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Hervé
24th December 2016, 13:43
5,000-Year-Old Nativity Scene Found in Egypt

BY ROSSELLA LORENZI (http://www.seeker.com/community/rlorenzi/) Dec 22, 2016 04:28 PM ET


http://www.livescience.com/images/i/000/088/528/original/sahara-nativity-scene-rock-art.jpg
Ancient cave art in the Egyptian Sahara desert depicts two parents, a baby and a star in the east. Marco Morelli

Italian researchers have discovered what might be the oldest nativity scene ever found — 5,000-year-old rock art that depicts a star in the east, a newborn between parents and two animals.

The scene, painted in reddish-brown ochre, was found on the ceiling of a small cavity in the Egyptian Sahara desert, during an expedition to sites between the Nile valley and the Gilf Kebir Plateau.

"It's a very evocative scene which indeed resembles the Christmas nativity. But it predates it by some 3,000 years," geologist Marco Morelli, director of the Museum of Planetary Sciences in Prato, near Florence, Italy, told Seeker.

Morelli found the cave drawing in 2005, but only now his team has decided to reveal the amazing find.

"The discovery has several implications as it raises new questions on the iconography of one of the more powerful Christian symbols," Morelli said.

The scene features a man, a woman missing the head because of a painting detachment, and a baby.

"It could have been interpreted as a normal depiction of a family, with the baby between the parents, but other details make this drawing unique," Morelli said.

He noted the newborn is drawn slightly above, as if raising to the sky. Such position, with the baby not yet between the parents, would have meant a birth or a pregnancy.

"As death was associated to Earth in contemporary rock art from the same area, it is likely that birth was linked to the sky," Morelli said.

The scene becomes more symbolically complex if the other figures, two animals and a small circular feature, are taken into consideration.

On the upper part is a headless lion, a mythical beast which appears in several rock art drawings from the same area, while below in the scene a baboon or an anthropomorphic monkey can be seen.

In the east, the Neolithic artist drawn what appears to be star.

The researchers called the site the "Cave of the Parents."

"No doubt it's an intriguing drawing," Morelli said. "We didn't find similar scenes until the early Christian age."


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Daughter of Time
24th December 2016, 16:00
Thank you, Herve, for your most unusual threads and posts.

I sometimes would like to reply to these most unusual posts but I am at a loss for words.

My personal interpretation of this cave drawing is that this man and woman will be parenting a "star man". I know I could most definitely be wrong here, but this is how i see it.

Now, whether star men born to humans was an event which occurred time and again, or whether the drawing is a prediction of times to come, is of course, anyone's guess.

Many years ago I read a book of very ancient "Vedic prophecies" which described the birth of a man very much like we know Jesus to have been.

It could also mean that people of by-gone eras knew of the existence of the soul, thus depicting the soul of a new-born descending into a body.

It could mean that this child would possess higher consciousness than its parents since it is placed above the parents.

It could mean so many different things!

JimM
24th December 2016, 16:30
It could be referring to the Egyptian legend of Osiris, Isis and Horus which was also a virgin birth and has many similarities to the Christian nativity scene. Some even say the Christian version was a copy of the Egyptian legend.

Many of the early religions had a similar legend.