Tuesday, February 4, 2014

History Trivia - Roman emperor Septimius Severus dies at York while campaigning to subdue northern Britain

February 4

 211 Roman emperor Septimius Severus died at York while campaigning to subdue northern Britain, leaving the Roman Empire in the hands of his two quarrelsome sons, Caracalla and Geta.



1194 King Richard I of England was freed by Henry VI, Holy Roman Emperor, after being ransomed. Richard did return to England but soon set sail for France where he died five years later.

1586 Robert Dudley, earl of Leicester, became governor of Neth (Netherlands).

Monday, February 3, 2014

My Review of The Adventures of Cecilia Spark Dragon's Star by Ngaire Elder


Mary Ann Bernal review of:

The Adventures of Cecilia Spark:  Dragon’s Star
By Ngaire Elder

 The adventures continue

 Cecilia Spark’s adventures continue to enthrall her readers with dragons and a wicked knight.  The author has weaved a tale of magic in this escapade where Cecilia must reunite the Millennium Dragon, Fuego, with its Millennium Star.  However, Fuego is a prisoner of the Knight of Darkness, who has the dragon confined in the Ice Chamber of Nillock Castle.  Cecilia and her friends face many obstacles on their quest, evil beings who would enslave them all. With only their wits and a crooked staff, which emanates magical powers when controlled, they are plunged into a world shrouded in darkness.  The reader is drawn into the intrigue as Cecilia fights to overcome every challenge facing her and her animal friends.  A delightful tale for young and old alike.  I look forward to reading more adventures of the brave and courageous Cecilia Spark.
 
Amazon US
 
Amazon UK
 

The Phil Naessens Show 3 Reasons Why the Indiana Pacers and Andrew Bynum are a Great Match

http://phillipnaessens.wordpress.com/2014/02/02/the-phil-naessens-show-3-reasons-why-the-indiana-pacers-and-andrew-bynum-are-a-great-match/



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On this edition of the Phil Naessens Show Kyle McKeown stops by to discuss the injury to Mike Conley and answer several Fantasy Basketball questions. Tom Lewis joins Phil to discuss Andrew Bynum signing with the Indiana Pacers, Lance Stephenson’s All-Star snub, Pacers turnovers and much more. Kevin Lipe joins Phil to discuss the injury to Mike Conley, Nick Calathes stepping in and filling it up, the Grizzlies winning 10 of 11 and the week ahead with the Oklahoma City Thunder, Dallas and much more.
 

I am Wesley Crusher - who are you? Take the quiz now!

Mary Ann Bernal is Wesley Crusher!

Beam aboard the starship Enterprise to seek out new life and new civilizations, and of course, find out which 'TNG' character best suits your personality.

http://www.zimbio.com/quiz/jw7sxwZHx3p/Star+Trek+Next+Generation+Character?result=yeO1y1lu3mC

History Trivia - Battle of Mortimer's Cross The Yorkists defeat Lancastrian forces

February 3

590 Gregory I, the Great, was elected Roman Catholic pope. He is known as the Father of Christian Worship because of his liturgical reforms. 

 1014 King Sweyn I (Forkbeard) of Denmark died. The Viking leader established a Danish empire, gained control of Norway, and conquered England. His name appears as Swegen in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle.

 1461: Battle of Mortimer's Cross The Yorkists, led by the future Edward IV, defeated Lancastrian forces in this significant battle of the Wars of the Roses.

Sunday, February 2, 2014

BOOK LAUNCH - The Adventures of Cecilia Spark Dragon's Star

Dragon's Star

Authored by Ngaire Elder
Illustrated by Peter Maddocks
Edition: 1
"The creature had been disturbed. Swishing its tail, it sailed effortlessly towards the noise source. It could clearly see something at the edge of the water ...The giant water creature was getting closer and closer to its substantial meal. With one final flick of its powerful tail, it would be over."

