#ANCIENT GLYPHS CODE#
What I’d like to compare runes with in modern days is programming, people who have not been in touch with development probably see this as a bit of magic - but for someone that has mastered it they can create things, so perhaps someone would flex like “I the Java-developer, write this line of code to turn a button green”. Often the words “Erilaz” and “Vitki” were seen engraved on rune writings with Erilaz probably meaning a ranking like Earl/Jarl and Vitki meaning a magician, both probably refer to someone who has the knowledge of the runes, thus it’s a bit of a flex. A rune itself would most likely not bare any power at all, but rather it is unlocked when used in a sequence. The rune poems exist in Old Norse, Ango-Saxon English and Icelandic and there is a wonderful song by Heilung called Norupo which is one of these rune poems. Each rune has a so-called meaning but these were likely to better remember the rune, but thanks to these we know what each rune represents thus we have a better understanding of the enchantments we see - unless they are ciphered. They are often seen on runestones which are basically gravestones as well as amulets, ships and even everyday objects. They could be used to write something but we also see rune sequences that clearly indicate they were used for ritualistic purposes or to bless something - or perhaps curse something. Geologists have stated that the sandstone in which the hieroglyphs are carved erodes quickly and nearby 250-year-old Aborigine petroglyphs (Bulgandry Aboriginal Art Site) show considerably more erosion.Runa means secret or breath/whisper and they were used for decorative as well as magical purposes. Other theories for their creation include high school students who copied them from their textbooks in the 1970s and a Yugoslavian immigrant with an interest in Egyptology who etched them in the early 1980s. Īustralian Professor of Egyptology Naguib Kanawati has also stated that they are not authentic and that they "were constructed in the early 1980s", concluding that the hieroglyphs within the same panels were of widely different periods and some were carved backwards. The soldiers, who had served in the Sultanate of Egypt from the mid 1910s to early 1920s, cited an example of shapes in the form of the Sphinx and a pyramid known to have been made by a returning soldier. He suggested that the glyphs might have been made in the 1920s by Australian soldiers when there was general interest in ancient Egypt after the uncovering of the Tomb of Tutankhamun at that time. There's no way people would've been inscribing texts from the time of Cheops from the signs that weren't invented until 2500 years later." "There's also a problem with the actual shapes of the signs that are used. "First of all the way they're cut is not the way ancient Egyptian rock inscriptions are produced, they're very disorganised. "here are many reasons why they are not accepted as genuine hieroglyphics. Site displaying Wadjet, Horus, water, ankh and sarcophagus symbols Since then, the hieroglyphs have been claimed by amateur Egyptologists to be authentic script created about 4,500 years ago, by Egyptians who sailed to Australia and engraved their story into the stones after becoming shipwrecked. From the mid 1990s, the site started to receive more public attention. In 1983, David Lamber, then a rock art conservator for the National Parks and Wildlife Service, found some clean-cut hieroglyphs which he estimated to be less than twelve months old. Up until their discovery, the site of the glyphs was engulfed with sand and rocks, and had overgrown vegetation. Dash continued to visit for five years and saw new glyphs whenever he visited. The carvings were first formally reported in 1975 by Alan Dash, a local surveyor working for Gosford Council who had been visiting the area for seven years without seeing the glyphs.
![ancient glyphs ancient glyphs](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/e2/88/2b/e2882bfc83b349901e6a716acfb3b3d0.jpg)
There is also a carving of the ancient Egyptian god Anubis.
![ancient glyphs ancient glyphs](https://i.pinimg.com/474x/58/11/20/581120c572ba16d9ef42b4f1a22735b6.jpg)
These names are given the same personal name and throne name. They depict boats, chickens, dogs, owls, stick men, a dog's bone as well as two cartouches that appear to be the names of kings, one of them Khufu (second king of the Fourth Dynasty, 2637-2614 BC), the other uncertain.