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by Anonymous - 4/27/21 3:33 AM
Also Kali is seen wearing a necklace with 72 demons heads upon it. And Thyphon is NOT the name of Set. That name is not native to Khem in any tradition. The name is Set/Seth/Sutek/Suty or some such variation of his name. The Greeks later attributed this god with Thyphon incorrectly as Set was bastardised.

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RE: 72

by caitlynn - 5/02/21 4:00 AM
thyphon may be shem, noah's (of the Ark)son, see Alexander Hislop's 'The Two Babylons' for a phenomenal store house of mythological remnants to follow up. on top the book is an expose of Catholicism but forget that the real gold is the leads for myths turning in to history along the way

RE: 72

by Caitlynn ii - 5/02/21 4:05 AM
'Khem' is biblical Ham, son of Noah: also, Moloch, the god of barbarity and blood. Moloch signifies "king"; and Nimrod was the first after the flood that violated the patriarchal system, and set up with Ham, or Khem, "the burnt one." As "her" also, like Ham, signified "The hot or burning one," this name formed a foundation for covertly identifying Ham with the "Sun," and so deifying the great patriarch, after whose name the land of Egypt was called, in connection with the sun. Khem, or Ham, in his own name was openly worshipped in later ages in the land of Ham (BUNSEN); but this would have been too daring at first. By means of "Her," the synonym, however, the way was paved for this. "Her" is the name of Horus, who is identified with the sun (BUNSEN), which shows the real etymology of the name to be from the verb to which I have traced it. Then, secondly, "Mes," is from Mesheh (or, without the last radical, which is omissible), Mesh, "to draw forth." In Egyptian, we have Ms in the sense of "to bring forth" (BUNSEN, Hieroglyphical Signs), which is evidently a different form of the same word. In the passive sense, also, we find Ms used (BUNSEN, Vocabulary). The radical meaning of Mesheh in Stockii Lexicon, is given in to explain the meaning of the names of the Egyptian kings, Ramesses and Thothmes, the former evidently being "The son of Ra," or the Sun; the latter in like manner, being "The son of Thoth." For the very same reason Her-mes is the "Son of Her, or Ham," the burnt one--that is, Cush.

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