Cecilia Spark is in a race against time. Her challenge is to save the last Millennium Dragon, captured by a hideous Knight of Darkness, and reunite him with the star that gives him his power. With Orson, Ractus and Pacha by her side, Cecilia must rescue Fuego and save the Land of Dragons from an endless, desperate gloom.

Harassed by crooked imps, captured in the lair of a giant spider, lost in the darkest of dungeons and threatened by a hidden river monster, will Cecilia and her brave friends succeed in their quest?

Illustrated novel. Age range 4 to 9 year old boys and girls.

www.ceciliaspark.com

Amazon US

http://www.amazon.com/The-Adventures-Cecilia-Spark-Dragons/dp/1480098612/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1391367952&sr=8-2&keywords=the+adventures+of+cecilia+spark


Amazon UK

http://www.amazon.co.uk/The-Adventures-Cecilia-Spark-Dragons/dp/1480098612/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1391368050&sr=8-1&keywords=The+adventures+of+Cecilia+Spark+Dragon%27s+Star








History Trivia - Second battle of St Alban's- Lancastrians defeat Yorkists

February 2

506 The Breviarium Alaricianum or Lex Romana Visigothorum, a collection of Roman law, was drafted at Toulouse under Alaric II, King of the Visigoths.

962 Pope John XII crowned Otto I, Holy Roman Emperor, the first Holy Roman Emperor in nearly 40 years.

1032 Conrad II, Holy Roman Emperor became King of Burgundy.

1208 James I (the Conqueror) King of Aragon was born.

1461 England's War of the Roses: Second battle of St Alban's- Lancastrians defeated Yorkists.

1461 Owen Tudor, Welsh founder of the Tudor dynasty of England died.

Saturday, February 1, 2014

Brenda Perlin Wins Flash Fiction Challenge


Congrats to Brenda Perlin, the readers’ choice in this week’s Indies Unlimited Flash Fiction Challenge.

The winning entry is recognized with a special feature here today and a place in our collection of winners which will be published as an e-book at year end.
Without further ado, here’s the winning story:


Photo by K.S. Brooks
Photo by K.S. Brooks

Sentry
by Brenda Perlin
Devil looks on from the mountain top hoping to see his friend Jewel once again. She has gone missing and hasn’t been seen in days. He and Jewel were puppies when they were adopted from the Carson City Shelter. It was then that their young lives were changed forever. For the first time, nights were not so scary and their days were now filled with runs in the park and an abundance of love.
Something didn’t feel right but he couldn’t figure out what it was. He couldn’t remember a time when Jewel wasn’t by his side. Even though they often fought for attention and had food fights they were extremely bonded. He wasn’t sure what he would do if she were to stay away forever. Though, in his heart, he knew he would never see Jewel again. Still, everyday he stood in the same spot, watching and hoping she would come running back to him.

http://www.indiesunlimited.com/2014/01/31/brenda-perlin-wins-flash-fiction-challenge/

Fingal’s Cave


Three features combine to make Fingal’s Cave on Staffa perhaps the best known of all caves.
Fingal's Cave on the Isle of Staffa
Fingal's Cave on the Isle of Staffa

Its struture is unique. Nowhere else is there a sea cave formed completely in hexagonally jointed basalt. Its appeal lies in the size, the sounds, the colours, and the remarkable symmetry of this 227 foot cavern, and by Nature’s gift of fractured columns which form a crude walkway just above high water level, allowing exploring visitors to go far inside.
Secondly, the evergreen popularity of Mendelssohn’s “Hebrides Overture (Fingal’s Cave)” provides a continuous stirring reminder of this wonder of the world.
And thirdly, the impact of the cave on all those who enter it, and especially on those who do so alone, is likely to be remembered for life. Sir Walter Scott put it into words for us:

“…one of the most extraordinary places I ever beheld. It exceeded, in my mind, every description I had heard of it …composed entirely of basaltic pillars as high as the roof of a cathedral, and running deep into the rock, eternally swept by a deep and swelling sea, and paved, as it were, with ruddy marble, baffles all description.”

