Harry Potter and the Eqyptian Symbols

Randy estesrandy at yahoo.com
Sun Jun 11 23:44:08 UTC 2006


No: HPFGUIDX 153692

Harry was born to be a Gryffindor lion.  Voldemort zaps him and 
gives him the gift of parseltongue.  The serpent combines with the 
lion.  His mom tries to protect her son from Voldemort.  Harry lives 
and for some reason has special protection from his mother and he 
has "his mother's eyes".  We later learn that he is "the chosen one" 
who has the power to vanquish evil.  Subsequently we learn the 
Voldemort has split his soul into seven pieces to obtain 
immortality.  

Ancient Eqyptian Temples have heiroglyphics which are religious 
symbols to them and basically became a written language.

The eye of Horus is briefly explained in the following link:

http://www.greatscott.com/hiero/eye.html

The mother of Horus tries to protect him from the evil Seth.  She 
prevents Seth from killing Horus, but Seth somehow steals one of his 
eyes.  The eye is replaced by the magic of Thoth.  This eye is now a 
magical eye with the powers of healing and protection.

The symbols described above are apparently quite common in Eqypt.


The lion-serpent image is displayed over and over in heiroglyphic 
form on the walls of the Temple of Horus at Edfu, forty miles south 
of Nag Hammadi. In the cult of Hathor celebrated there, the lion-
serpent represented the "royal seed" of the pharoahs. The royal 
child Horus is often depicted in a finger-sucking gesture that 
vividly recalls the posture of the embryonic Archons. Did Egyptian 
priests who directed the breeding of the dynastic families have 
intimate knowledge of Kundalini, as well as the Archons? The 
Kundalini serpent is displayed in Egyptian sacred art by a standing 
cobra, or a pair of corbras, sometimes wound on a staff, and by the 
uraeus, the cobra headress of divine empowerment. The ceremonial 
braid on the side of Horus' head was yet another indication of the 
serpent power.The pharaonic braid, traditionally worn on the right 
side of the head, visually repeats the form of the spermatic cobras 
of Edfu. The sacred iconography carries explicit, but highly occult 
knowledge: Horus is the child who right-brain cerebral functions are 
heightened by the serpent power. 

The above paragraph comes from a very strange site that tries to 
interpret Eqyptian mysteries. See below if you dare....

http://www.metahistory.org/AlienDreaming.php

I don't know much about Eqyptian mythology but I bet JKR does.

Randy











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