Page 357 - Russian History Viewed through Distorted Mirrors, Vol. 1
P. 357
Nicolai Levashov. Russian History Viewed through Distorted Mirrors. Vol. 1
Fig.14. — The photo of the star sky with the
Palace of Eagle (constellation Aquila) which is
located in the eastern branch of the Milky Way
and contains 119 stars visible with the naked
eye. The name of the brightest star is Altair
(Alpha Aquilae). It is an A-type main sequence
star with an apparent visual magnitude of 0.77
which is located at a distance of 16.5 light years
from the Sun and has 11 times the luminosity.
It is unknown now which of these 119
stars the inhabited planet of Uray (Uray-Earth)
orbited and what distance from our Sun this star
is. Perun, the son of Svarog (as he introduced
himself to the people), arrived on Midgard-
earth from exactly Uray-Earth, — the planet
which still revolves around one of the stars of
the Palace of Eagle (constellation Aquila). This
means that they did not recognize his appearance or know of him before he came,
which in turn means that either he had never visited Midgard-earth in his physical
body or he was there so long ago that nobody who met him this time could possibly
know what he looked like.
Fig.15. — The image of the Palace of Eagle
(constellation Aquila) in a map from the Mid-
dle Ages: certainly, a constellation can consist
of stars which could be located billions of light
years away from each other and in reality do
not form a united star system. This is related to
the fact that stars are located in volumetric
space, while a person sees only their flat pro-
jection. Therefore the modern concept of this
constellation (as well as the others) differs
from the concept of “Palaces” which our an-
cestors had. We can talk with confidence only
about the coincidence of the position of the
brightest stars of modern constellations and the
Palaces of our ancestors. In fact, unlike us,
they did visit the inhabited planets of these
Palaces.
Modern science is capable of only theo-
retical reasoning and analyzing of the projections of the stars and, although it affirms
that one or another star is in one or another constellation, in reality the latter can be a
very remote galaxy with billions of stars. This “misunderstanding” appears as a result
of the fact that initially stars were “assigned” in constellations according to their lu-
minosity: the brightest star was determined as an alpha-star and the next letter of the
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