How Fingal’s Cave was formed

The question “how was Fingal’s Cave formed?” is often posed. Eminent visitors have seriously asserted that it must, because of its regularity and because it points exactly at Iona, have been hollowed out of the island by hand. In fact, the answer is straightforward. Since the layer of rock made up of columns would all have been laid down at one time it follows that when the tilting occurred there would have been pressure above the present site of the cave, and a fissure would have been forced open directly below, where sea now surges in. The violent action of huge waves that would have struck the island during storms over thousands of years developed the fissure, undermining dozens of columns, to create the opening we marvel at today.

Origin of the Name

The origin of the name ‘Fingal’s Cave’ is wrapped in myth. Around 250 AD Finn MacCumhaill, or Fingal, was possibly an Irish general who had a band of faithful warriors – a Celtic parallel to King Arthur and his Round Table. Fingal is supposed to have been the father of Ossian, traditional bard of the Gaels.
Gaels migrated into Scotland from Ireland until the Norsemen began their raids on the Scottish coast, and the stories of Fingal would doubtless have come across too. Soon he became revered in Scotland and, boosted by the Ossianic heroic verse and songs, his name was a natural choice to assign to this dramatic and awe inspiring cavern.

Mendelssohn’s Historic Visit

In 1829, on 7th August, Felix Mendelssohn visited Fingal’s Cave. With his friend Klingemann, Mendelssohn set out on the newly introduced paddle steamer service to sail round Mull calling at Iona and Staffa, returning down the Sound of Mull to Oban. The day was wild and all the passengers were ill. Klingemann tells of the arrival at Staffa:
“We were put out into boats and lifted by the hissing sea up the the pillar stumps to the celebrated Fingal’s Cave. A greener roar of waves surely never rushed into a stranger cavern – its many pillars making it look like the inside of an immense organ, black and resounding, and absolutely without purpose, and quite alone, the wide grey sea within and without.”

Conditions were so bad that the little craft had only reached Tobermory by nightfall, and Mendelssohn can hardly have enjoyed seeing Fingal’s Cave since he was so seasick. However, the visit to Staffa, and the sight and sound of the Atlantic swell tumbling into the Cave, made a profound impression on him. The theme in the illustration, which he later developed into the ever-popular Hebrides Overture, occurred to him immediately. He was just 20 years old.

http://www.staffatours.com/the-islands/staffa/fingals-cave/

The Hope Diamond Gives Up One of Its Secrets

 

  • The Hope Diamond Gives Up One of Its Secrets
    In this Sept. 23, 2009 file photo, the Hope Diamond is displayed at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History in Washington. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, File)
It's legendary, supposedly cursed, admired daily by thousands, and the star of a video game—and yet we don't know all there is to know about the Hope Diamond, or so a recent discovery indicates.
The 45.52-carat diamond has given up one of its secrets to French mineral scientist François Farges and Jeffrey Post, the Smithsonian's curator of minerals. Their detective work involved computer modeling and a 17th-century lead replica that Farges found in 2009 among the National d'Histoire Naturelle's collection, and led them to an intriguing conclusion: When King Louis XIV possessed the diamond, it was mounted on a gold background and cut in a way that could cause a sun to appear at the blue stone's center—all too appropriate for the Sun King, whose colors were blue and gold, reports Smithsonian Magazine
Louis XIV bought the originally 112 3/16-carat, crudely cut diamond in 1668 from a French merchant who obtained the jewel somewhere in India. Five years later it was recut to its 67 1/8-carat size, according to the Smithsonian Encyclopedia, at which time it became known as the French Blue.
In the years between its theft (in 1792, during the French Revolution) and reappearance (in 1812, in Britain), it was again cut to its current size, obliterating those former dimensions—until Farges uncovered the replica, which would have been used by jewelers in need of a stand-in for the actual diamond while creating settings.
But the replica made clear that the French Blue was cut in an unusual way, eschewing the sharp angles that maximize the reflection of light. In exploring the reasoning behind the cut, Farges and Post arrived at their conclusion.
Interestingly, it was only with the discovery of the replica that it was conclusively proven that the French Blue and the Hope Diamond were the same stone.

http://www.foxnews.com/science/2014/01/28/hope-diamond-gives-up-one-its-secrets/?intcmp=trending

Researchers find 300,000-year-old hearth in Israel

  • ancient hearth.jpg
    Qesem Cave near the central Israel town of Rosh Ha'ayin, with an arrow pointing to a 300,000-year-old hearth recently uncovered. (The Weizmann Institute)
They weren’t cooking brontosaurus burgers -- but maybe mammoth meat?
A team of researchers has uncovered the oldest hearth in Israel, a 300,000-year-old fire pit where prehistoric humans roasted ancient meats. Scientists estimate that humans discovered fire over a million years ago, and this find helps determine when our ancestors learned to cultivate it and use it as a tool, said Ruth Shahack-Gross of the Kimmel Center for Archeological Science at the Weizmann Institute of Science.
“These findings help us to fix an important turning point in the development of human culture – that in which humans first began to regularly use fire both for cooking meat and as a focal point – a sort of campfire – for social gatherings,” Shahack-Gross said in a press release.
“They also tell us something about the impressive levels of social and cognitive development of humans living some 300,000 years ago.”
The hearth was discovered in the Qesem Cave near the central Israel town of Rosh Ha’ayin, a spot archaeologists have plumbed for nearly 15 years. During recent work there, Shahack-Gross spied a thick deposit of wood ash, hardened and compressed over the centuries into sediment and buried in the center of the cave.
By taking thin slices of it and studying it under a microscope -- using a technique called infrared spectroscopy -- she and her colleagues Avi Gopher and Ran Barkai of Tel Aviv University determined that bits of bone and soil that had been heated to very high temperatures were mixed in with the ash.
There were also tiny but clear layers in the ash, which she called conclusive proof that the area had been the site of a large hearth that was used over and over again.
Around the hearth area they found flint tools that were clearly used for cutting meat -- early knives and forks, in a sense. Flint tools found just a few feet away had a different shape and were clearly designed for other activities.
Also in and around the area were burnt animal bones -- further evidence for use of the fire pit for cooking meat.

http://www.foxnews.com/science/2014/01/28/researchers-find-300000-year-old-hearth-in-israel/

History Trivia - Elizabeth I of England signs the Warrant of Execution for Mary Queen of Scots

February 1

 772 Adrian I was elected pope. During one of the longest pontificates in history, he forged a strong bond with Charlemagne and presided over the Second Council at Nicea where twenty-two canons relating to points of discipline was established.

1327 Edward III was crowned King of England, but the country was ruled by his mother Queen Isabella and her lover Roger Mortimer.

1587 Elizabeth I of England signed the Warrant of Execution for Mary (Queen of Scots).

Friday, January 31, 2014

Diane Turner - London Rocks - 30.01.2014

Diane Turner - London Rocks - 30.01.2014

The Adventures of Cecilia Spark featured on ebookSoda

The Adventures of Cecilia Spark: the Brimstone Forest ebook cover
 

The Adventures of Cecilia Spark: the Brimstone Forest

by Ngaire Elder, Illustrated by Peter Maddocks

Enchanting children's adventure

Cecilia's bug-hunting adventure in the garden takes an interesting turn when she's trapped by a witch and taken to Brimstone forest. On her adventures she meets strange and wonderful creatures including the Troglosauruses and a dragon! Fabulous tale for ages 5-8.
Similar To:
A Dragon Named Dragon;
Amelia Bedelia;
Burly and Grum and the Secret City


http://www.ebooksoda.com/ebook-deals/the-adventures-of-cecilia-spark-the-brimstone-forest-by-ngaire-elder-illustrated-by-peter-maddocks

The Phil Naessens Show Super Bowl XLVIII Preview

http://phillipnaessens.wordpress.com/2014/01/31/the-phil-naessens-show-super-bowl-xlviii-preview/



