Ancient World History and Pictures
Ancient world history with pictures and animations of a rare and strange sort may be selected below by clicking the animation or picture as well as the bolded title above the first-paragraph Web-page previews below:
Demons and angels (stars) are commonly assigned to hell and heaven respectively, but these entities reside in both places. That is, if we are to believe the Bible and other ancient Scriptures like the Book of Enoch—originally in the Bible but later replaced by the Book of Revelation—which assign them to both domains. . . .

Armageddon is the site where several ancient battles took place. However, one is of particular importance to students of the Bible and its book of Reveleation. The great contest is addressed in “The Battle of Armageddon,” the title of a short chapter (14) in Astronomical Revelations or 666, written by Larry Brian Radka and published by The Einhorn Press in 1997. Since it is short, he has retyped the chapter and included its and other illustrations here on this Web page. However, to fully understand this description of the great battle of Armageddon with its Scriptural references, all 336 pages of Astronomical Revelations or 666 should be read carefully. Nevertheless, “CHAPTER FOURTEEN" touches on the subject and runs as follows: . . .

The Golden Age describes a time long ago when the ancients enjoyed a world of universal peace and happiness. In his Stories of Gods and Heroes, Thomas Bulfinch recounts just how they described this beautiful era and how it eventually deteriorated into the miserable ages that eventually followed. He says: . . .

The Seven Wonders of the Ancient World embody seven great works—like the Great Pyramids and ancient Pharos Lighthouse at Alexandria with its flashing beacon—built a few thousand years ago for all mankind to behold with awe. “That the Pharos was used as a signal-station as well as a lighthouse is certain,” wrote Dr. A. J. Butler, “and at the time of the Arab conquest it was in full working order and flashed the sun by day and its own fire by night many leagues over the sea.” He went on to claim in his exhaustive work titled The Arab Conquest of Egypt and the Last Thirty Years of Roman Dominion that it was a “conspicuous landmark visible by day and by night at a distance of sixty or seventy miles.”
This page was last modified on Wednesday, August 18, 2010