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dennis mann
http://www.earthfiles.com/

CROP CIRCLE IS FIGURE 8, REPORTED ON 08-08-2008

CELTIC CROSS CROP CIRCLE, 08-15-2008, BRITAIN

August 13, 2008 - Gigantic “Eight” in U. K. Wheat Field On 080808.




Reported August 8, 2008, below Milk Hill, near Alton Barnes,
Wiltshire, England. Andreas Muller, Editor of Kornkreise-forschung.de/ reports,
“I estimate the total axis length to be about 250 to 272 meters (820 to 892 feet).”
Aerial image Lucy Pringle. Also see: Cropcircleconnector.com.



(scroll down the page a little ways)

warning,,,,,,,,,this is an anti-christ web-site


August 15, 2008 - Celtic Cross in Etchilhampton, U. K., Wheat Field
Two Years After Etchilhampton Mayan Lamat, August 15, 2006.





Left 2008: Spanning eight tramlines, which might total 640 feet wide, this Celtic cross was reported on August 15, 2008, in an Etchilhampton Hill wheat field near Devizes, Wiltshire, U. K. Aerial image © 2008 by Steve Alexander. Right 2006: Mayan Lamat formation in wheat at Etchilhampton Hill, near Devizes, Wiltshire, England, reported on August 15, 2006. Estimated diameter was about 300 feet.
Aerial image © 2006 by Cropcircleconnector.com. Also see: 2008 Cropcircleconnector.com.

dennis mann

888 IN GREEK = JESUS




http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celtic_cross


Celtic cross
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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For the band, see Celtic Cross (band).

Muiredach's High Cross at Monasterboice, Co Louth, Ireland, 10th century. This article needs additional citations for verification.
Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (April 2008)

A Celtic cross is a symbol that combines the cross with a ring surrounding the intersection.

It is the characteristic symbol of Celtic Christianity, though the symbol has older, pre-Christian origins. Such crosses formed a major part of Celtic art. This design is also referred to as the Irish Cross.

Contents [hide]
1 Origins
2 Irish myth
3 Celtic Revival
4 Political symbol
5 Sporting
6 Current use
7 References
8 See also
9 External links



[edit] Origins
In Celtic regions of Ireland and later in Great Britain, many free-standing upright crosses (or high crosses) were erected by Irish monks, beginning at least as early as the 7th Century. Some of these 'Celtic' crosses bear inscriptions in runes. There are surviving free-standing crosses in Cornwall (famously St Piran's cross at Perranporth) and Wales, on the island of Iona and in the Hebrides, as well as the many in Ireland. Other stone crosses are found in the former Northumbria and Scotland, and further south in England, where the merge with the similar Anglo-Saxon cross making tradition, in the Ruthwell Cross for exampled. The most famous standing crosses are the Cross of Kells, County Meath, Ireland, Ardboe Auld Cross, Ardboe, County Tyrone, Northern Ireland, the crosses at Monasterboice, County Louth, Ireland, and the Cross of the Scriptures, Clonmacnoise, Ireland. This representation is often related to the numerous representation of crosses combined with a circle before Christianity. Often called "sun cross", they can be found in Bronze Age Europe (Nordic Bronze Age, Urnfield culture). But there is a constant difference: only the Christian cross shows arms outside the circle, while the sun cross is totally surrounded by its circle. Moreover, the sun crosses are sometimes made with more than 4 arms.


Modern Celtic cross in Père Lachaise cemeteryThe archaic English word for cross as an instrument of torture is rood (literally "pole", cognate with rod). The word cross in English derives only indirectly from Latin crux via Old Irish and possibly Old Norse, introduced in the 10th century.


It has also been suggested that Celtic crosses may have had their origins in the early Coptic church. The similarity between the ankh, symbol of "life" and variations of the cross or ankh with a circle on Coptic stella and textiles from as early as the 5th century clearly show that the combination of circle and cross were used in early Christian Eqypt. [1] Whilst some experts say that they were originally carved horizontally on stone, their Geometrical ring construction and the fact that the "Lights" in East facing high crosses can be seen to "refract" early morning sunlight is indicative of vertical construction
Guardian Of Centurian
The sign of this circle is a important sign for its true purpose this and that of recent others are part of a message, its image even further important because of type of graphic it is. UK intresting that this is occuring though I am. rolleyes.gif 1dsz5f1.gif
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