Devanagari - The Alphabet Of The Serpent People? - Alternative View

Devanagari - The Alphabet Of The Serpent People? - Alternative View
Devanagari - The Alphabet Of The Serpent People? - Alternative View
Anonim

Could the serpent people also have higher knowledge?..

The Devanagari alphabet is a type of ancient Indian script that has survived to this day. It has some very expressive features that allow us to make an unexpected assumption: perhaps in time immemorial this language was not used by people … but by those who in the Eastern tradition are called nagas or snakemen.

The first thing that prompts this idea is the direct translation of the very name of this alphabet:

"Virgo" - divine, (related words "wondrous", "amazing")

"Naga" - Nagas (mythical people of serpent people) who lived, according to legend, in India in ancient times.

"Ri" - (the same root word speech) speech, writing, law, order, ritual.

In total we get "Deva-Naga-Ri" - Divine Nagas letter (or speech). Nagas are people considered to be a mythical fiction, however, the letter, the alphabet, you must agree, is a completely material object that is difficult to declare "fiction".

It is also known that the people of India were a mixture of Aryans (northern settlers) and southern, local peoples (Dravidian tribes). Curiously, the nagas have nothing to do with the Aryans. It was believed that snake people lived only in the southern and southeastern regions of Indochina, representing a kind of isolated and extremely small branch of evolution, which, nevertheless, was highly developed. The mythological tradition links the nagas with Venus - supposedly, before the catastrophe on this planet, some small part of its inhabitants managed to move to Earth, where they lived mostly underground, in solitude … However, this is only one of the versions.

Promotional video:

The Devanagari alphabet differs significantly from all other earthly ones, and we will give evidence of this further. Perhaps the Draenei Indians abandoned their own alphabet (Brahmi) in order to receive some higher knowledge?..

Devanagari symbols

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The following fact is noteworthy: in India to this day, a strange custom of cutting the base of the tongue is widespread. Many yogis stretch their tongue with special training (sometimes even very strongly) - a strange practice is called Khechari wiser. There have been preserved references to the incision by the Brahmans in antiquity of the tongue along the length so that it resembles a serpentine …

We have already put forward a hypothesis, not without reason, that this custom may be associated with churning the palate, or, to be more precise, a way to stimulate a certain point in the palate or pineal gland, which produces serotonin, which has been preserved since antiquity (and hardly on the part of people!) … This method (theoretically) allows not only the body to enter into a special, altered state (spiritual vision), but also to increase life expectancy. True, to some extent due to procreation - since this (at least in humans!) Loses sex drive … However, all this has another side - perhaps people also tried to imitate the nagas, which they saw as a source of wisdom and knowledge?! And the bridle of the tongue was trimmed (and the tongue lengthened and became like a snake), in order not only to stimulate special opportunities,but also to speak the language of the Nagas?.. He is Devanagari.

It can be assumed that, as in the case of the Cyrillic group of alphabets, each Devanagari sign is a schematic representation of the mouth and organs of speech at the time of uttering a sound.

The symbolism in this case will be somewhat different than in the proto-Cyrillic alphabet. We will not find any conventions for touches and obstacles in Devanagari.

Here is a picture and only a picture. Like a schematic side view of the mouth. The upper palate is a horizontal line, the lower jaw is vertical. The mouth is always open and looks to the right and down.

In Devanagari, teeth are never depicted. Never ever. Not a single symbol!

Unlike all other human languages, the language of the creators of Devanagari did not contain ANY dental letter. It can be assumed that these creatures did not have teeth at all. This is how Indian sculptures depict the nagas. Nagas have only 2 sharp, long canines on the lower and upper jaw. It is clear that it is almost impossible to pronounce any sounds from these fangs.

Some of the sounds of the language of the creators of Devanagari require a very long tongue to pronounce. Judging by some of the letters, it may be forked at the end.

There are many sounds in the tongue, with exhalation through the nose rather than through the mouth. For other human languages, this phenomenon is extremely rare. Why complicate things so much when our mouth and lips allow a huge amount of different pronunciation variations? Moreover, in classical Sanskrit, these very "exhalation" sounds are also pronounced as through the mouth, but with aspiration. It seems that the creators of the Devanagari language did not have such a mobile mouth, but the nasopharynx was overdeveloped.

It is possible that the nagas became extinct even before the civilizations of the "Bronze" age, so all that was left of them to people as a legacy is this very alphabet …

Video about the riddle of the nagas and who they could be: