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Alexander – the Great: History in the stars



Between 334 and 323 BC, the great military commander and king of the ancient Greek kingdom of Macedon forged the largest empire in the ancient world, with his kingdom stretching from modern day Greece, Bulgaria and Turkey to Syria, Lebanon, Israel, Egypt, Iraq, Iran, India and much of Central Asia. And he did it all by his early 30s. A team of researchers led by Dr. Thomas Gerasimidis of Aristotle University of Thessaloniki has completed nearly a quarter of a century of painstaking studies on the last days of Alexander the Great’s life, concluding that the conqueror died of pancreatic necrosis, and not malaria, typhoid fever or pneumonia, as previously thought, Sputnik Greece has reported. Oct. 25 https://sptnkne.ws/AhUV



It is an old astrological belief that deaths of famous people are “foretold” by eclipses. Not all eclipses are equally strong. Total eclipses,  solar and lunar, are much stronger that partial.  The study concluded that Alexander the Great died of severe sepsis on June 13, 323 BC. A Total Lunar Eclipse on April 28, 323 BC aligned very significantly with the meridian at Babylon where he died. The eclipse Moon [2sc27] fell on Alexander’s [1] natal Moon [0sc] and Hades [4sc] conjunct the star Yed Posterior [1sc] in hard aspect to the TNPs Kronos-Hades. Epsilon (ε) Ophiuchus, Yed Posterior, is a red star in the left hand of the Serpent Bearer. Epsilon (ε, this star Yed Posterior), with Zeta (ζ Han), marked the Akkadian lunar asterism Mulu-bat, the "Man of Death". Pliny said that it occasioned much mortality by poisoning (Robson p.54).



The New Moon of June 11, 323 BC took place just two days before Alexander’s death. Once again the New Moon is aligned very significantly with the meridian at Babylon. It is opposite the TNPs Kronos-Hades [2] and square Mars on the descendant.

Kronos-Mars : a famous warrior
Hades: debilitation or deterioration; bowels; vermin or toxins

Can it be a coincidence that just as the announcement is being made by Dr. Thomas Gerasimidis of Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, the Sun is transiting over Alexander’s natal Moon and the April 28, 323 BC eclipse Moon!

References:
[1] Alexander – the Great: Birthdata Jul. 22, 356 BCE OS; 23:00 LMT; Pella, Macedonia  (American Book of Charts p.360-61)

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