16-04-2021



Punt, said Velikovsky, was one and the same as Israel. In this volume historian Emmet Scott brings forward dramatic new evidence in support of Velikovsky.

  1. Sheba Western Bangla Pdf
  2. Sheba Western Pdf

Tumi Chirokal Seba Romantic pdf – Sheikh Abdul Hakim – তুমি চিরকাল – শেখ আবদুল হাকিম – সেবা রোমান্টিক Book Name – Tumi Chirokal (তুমি চিরকাল) Book Type – Seba Romantic Author Name – Sheikh Abdul Hakim (শেখ আবদুল হাকিম) Book Category – সেবার.

Western

Author: Emmet Scott

Sheba Western Pdf
  1. In the year 1966, first book of Masud Rana series, name Dhwangsa pahar published from 'Sheba Prokashoni', since then more than four hundred spying stories published in this series. Although the first two books of the series are fundamental, but there is a great deal of books written on the shadow of English and other languages books.
  2. Prohori by Showkot Hossain is a book of Western Series and translated in Bangla which is written by Shawkat Hossain and published by Sheba Prokashoni. Showkot Hossain is popular bengali writer & Translator. He is famous for his writings of Western Series and Sheba Prokashoni Books. There were adaptations of pulp cowboy Westerns and and introduced the Wild West to the Bengali language.
  3. All Western Books From Sheba Prokashoni ডাউনলোড করুন নামহীন মার্চ ২৬, ২০১৬ All Western Books From Sheba Prokashoni.

Publisher: Algora Publishing

ISBN: 9780875869452

Category: History

Page: 188

Sheba

Sheba Western Bangla Pdf

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Sheba Western Pdf

Over the centuries the figure of the Queen of Sheba has loomed large in poetry and romance. The mysterious Queen, who is said to have visited Solomon in Jerusalem, has cast her spell over poets, painters and storytellers of many lands. The people of Ethiopia have always claimed her as her own, and to this day boast that her son Menelik - fruit of the union between the Queen and Solomon - stole the Ark of the Covenant from the Temple in Jerusalem after Solomon's death. For all that, historians have been more sanguine, and increasingly over the past century the academic community has veered towards consigning both royal characters to the fairyland of myth and romance. In 1952, however, Immanuel Velikovsky made an astonishing claim: He announced that not only did the Queen of Sheba exist, but that she left numerous portraits of herself as well as an account of her famous journey to Israel. The Queen of Sheba, Velikovsky announced, was none other than Hatshepsut, the female 'pharaoh' of Egypt, who built a beautiful temple outside Thebes on the walls of which she immortalized the most important event of her life: an expedition to the Land of Punt. Punt, said Velikovsky, was one and the same as Israel. In this volume historian Emmet Scott brings forward dramatic new evidence in support of Velikovsky. He finds, among other things, that: - Ancient Israel, just like Punt, was a renowned source of frankincense. - Egyptian documents, generally ignored in academic circles, unequivocally place Punt in the region of Syria/Palestine. - The goddess Hathor was known as the 'Lady of Punt,' but she was also known as the 'lady of Byblos'. - The Egyptians claimed to be of Puntite origin, but Jewish and Phoenician legends claimed that the Egyptians came from their part of the world, and the Phoenicians named Misor - almost certainly the same as Osiris - as the Phoenician hero who founded the Nile Kingdom. This, and a wealth of additional evidence, has, Scott argues, shifted the burden of proof onto Velikovsky's critics; and the identification of Hatshepsut with the Queen of Sheba will eventually compel the rewriting of all the history books. Joyce Tyldesley's 'Hatchepsut' deals with the same character, but from an entirely conventional viewpoint. She never even raises the possibility that the accepted chronology of Hatshepsut's life may be wrong. In his 'Ages in Chaos,' however, Immanuel Velikovsky did raise this possibility, and was the first to suggest that Hatshepsut be identified with the Queen of Sheba. Velikovsky's work remains extremely popular, and the present book aims to take his ideas forward, exploring new evidence that has come to light since his death. This new evidence, Scott argues, puts the equation of Hatshepsut with the Queen of Sheba virtually beyond doubt.