How far did ancient cultures travel?
The world’s oldest stone circle is Karahunj in Armenia, dated c.25,000 BC. It’s cruciform design is a precursor of Callanish on the Scottish island of Lewis, dated c.3500 BC.
However, sometime in the 6th millennium BC, an Armenian enclave migrated to the foothills of Himalaya, and may have been responsible for a circle of stones whose shapes are near-identical to those at Callanish and the circle of Stenness, Orkney.
Could the same Caucasian culture have taken their blueprints to Scotland?
Find out in my latest book, Scotland’s Hidden Sacred Past
Freddy Silva is a best-selling author and leading researcher of ancient civilizations, restricted history, sacred sites, and their interaction with consciousness. He has published six books in six languages.
Described as “perhaps the best metaphysical speaker in the world right now,” for more than two decades Freddy has been an international keynote speaker, and has appeared on Gaia TV, History Channel, BBC, and radio shows such as Coast To Coast. He is also a documentary filmmaker, and leads sell-out tours to sacred sites throughout the world. invisibletemple.com
Taken from Nana Herouni in the group Paris Herouni
Read Also:
- In ancient Armenia they were called Peri. About Neolithic monument builders of Scotland
- Most ancient monuments on the Scottish western isles are based on Armenian or Egyptian language
- Armenia, Land of Ermenen in the mention of Thutmose III
- Scotland’s Hidden Sacred Past includes the ancient secrets of Ireland, Armenia, and Sardinia
- Dun Carloway, Armenian etymology of the name of a tower in Northern Scotland, Freddy Silva