh unit and Great Pyramid; note the aakhu meh (transliterated as
Spirit/Light cubit) is recorded in the ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs, but this
research has yet to reveal any further information on it, other than its name.
–Paquime
(Mogollon: Ancestral Puebloans) culture (Mexico-Arizona-New Mexico) – 27.5
inches (70 cm) = 1 nebiu
–Mayan
Cubit: Zapal – 55 inches (142 cm)… Kukulkan Pyramid = 2 nebiu
-Stonehenge:
megalithic rod: (100 megalithic inches, 2.5 MY = 81.6 inches {207.3 cm})
= 3 nebiu 82.5 inches (210 cm)
–Author
research at Aztec Ruins National Monument great kiva. Great kivas at Chaco
Canyon and Salmon Ruins kiva and rooms in New Mexico provide significant
results using 55 inches (140 cm) = 2 nebiu or a zapal
The Indus Valley (Asia): In this report is an analysis of the Harappan linear unit by R. C. A. Rottlander, starting on page 201, whose effort is to determine this culture’s units of measurement. Rottlander determines the Harappans used an “Indus foot” of 34.55 cm and a “double foot” of 69.11 cm. These results are equivalent to the length of the spirit light cubit and its half. Asia can now be added to Africa, Europe, and North America as the fourth continent on which this unit of measure has been discovered. And so it goes. I am confident more such discoveries will occur.
To return
to Sir Petrie’s method of examination of communication and sharing between
civilizations: In On Metrology and Geometry in Ancient Remains,
Petrie contends that measurement systems are an important proxy for divining
the capacities of the ancient mind. The more complex the measurement system, he
argued, the more complex the mind behind it. Additionally, Petrie established that measurement systems could be used as a method
to evaluate connections between ancient cultures in a manner similar to the
study of languages.vi
Cultures sharing similar measurement systems
likely had some form of contact. Should such a measurement be located in
architectural remains, and appear in halves or doubles, then the probability
that this measure reflects a real historical unit of measure increases. vii
Sir Petrie in his later writings leaves no doubt
of how important and substantial a unit of measurement shared by different
cultures is in providing important evidence of an advanced mental capacity and
either shared ancestors or strong trading links between such cultures.
Among the
various tests of the mental capacity of man one of the most important, ranking
in modern life on an equality of with language is the appreciation of quantity,
or notions of measurement and geometry. …Thus the possession of the same unit
of measurement by different people implies either that it belonged to their
common ancestors or else that a very powerful commercial intercourse has
existed between them. viii
What
follows is a detailed examination of this evidence of a shared unit of
measurement perhaps not only more important than language and more complex
minds in that it also points toward a common effort to unite Heaven and Earth
and time and space, with a unitive spiritual philosophy aimed toward higher
consciousness among cultures strewn far and wide and the premise that ancient
civilizations on at least three different continents had communication with
each other farther back in time than is presently considered possible—all of
this “hidden” in plain sight.
Scholars
Iain Morley and Colin Renfrew understood and expounded on the universal seeking
to unite and interact with the physical and the spiritual, the material and
immaterial.
From the
stones of Stonehenge to the alignments and calendars of Mesoamerica,
measurement stands at the dawn of cosmology. The term “cosmology” is used here
not just in the sense of explanation of the celestial, but in the sense of
conception of the universe—the set of beliefs about the world, material and
immaterial, and the rules through which interaction can occur. ix
I
consider this measure, called by some Egyptologists nb or nebiu, is also
identified in ancient Egyptian texts as the “aakhu meh,” which translates as
spirit or light measure and that it was communicated to multiple cultures. For
the purposes here, I will call it the spirit/light cubit.
I hope this study does for you what it did for me in my searching, delving out into the physical world of sacred sites and in to the spiritual world of higher consciousness, bringing a peace and hope and flow into my life. It is like being cured of color blindness and beginning to see the vibrant hues of the universe.
The Spirit of Light Cubit: The Measure of Humanity and Spirit
by Donald B. Carroll
References
i Flinders
Petrie. Measures and Weights. London: Methuen & Company Ltd.
1934, p.1.
ii The Archeology of
Measurement: Comprehending Heaven, Earth and Time in Ancient Societies.
Cambridge University Press. 2010. Edited by Iain Morley and Colin Renfrew. p.1.
iii Marcus Vitruvius
Pollio. de Architectura, Book III, Ch.1.
iv Frank Waters. Book
of the Hopi. Penguin Books (June 30, 1977) p.9-10.
v Frank Waters. Book
of the Hopi. Penguin Books (June 30, 1977) p.4.
vi Flinders
Petrie. The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain
and Ireland, Volume VIII. London 1879: p.107.
vii Flinders
Petrie. The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain
and Ireland, Volume VIII. London 1879: p.107.
viii Flinders
Petrie. The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain
and Ireland, Volume VIII. London 1879.
ix Measure: Towards the
construction of our world. The Archeology of Measurement: Comprehending Heaven,
Earth and Time in Ancient Societies. Cambridge University
Press 2010. Edited by Iain Morley and Colin Renfrew. p.3.
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