SH Archive More misrepresented dating.

SH.org OP Username
jd755
SH.org OP Date
2019-03-28 14:03:10
SH.org Reaction Score
35
SH.org Reply Count
6
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Username: jd755
Date: 2020-03-01 10:35:54
Reaction Score: 1
Now that makes sense. Thankyou. And yes crossing cheques is remembered here.
 
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Username: FlyChaos
Date: 2020-03-01 10:53:02
Reaction Score: 0
ok idk spanish
igual translation English | Spanish dictionary | Reverso
(=constante) steady, constant
"passed" /"continuous" my attempt english translation ,"from jesus 526 years constant "
 
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Username: Felixnoille
Date: 2020-03-01 12:03:12
Reaction Score: 0
You're absolutely correct - udk Spanish.
A few years ago
[hace unos años]
igual habrias querido semejante regalo
[equally you would have wanted a similar present]
El tipo murió hace nueve años
[The guy died nine years ago]
igual que casi todos los implicados en el caso
[the same as almost all those implicated in the case]
Not really, because aren't all years constant and steady or are there some unequal ones? Anyway, does it really matter, does it affect anything? :)
 
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Username: wild heretic
Date: 2020-03-01 15:52:13
Reaction Score: 0
Korben, id like to see any examples of j in the middle of dates. Would be interesting to follow up on this.
i was thinking that. j could stand for julius or julian, per the calendar. But then where does the i come in? Iuluis maybe?

Is it just me do those grafeti inscriptions look way too good in terms of wear and tear. In europe u can hardly read grave inscriptions from the 1700s. Maybe a dry climate preserves better.
 
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Username: KorbenDallas
Date: 2020-03-01 17:06:15
Reaction Score: 1
There are plenty of examples on this map. Js used for 7s, and i's (with no dot) used for 1's.

And if you scroll to a snippet of this map in the Columbus thread, you will see an oddity pertaining to the usage of these i-J's I pointed out.
 
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Username: jd755
Date: 2020-03-01 17:48:51
Reaction Score: 1
You've lost me there, sorry.
All was hoping to establsh from the Spanish speaking members was if the inscriiption was in any way dateable from its content, style of writing, word construction, punctuation.
And anything that could throw some light on the letter/number combination as being a date or something else entirely.
Sadly as it stand it seems that is not possible so all there is is a carved inscription on a peice of stone that could have been done last year sometime.
For me I find it incredulous that a man with that standing would scratch out an inscription on a rock wall.
 
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Username: wild heretic
Date: 2020-03-01 19:40:11
Reaction Score: 1
Thanks for that. After looking at the text of that map, my opinion is as follows...
I think the 1 is the same font as the i without a dot but it actually is a 1. They just used the same font without a dot.

The j is definitely a j and i think it means julian because there are interchanging uses of j and 1 throughout. It makes perfect sense that they are dates from two different calenders. The dates match very well too. It is also evidence of a 1000 year shift in chronolgy as julian moves up a thousand years.
"the julian calendar has gradually been abandoned since 1582." and "By the 40s BCE the Roman civic calendar was three months ahead of the solar calendar. Caesar, advised by the Alexandrian astronomer Sosigenes, introduced the Egyptian solar calendar, taking the length of the solar year as 365 1/4 days. The year was divided into 12 months, all of which had either 30 or 31 days except February, which contained 28 days in common (365 day) years and 29 in every fourth year (a leap year, of 366 days). Leap years repeated February 23; there was no February 29 in the Julian calendar. To align the civic and solar calendars, Caesar added days to 46 BCE, so that it contained 445 days. Because of misunderstandings, the calendar was not established in smooth operation until 8 CE."

So switching over from 1582 matches beautifully with the dates on the 1652 columbus map. It also puts julius ceasar at 960ad not 40 bc. As that matches the j dates very well.. Aka starting at 1000ad. So it seems the georgian calendar added the thousand years.

Also 1582 matches the massive earth expansion at the end of the 16th century very very well that affected ireland horrifically.
 
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Username: KorbenDallas
Date: 2020-03-01 20:05:20
Reaction Score: 0
Could you please elaborate on this in the Columbus thread? Do not want to interfere with this discussion, for I'm gonna start asking questions.
 
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Username: Felixnoille
Date: 2020-03-02 16:07:12
Reaction Score: 1
OK...

To which you replied...

To which I replied...

In other words, the = symbol is superfluous to the meaning even if you read it as 'equals' and if you incorrectly translate equals as meaning 'constant'.

