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mysteries of egyptian zodiacs - HiddenMysteries Information Central

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1.9 Mathematical and Statistical Methods for Dating Events <strong>of</strong> Ancient History. 25<br />

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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37<br />

Jet A: the Second Roman Empire in the 1st c. B.C.-3rd c. A.D<br />

Jet B: the Third Roman Empire in the 3rd-6th cc. A.D.<br />

Jet A<br />

Jet B<br />

Figure 1.30: Parallel between the Second Roman Empire in the 1st c. B.C.-3rd c. A.D, and the Third Roman Empire in the<br />

3rd-6th cc. A.D. Two graphs combined. Approximately 333-year shift.<br />

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Jet A: the Holy Roman Empire in the 10-13th cc. A.D.<br />

Jet B: the Hapsburg’s Empire in the 13-17th cc. A.D.<br />

Figure 1.31: Parallel between the Holy Roman Empire in the<br />

10-13th cc. A.D. and the Hapsburg’s Empire in the 13-17th<br />

cc. A.D. Two graphs combined. Rigid 362 year shift.<br />

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Jet A<br />

Jet B<br />

Jet A: the Carolingians in the 7-9th cc. A.D. (Charles’ Empire)<br />

Jet B: the Third Roman Empire in the 3-6th cc. A.D.<br />

Figure 1.32: Parallel between the Carolingians in the 7-9th cc.<br />

A.D. (Charles’ Empire) and the Third Roman Empire in the<br />

3-6th cc. A.D. (basically in the East). Two graphs combined.<br />

Rigid 360 year shift.<br />

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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17<br />

Jet A: the Eastern Roman Empire in 306-700 A.D.<br />

Jet B: the biblical Kingdom <strong>of</strong> Judah in them 10-6th cc. B.C.<br />

Figure 1.33: Parallel between the Eastern Roman Empire in<br />

306-700 A.D. and the biblical Kingdom <strong>of</strong> Judah in the 10-6th<br />

cc. B.C. Two graphs combined.<br />

There is another surprise, besides coincidence <strong>of</strong> the dynasty<br />

functions, the other numerical functions confirm with<br />

very high probability that these dynasties are indeed the<br />

same. It brings us to a suspicion that in fact we are dealing<br />

with repetitions in the conventional version <strong>of</strong> the history.<br />

Fomenko discovered dozens <strong>of</strong> strong coincidences, sometimes<br />

between three and more dynasties. But, there are no more<br />

such coincidences in the history <strong>of</strong> the better-documented<br />

epochs, for example starting from the 16th century.<br />

Using empirico-statistical analysis A.T. Fomenko and his<br />

collaborators discovered dozens <strong>of</strong> historical repetitions which<br />

most probably were mistakenly organized as unrelated sequences<br />

<strong>of</strong> historical events. Extremely high probability for<br />

these identifications exclude any possibility for an accidental<br />

coincidence. Let us illustrate several such historical duplicates<br />

based on selected from the book [103]. We begin with<br />

an example showing similarities between two dynasties, one<br />

the dynasty <strong>of</strong> the Holy Roman-German Empire (10th – 13th

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