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The Th’uban star.

The traditional name of Alpha Draconis, Th’uban, means "head of the serpent."

Th’uban, designation Alpha Draconis, is a binary star system in the constellation of Draco.  Draco is one of the largest constellations in the sky. Located in the northern celestial hemisphere, the constellation represents Ladon, the dragon that guarded.

 

Thuban is  a relatively inconspicuous star in the night sky of the Northern Hemisphere, it is historically significant as having been the north pole star from the 4th to 2nd millennium BCE.

The traditional name Thuban is derived from the Arabic  'large snake'.

Symbolism          the Dragon

Main stars           14

stars      76

Stars with planets            14

Stars brighter than 3.00m             3

Visible at latitudes between +90° and −15°.

Best visible at 21:00 (9 p.m.) during the month of July.

Th’uban is located at around 303 light-years / 93 parsecs away from the Sun. The primary component star is both more massive and several times bigger than our Sun.

 

The Pyramids on the Giza Plateau were designed to have one side facing north, with an entrance passage geometrically aligned so that Th’uban would be visible at night.

 

The Egyptians described these stars as "imperishable" or "undying." Khufu expected that when he died, he would join not only with the Sun, but with Thuban as well - maintaining order in the celestial realm, just as he had on Earth.

 

This ties into older Sub Saharan mythologies of the Ogdoad role as the progenitors of the cosmos.

 

There are a number of myths behind the constellation Draco, due to its resemblance to a dragon,

 

In the famous Sumerian Myth Draco is presented as Tiamat, the sea serpent who existed even before the sea and sky had been divided from each other, the dragon of chaos. the wild form that must be tamed before a new order could be established. This group of stars has always been associated with control of the Universe.

the sea serpent who existed even before the sea and sky had been divided from each other, the dragon of chaos.

 

In Greek myth Th’uban represents control of immortality and sacred knowledge.

In three separate tales Hercules, Jason each kill dragon for specific target.

 

Hercules for the Golden Apples that represent immortality, Hera later placed the dragon in the sky as the constellation Draco.

Jason for the Sacred Golden fleece.  

In another legend, Draco represents the dragon killed by Cadmus before founding the city of Thebes, Greece.  Just as Marduk had to kill Tiamat before founding his Kingship.

 

 

The Persians regarded Th’uban as a man-eating serpent called 'Azhdeha'.

 

 

In alien conspiracy theory the Th’uban star is home to the Annunaki who play the role of the reptile overlords who come to Earth as a Galactic Corporate enterprise. They create mankind as a labor force who they seek to exterminate at several points.

 

They are opposed by the benevolent Pleiadeans who aid mankind through education and enlightenment. The Pleiadeans are often synchronized as the Vanir of Norse myth.  

 

The proliferation of Snake deities thought the Hindu belief systems seen as sources of knowledge and medical expertise.

 

Thu'ban  is personified as a demon who was worshiped as a snake god by pagan Arabs, he was also known variously as Hanash, Hayya and Hubab. Habab being another name for Shaytan.  The demon often took the form of serpents, and they were a sacred totem to the Minaeans of Yemen.

In fantasy literature Th’uban leads the great demon army as a Demon King.

This star was one of the first planetary systems Alpha Draconian Lords conquered. The inhabitants are different kinds of Draco/Reptilian life forms, often giant in shape. These races are commonly mentioned as a cruel conqueror race and deeply involved in Earth's history.

 

At every point of reference, the Th’uban star is viewed as a source of knowledge or authority. The defeat its influence was to claim lordship or immortality. Only the Sirius star system has had a more profound impact on the religions mythologies and fictions of Earth.

 

 

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Name : The Ogdoad Aliases : The 8, The Primordial Classification: Pantheon of Cosmic deities Literature: Pyramid Text of the Old Kingdom Associated: Creation, The Primordial Waters Patheon/Faith : Early Nile River Valley Civilizations Cultural : Ancient Nile Valley The Egyptians believed that before the world was formed, there was a watery mass of dark, directionless chaos. In this chaos lived the Ogdoad of Khmunu (Hermopolis), a group of four pairs of gods venerated in Hermopolis whom the Egyptians called the eight. They are the personifications of the primeval forces of chaos Nun and his wife Naunet symbolized the primordial waters Kuk and Kauket represented darkness. Huh and Hauhet the eternity of space. Amun and Amaunet represent invisibility or the hidden. As cosmic gods they are represented in anthropomorphic form. They are also sometimes conceived as chthonic animals the male gods appearing as frogs the female as snakes The chaos existed without the light, and thus Kek and Kauket came to represent this darkness. They also symbolized obscurity, the kind of obscurity that went with darkness, and night. the four concepts represent the primal fundamental state of the beginning, they are what always was. In the myth, however, their interaction ultimately proved to be unbalanced, resulting in the arising of a new entity. When the entity opened, it revealed Ra, the fiery sun, inside. After a long interval of rest, Ra, together with the other gods, created all other things. The concept of an Ogdoad appears in Gnostic systems of the early Christian era, and was further developed by the theologian Valentinus (ca. 160 AD). The number eight plays an important part in Gnostic systems, The earliest Gnostic systems included a theory of seven heavens and a supercelestial region called the Ogdoad. Astronomical theories had introduced the concept of seven planetary spheres with an eighth above them, the sphere of the fixed stars. The Ogdoad were the original great gods of they helped with creation of all existence, then died and retired to the land of the dead where they continued to make the Nile flow and the sun rise every day.

Name: Naunet

Known Aliases: the Mother of all Mothers

Associated: The Primeval waters of Chaos

Pantheon: Egyptian

Gender: Female

Literature: Pyramid Text

Classification: Primordial God

Element: Water

Crystal:

Occupation: Creator

Known Affiliations The Ogdoad, Nun

Naunet is the one of the eight ancient deities of Ogdoad theology in Hermopolis. She is the consort of Nun and represented chaos and the primeval waters to which everything have sprouted from nothingness. Like her three sisters Kauket, Amaunet and Hauhet, she was represented as a woman with the head of a snake, mostly that of a cobra. Her name may also be spelled as Nunet.

. She guards the twelve veils of negation believed to be the flaws of the original creation. Access to these cracks would lead to the void that was Nun. She embodies the primal womb – where cycles of life, death and rebirth continues for all creatures and beings. She is depicted as the one who have freed all creations to pursue their individual life cycles making her “the Mother of all Mothers

 

She was rarely described as a personified deity, and is not often mentioned without her partner Nun although she is sometimes described as the mother of the sun god along with the composite deity Nun-Ptah.

 

In the old religious text she is the underworld equivalent to heaven which the sun traverse during the night.

 

 

 

 

 

 


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