So, why then would anyone write graffiti about someone who nobody would know about unless they looked it up on Wikipedia, in 'Middle Spanish' using obsolete words in the middle of nowhere in 2019? Is that more or less likely than Don Joseph de Payba Basconzelos being the author (although he probably dictated it) in J526?

You should see the Egyptian tombs they moved to Sudan to make way for the Aswan Dam, they are absolutely covered in ancient graffiti. Why would someone of Napoleon's standing shoot the nose off the Sphinx?
 
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Username: jd755
Date: 2020-03-02 16:29:50
Reaction Score: 0
Thanks for the explantion now I get where you are coming from.

Why indeed. Doesn't change a thing in regards to my indcredulity. I've seen lots of graffiti in my time never any drawn by a public official, aristircrat. Doesn't mean there isn't any just means I've never seen any.

And why this location where as you say no-one will ever see it?
The only thing that makes any sort of sense there is if the inscriber was incarcerated for a period of time unable to leave until whoever was holding him ther elet him out. He may have got a bit board and decided to inscribe the wall.

My reference to 'last year' was a tad obtuse, sorry. I should have said it could have been done at any time by anyone who had the means to do it, chisel presumably and the words could be on a piece of paper in their pocket. Just because its old/obsolete spanish doesn't mean its an old inscription.

Could be done as a prank though unlikely as most pranksters get their kicks from watching the reactionn of the ones being pranked.
Equally it could have been an ancient prankster messing with ancient people, or just an old one winding up archaeologists or simply someone after a fast bick from the gullible.
Doesn't seem likely it was and ancient/old prankster winding up future archaeoligists but even that is within the realms of possibility.
All ends up the inscription, its use of old spanish, it's location, the assumption the named individual in the inscription did the inscribing for reason unknown, make no sort of sense to me, always to me.
 
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Username: Felixnoille
Date: 2020-03-02 16:58:32
Reaction Score: 0
You obviously don't credit the authenticity of the 'J526' part of the inscription either then. So the point of this thread was... :unsure:
 
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Username: jd755
Date: 2020-03-02 17:13:52
Reaction Score: 0
Clutching at straws.
I see the J and see the I attached to numbers, never more than three, but when I posted this thread I was in full on I or J being taken for a 1 in mainstream academic explanations and thought "are they blind!" mode.
As the people above have contributed immensely to what I am looking at in the photograph my position has altered into one where its not clear what the I or J plus two or three numbers is.
Dating does seem the most obvious and if it wasn't for the equals sign = at the end I would probably have moved on presuming it's just another example of the seemingly anomylous use of I and J.
I don't have enough for even a balance of probability to appear. Your translation points to it being a date that much is clear but were it in common use during the time of the man mentioned in the inscription then to me its fair to suggest these I and J dates should be all over the area and they ain't.
As I said clutching at straws.
 
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Username: FlyChaos
Date: 2020-03-08 05:19:52
Reaction Score: 0
further thought : "=" meaning "without stopping" ie carve rock without stopping here (and yes igual can mean without stopping)

Crossing of cheques - Wikipedia
Crossing of cheques - Wikipedia
Crossed cheque. A crossed cheque is a cheque that is payable only through a collecting banker and not directly at the counter of the bank. When two parallel transverse lines, with or without any word, are drawn generally, on the left hand top corner of the cheque.

not "used to terminate the inscription and prevent any unauthorised additions"
but "terminate inscription" maybe: "without stopping"
IT IN SPANISH DICTIONARY
igual translation English | Spanish dictionary | Reverso
(=constante) steady, constant
he did not.
and u have been very rude on this thread to everyone
 
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Username: Felixnoille
Date: 2020-03-08 11:49:44
Reaction Score: 1
This is my final post regarding this subject as I feel my contribution has gone as far as it can.

Not so. Without stopping = 'sin parar'. Someone clearly did stop and carve the rock.

I didn't actually say that, it was someone else's assumption. I was referring to the practice of drawing lines after the numbers and/or words to prevent any further additions.

constante = constant. Surely you have to consider context in any translation. Why would anyone describe years as being steady or constant? As I said before, are there any years that are not steady or constant? If that was the intention then the word 'constante' is far more appropriate, but even so to convey that meaning would have required the reconstruction of the entire sentence.

I apologise for stretching the truth about the Spinx's nose and I sincerely apologise if anyone thinks I have been rude in any manner. However, I would just like to point out that some may consider it less than polite to use 'texting' when posting in the forum.
 
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