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Myths Folklore Storytelling Yellow Butterfly 81w 63h
Myths Folklore Storytelling

Sagas, Fables, Epics, Chronicles, Tales



Most of the ancient Egyptian cultural legends about Isīs, Osirīs, and Horūs are allegorical in nature. There were hidden spiritual truths within the wording of the texts. Take for example the story where Seth dismembers Osirīs and scatters his body parts throughout the landscape.

What really happened was that Osirīs suffered intense soul essence loss during his interdimensional encounters and struggles with Seth. Seth, who had stolen and siphoned off this treasury of divine attributes, powers, gifts, light matrix energies, and skills of Osirīs, then wantonly distributed them widely, as spoils of war and blunder booty, to his contingent of cohorts.

As a Shamanic Healer, Isīs used her lost soul essence retrieval skills to eventually restore everything back to the way it was in his light matrix. Their son Horūs, assisted her in this Shamanic Healing process. Isīs also had an abode in Sumeria where she was called the "Wild Cow Queen". As goddess Nisun (Ninsun, Ninsuna), she was known for her wisdom and dream interpretation abilities.

Osirīs (Osiris, Usire) was the Egyptian all god, the male eye of Rā and kingly Otherworld benefactor who planned to use his shamanic knowledge of soul transformation and empowerment words to help humanity heal by embracing their divinity. Osirīs was an Egyptian god of the otherworld and of green vegetation who was legendary for the scattering of his dismembered body parts or stolen soul essence by his false and envious adopted brother Seth, a son of the misqualified light energies.

After his wife and divine complement Isīs used her magical abilities to transmute these seed potentials, they germinated with creative renewal potencies to become seedlings of hope for better tomorrows throughout the land. Revered from around 3000 BCE to 400 ACE throughout the region, but, particularly at on the Giza Plateau, along the Nile Delta, and at Karnak in Thebes.

He was depicted in the Book of the Dead, numerous coffin texts, sculptures, papyrus illustrations, Pyramid Texts, sculptures, and stone reliefs. An Egyptian father god and protector of the pharohs in the Otherworld afterlife, Osirīs was usually portrayed as a human man with his body wrapped in mummy linen, wearing a white conical crown of rams' horns with tall plumes.


Myths Storytelling Depiction of the Hindu Deity Mahadeva Siva 369w 482h

Depiction of the Hindu Deity Mahadeva Siva

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Most of the Hinduism oral traditions and storytelling arose from Lemurian traditions and spiritual teachings. Many of the immortal, spiritually evolved goddesses and gods depicted as divinities in the Hindu Classics and the Vedas, like the Asvins for instance, were human beings of Lemurian Pleiadian lineage. The Asvins were twin Asvin (Tortoise Avatars, Kumaras) Hindu physician gods who travelled about together in a horse drawn chariot. They were depicted with birds, books, herbs, and water jars.

Rudra (Siva) was an authentically compassionate Hindu forest fertility father god mentioned in the Vedas and many Hinduism writings. Revered in ancient India until around 300 BCE, he was depicted in reliefs and sculptures. Considered by many to be an earlier aspect of Siva, the embodied of the male aspect of creative divinity, he was portrayed with a beaded wood necklace, a bow, a staff, a drum, a lotus, and, sometimes as a human male with a leafy head. Many of the ancient Vedic goddesses and gods are now living legends on the planet.

The Hindu Vedas were ancient Hindu scriptures in the form of mantras or hymns were the timeless and eternal religion, shruti (heard directly from the deities), wisdom revealed through the inner spiritual experience of the seers and sages. The Rig, Sama, Yajur and Atharva Vedas each contain four sections: Sanhitas (the hymns), Brahmanas (prose explanations about the significance of the hymns), Aranyakas (interpretations of the hymns), and Upanishads, (metaphysical dialogs).

A classical epic of Hindu India composed by a number of bardic poets (and later revised by priests) between 200 BCE and 200 ACE, the Mahabharata was comprised of more than 90,000 couplets and eighteen books. The Mahabharata was the longest single poem in world literature and the foremost source regarding Hindu ideals, Culture, statecraft, theology, and morals. Although there were many subplots and unrelated tales, the Mahabharata was primarily a fabled account of civil war and dynastic struggle for the throne of Kurukshetra in the region around modern Delhi.

The Ramayana was a classical epic based on many Hindu legends about the adventures of Rama and his three half brothers who together formed the group consciousness of the seventh incarnation of the god Vishnu. Rama and his noble wife Sita were forced into a lengthy exile after being tricked out of the throne of Ayodhya. When Sita was abducted by a demon, Rama and his allies, the monkey king Sugriva and his general Hanuman, fought a mighty battle in Sri Lanka. After Sita's rescue, Rama's kingdom was restored to him... Continue on Go back


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Australia Storytellers and Dreamtime Mythos, Atlantean Legends and Myths, Celtic Storytelling and Druidic Oral Traditions, Chinese Traditions and Living Legends, Egyptian Isis Osiris Ancient Ra Lineage, Grail Living Legends Goddesses Gods, Hindu Vedic Deities and Tortoise Avatars, Irish Daghda Danann and Newgrange, Japanese Creation Myth and Kami Parents, Japanese Shinto Folklore Legendary Kami, Lemuria in Myth and Legend, Maya Four Worlds and Creation Legends, Mayan Kumara Star Teachers Mentors Legacy, Norse Germanic Hero Siegfried and Brynhilde, Peruvian Mythic Pleiadian Storyteller Benefactors


Myths Folklore Storytelling Iris 35w 35hMyths Folklore Storytelling Copyright © 2002-2008 Maureen Grace Burns, Blessings Cornucopia. All Rights Reserved. Public Domain Image Depiction of the Hindu Deity Mahadeva Shiva [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:MahadevShiva.jpg]. Accessed January 14, 2007.

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All Rights Reserved. Copyright © 2002-2008
Maureen Grace Burns, Blessings Cornucopia.