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On this edition of the Phil Naessens Show J.A. Sherman joins Phil to discuss the Oklahoma City Thunder’s recent thumping of the Miami Heat and Sherm shares his thoughts on whether or not he thinks the Heat can win three championships in a row. J.R. Wilco joins Phil to discuss the injury to Manu Ginobili, why the Spurs can’t beat a top seven NBA team and his thoughts on the Heat winning it all. Joe Mullinax joins Phil to preview Super Bowl XLVIII and much more   

History Trivia - Guy Fawkes executed

January 31 

 36 BC Antonia Minor, daughter of Mark Antony and Octavia Minor was born.

314 Silvester I began his reign as Pope of the Catholic Church, succeeding Pope Miltiades. During his pontificate, the Basilica of St. John Lateran, Santa Croce in Gerusalemme, St. Peter's Basilica, and several cemeterial churches over the graves of martyrs were founded.

1606 Gunpowder Plot: Guy Fawkes was executed for his plotting against Parliament and James I of England. Guy Fawkes and fellow surviving Gunpowder Plotters were hanged, drawn and quartered at Westminster.

Thursday, January 30, 2014

The Writers Showcase Podcast The Briton and The Dane Franchise with Mary Ann Bernal





BOOK LAUNCH - The Briton and the Dane: Timeline by Mary Ann Bernal



Dr. Gwyneth Franger is a renowned expert in early medieval England who is set upon learning the truth about the death of Lord Erik, the last descendant of the powerful House of Wareham. Her quest becomes an obsession, a condition that began with the discovery of a portrait of the tall and valiant warrior with which she forms an extraordinary and inexplicable bond.

Digesting troves of mildewed scrolls and source documentation only enhances her belief that Lord Erik was brutally assassinated by a cabal of traitors in the pay of William the Bastard, shortly before the onslaught of the Norman Invasion.

On an archeological dig in Southern England, her team unearths an Anglo-Saxon fortress, a vast citadel built during the reign of Alfred the Great, which she believes was Lord Erik's stronghold. In the midst of her excitement, she is awakened one night from her slumbers by a disconcerting anomaly emerging from the site.

Dr. Franger finds herself transported back to the Dark Ages and at the side of the noble Lord Erik who commands an army of elite Saxon warriors, a swift and mobile force able to deploy quickly throughout the kingdom to ward off invaders.

Witnessing the unrest firsthand, Gwyneth senses that her instincts had been right all along, and she is determined to learn the identities of the treacherous blackguards hiding in the shadows, villains who may well be posing as Lord Erik's friends and counselors.

Will Gwyneth stop the assassins? Is she strong enough to walk away and watch her beloved Erik die? Or will she intervene, change the course of history and wipe out an entire timeline to save the man she loves with all her heart?


Amazon US

http://www.amazon.com/The-Briton-Dane-Mary-Bernal-ebook/dp/B00I4WFUOW/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1391096786&sr=8-1&keywords=The+Briton+and+the+Dane+Timeline

Amazon UK

http://www.amazon.co.uk/The-Briton-Dane-Mary-Bernal-ebook/dp/B00I4WFUOW/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1391096904&sr=8-1&keywords=the+Briton+and+the+Dane+Timeline


Print:

https://www.createspace.com/4598250


The Phil Naessens Show The 2014 Texas Rangers are Loaded and Ready

http://phillipnaessens.wordpress.com/2014/01/29/the-phil-naessens-show-the-2014-texas-rangers-are-loaded-and-ready/

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On this edition of the Phil Naessens Show Rush Olson joins Phil to discuss the Texas Rangers new acquisitions Prince Fielder and Shin-Soo Choo, life without Ian Kinsler and the possibility of Nelson Cruz signing with the club this coming season. Mark Berman stops buy to talk about the possibility of Matt Harvey pitching in 2014, the signings of John Lannan and Daisuke Matsuzaka and the guys reminisce about Johan Santana and his no-hitter. Alex Hall joins Phil to discuss minor league phenom Addison Russell and the likelihood of whether or not he’ll play for the Oakland A’s this summer, the A’s possible outfield combinations plus will it be Eric Sogard or Alberto Callespo starting at second base for the Athletics this season plus much more Hot Stove Baseball talk!   

