Roy Batty
Daily Stormer
April 7, 2018
In another life, I would have liked to have been an archaeologist. I think all those ancient sand-colored dunes have a certain charm to them. Even the tuskan raiders who live there just add an exotic flair to the whole place in my mind.
RT:
A rare Greco-Roman temple has been uncovered in Egypt’s Western Desert. Archaeologists believe it dates back to between 200 BC and 300 AD.
The temple was discovered at the al Salam archaeological site, the Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities announced on Wednesday. Two limestone lion statues, bits of pottery, coins, and a sculpture of a man’s head were also found at the site.
The front section of the temple and foundations were found, along with a three-foot thick outer wall and courtyard. The temple is rare in that not many ruins from this era remain.
Hear that? That’s pretty cool.
When archaeologists moved rubble from the area, parts of the temple walls, complete with Greco-Roman designs, were first spotted, Ayman Ashmawy, head of the Egyptian Antiquities Department, explained. The temple’s design is influenced by both ancient Egyptian architecture and that of the Hellenistic and Roman style, which ruled the area during this time.
The temple was discovered near the Siwa Oasis, which is one of the most isolated Egyptian settlements where people are thought to have lived as far back as 10,000 BC. Archaeologists hope to learn more about the life of people living in the Siwa Oasis at this time.
Damn.
10,000 BC. Kangz BTFO’d.
Well to be fair, there MIGHT have been kangz there before the Greeks/Romans.
You know, as dick-scrubbers.
This story isn’t actually revealing anything about Egypt that we don’t know. The Egyptians got conquered by Alexander of Macedon, then there were Greeks living there and then the Romans ruled.
I just thinks its awesome that they’re still finding monuments and temples and lost cities built by White people all over the Middle East.
We used to own the entire civilized world – except China.
By my reckoning, that means we have a valid claim to these lands to this day. The Arabs came later after all, in the 6th century, and they conquered these places when they were weak and fractured.
If the Jews can advance a millennium-old claim to land in the middle-east, then so can we.
Soon, fam.