Albert Slosman: Unterschied zwischen den Versionen

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'''Forscher- und Autorenportrait'''
 
'''Forscher- und Autorenportrait'''
  

Version vom 1. Juni 2015, 00:00 Uhr

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Forscher- und Autorenportrait

(red) Albert Slosman (1925-1981) aus Frankreich war hauptberuflich als Professor für Mathematik und als Informatik-Experte zeitweilig für die NASA tätig, die er bei der Entwicklung von Software unterstützte. Bekannt wurde er allerdings vor allem als Privatforscher zur Prä- und Protohistorie, insbesondere zur Zivilisationsgeshichte der alten Ägypter, bzw. durch seine zahlreichen Buchveröffentlichungen dazu. Darin verfocht er nicht zuletzt einen atlantischen Ursprung der ägyptischen Hochkultur. Seine Kernthesen lauteten:

1) The egyptian hieroglyphs had not been properly translated by the professional experts.

2) The ancient egyptians’ ancestors were Atlantean refugees, who travelled from west to east after the great flood and left some traces in North Africa.

3) Atlantis, the original civilization, was called Aha-Men-Ptah. The north african place where the refugees arrived was called Ta Mana.

4) These refugees had a monotheistic religion.

5) The texts of the Zodiac in Dendera indicated that the great flood occurred in 9792 BC. [1]

Bei Tony O’Connell heißt es über A. Slosmans Leben und Werk: "Als a member of the French Resistance, he was captured and tortured by the Gestapo. Ironically, after the Liberation of France, he was unjustly accused of desertion and deported to Cameroon. While there, he heard of a local myth that told of a great cataclysm with which God had punished the wickedness of man and almost completely inundated a large continent in the Atlantic, where we now have Fernando Poo (Macias Nguema Biyogo). Afterwards Slosman travelled to Egypt and while there began to study hieroglyphics and also engaged in a serious investigation of the Denderah Zodiac.

While travelling in the Moroccan Middle Atlas Mountains, near Midelt, he was interested in the metals found there thinking that there was a connection between Moroccan oricalcita, a copper derivative, and Plato’s orichalcum! His Egyptian studies led him to conclude that (i) Atlantis existed in the Atlantic and that after its submergence survivors migrated across North Africa and eventually became settled in Egypt and (ii) the Denderah Zodiac indicated a July 27th 9792 BC date for this destruction of Atlantis! He managed to publish ten books, two of which related to Atlantis, before his tragic death following a fall in 1981. Unfortunately, many more publications were still at various stages of development.

Wolter Smit, on his website, appears to accept Slosman’s interpretation of the Denderah Zodiac regarding the destruction of Atlantis. Likewise, Patrick Geryl and Gino Ratinckx were so impressed by Slosman’s interpretation that they incorporated parts of it into their book[066] on an impending catastrophe in 2012. Carlos Barcelóis also a fan of Slosman’s interpretation. [2]


Literatur von Albert Slosman

Abb. 2 Das Frontcover einer Neuauflage von A. Slosmans im Jahr 1982 veröffentlichem Werk 'La Grande Hypothèse'


Anmerkungen und Quellen

Fußnoten:

  1. Quelle: Titus Livius, "Albert Slosman's work", 14. Juli 2011, bei: grahamhancock.com (Message Boards / Author of the Month)
  2. Quelle: Tony O’Connell, "Slosman, Albert (l)", 11. Juni 2010, bei: Atlantipedia.ie (Übersetzung ins Deutsche durch Atlantisforschung.de)