History Trivia - King Charles I of England beheaded

January 30

1077 Pope Gregory VII pardoned German emperor Henry IV.

1487 Bell chimes were invented.

1522 Duke of Albany took captured French back to Scotland.

1648 Eighty Years' War: The Treaty of Münster and Osnabrück was signed, which ended the conflict between the Netherlands and Spain.

1649 King Charles I of England was beheaded.

1661 Oliver Cromwell, Lord Protector of the Commonwealth of England was ritually executed two years after his death, on the anniversary of the execution of the monarch he himself deposed.

Wednesday, January 29, 2014

The Wizard of Notts Recommends: Blast from the Past: Meadow Lane on the 28th April 1973

 
Films for 1973 include The Exorcist, Enter the Dragon and The Wicker Man. Dark Side of the Moon, Goats Head Soup and Quadrophenia were amongst the great albums released that year. in Britain, conflict between Ted Heath and the miner caused nationwide power cuts and the first gravediggers strike meant that bodies remained unburied at the side of the road. And in the US, Vietnam raged and Tricky Dicky was secretly listening in on the Democrats in a famous hotel in Miami. More importantly, Notts won 4-1 against Tranmere. The Wizard is in this photo somewhere. Note the fashions, the haircuts and the state of the pitch. None of the players ate pasta or food with green bits


The Phil Naessens Show What Really Happened to the Minnesota Timberwolves and New York Knicks?

http://phillipnaessens.wordpress.com/2014/01/28/the-phil-naessens-show-what-really-happened-to-the-minnesota-timberwolves-and-new-york-knicks/

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On todays Phil Naessens Show Zeb Benbrook joins Phil to discuss the 28 NBA players selected to possibly represent Team USA in Spain and also in Brazil and Aaron Stampler joins Phil to answer listeners questions about the Minnesota Timberwolves and New York Knicks plus much more NBA talk

History Trivia - Galileo observes Neptune

January 29

904 Pope Sergius III came out of retirement to take over the papacy from the deposed antipope Christopher. 

1119 Pope Gelasius II died. The brief reign of Gelasius II was plagued by the lingering investiture controversy and the aggressive actions of Henry V, Holy Roman Emperor. Henry took possession of Rome and twice drove the pope from the city, installing in his place the antipope Gregory VIII. 

 1327  Edward III was crowned  By laying claim to the French throne, he started the Hundred Years' War.   He also created Britain's highest knightly order, the Order of the Garter because of his fondness for chivalry.

1595 William Shakespeare's play Romeo and Juliet was performed for the first time on this day.

1613 Galileo observed Neptune but failed to understand the significance of his find.

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Message decoded, again: 3,000-year-old text may prove biblical tale of King Solomon

Message decoded, again: 3,000-year-old text may prove biblical tale of King Solomon

  • eilatmazar1.jpg
    Archaeologist Eilat Mazar shows off her 3,000-year-old Biblical find. (Key to David's City/Youtube)
  • cheap-wine-hebrew-gershon.jpg
    Haifa University professor Gershon Galil says the missing letters on the ancient inscription spell out "yah-yin," which is Hebrew for wine. (Gershon Galil)
A few characters scratched into the side of an ancient earthenware jug have archaeologists scrambling for their dictionaries -- and wondering if it corroborates the Bible's stories of King Solomon.
The Ophel inscription -- 3,000-year-old characters found in Israel in July -- is the earliest alphabetical written text ever found in Jerusalem. It proves the real basis behind the parables and stories in the world’s most famous book, said Gershon Galil, a professor of ancient history and biblical studies at the University of Haifa.
"We are dealing here with real kings, and the kingdom of David and Solomon was a real fact," Galil told FoxNews.com, in a phone call from Israel.
But the world's leading archaeologists are still hotly debating the meaning of the inscription. Gershon offers what he calls the "only reasonable translation," noting at the same time that the very existence of the text is as important as its meaning.
'If Obama were to achieve something, he would not claim that Bush did it. It's not in human nature!'
- Haifa University professor Gershon Galil
"The most important thing this tells us is that somebody during this time knew how to write something," he said.
Three letters of the inscription are incomplete, and Galil translates them to read, "yah-yin chah-lak," which is Hebrew for "inferior wine." The first half of the text indicates the twentieth or thirtieth year of Solomon's reign -- making the entire inscription a label of sorts for the jug's contents.
He explains that the text must be written in an early form of southern Hebrew because it is the only language of the time to use two yods (Hebrew letters) to spell the word wine. Galil also suggests that the "inferior wine" was probably given to laborers who were helping to build the burgeoning city of Jerusalem.
If Hebrew as a written language did exist during the time of the inscription, it places the ancient Israelites in Jerusalem earlier than previously believed, under a time the Bible indicates was King Solomon's rule.
According to Galil's understanding of the text, the writing ability demonstrated by the inscription proves the existence of a fully functioning administration that collected taxes, prepared storage jars and performed other duties as early as the second half of the 10th century BC.
"The Bible claims that Solomon built the temple and that he was the man that enlarged the city," explained Galil. Outside of biblical texts, there has not been any evidence that Solomon in the mid-10th century BC ordered the building of the First Temple, the ancient Israelites' place of worship where the Dome of the Rock currently stands.
Some suggest Judean King Hezekiah actually built the temple in Solomon's name. Galil scoffed at the suggestion.
"If Obama were to achieve something, he would not claim that Bush did it. It's not in human nature! Solomon built the temple, not Hezekiah."
"Even if my reading is not the right one, the fact that somebody knew how to write [in Hebrew] during this time, shows that somebody could have easily written a book a little while later like [the Old Testament's] book of Samuel and Judges."
Galil hopes that in years to come, more evidence will be found to support the Kingdoms of Solomon and David.
"The evidence that we have today and each year we have so much more that David and Solomon were real and important kings and not just tales of the Bible," he said.

http://www.foxnews.com/science/2014/01/27/message-decoded-again-3000-year-old-text-may-prove-biblical-tale-king-solomon/

Mr. Chuckles stirs the Wizard's Cauldron, and can't get enough of Christmas

 
This week around the Cauldron, we have Rebecca Raisin, who writes both romance and thrillers with eloquence, culture, wit and with a dash of humour in each chapter. A resident of Perth, Australia, (rather than the racecourse town in Scotland), she penned her debut novella for Harlequin imprint Carina UK at Christmas and, barely a month later, she's straight back on our shelves with Snake Typhoon, a thriller written under indie pseudonym Billie Jones. 

Want to read more, click on the link:


http://greenwizard62.blogspot.com/2014/01/top-romance-and-thriller-author-rebecca.html

The Wizard's Cauldron: Top romance - and thriller! - author Rebecca Raisi...

The Wizard's Cauldron: Top romance - and thriller! - author Rebecca Raisi...: This week around the Cauldron, we have Rebecca Raisin, who writes both romance and thrillers with eloquence, culture, wit and with a dash...

The Phil Naessens Show Introducing the Fab 5 of the Utah Jazz

http://phillipnaessens.wordpress.com/2014/01/28/the-phil-naessens-show-introducing-the-fab-5-of-the-utah-jazz/

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SLC Dunk Managing Editor Amar join Phil to discuss the Utah Jazz lottery picks all finally playing together and the guys take a Division by Division look at the NBA plus much more
 
Come over to DraftSheet and join me for a free Fantasy Basketball free roll and win cash. It's absolutely free. For Fantasy Basketball please click here . For Fantasy Football please click here and for Fantasy Hockey please click here
The Phil Naessens Show can be heard Monday thru Friday at Max Sports ChannelsTalk Superstation, Armed Forces Radio Network , Kozmik RadioFirst Online Radio  and Baseball Podcasts. The show is also aired every Saturday on Epix Radio as well.