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Edited on Thu Feb-24-05 10:00 PM by ashmanonar
the time scale (and the actual story) of the supposed birth of jesus of nazareth was way off from what the church says. the wise men, if they truly came to jesus, came in the spring, a few years after his birth. it would take that long to find him anyways, considering herod was killing all the firstborn. (i believe that they came to him in egypt, if my memory is correct)- remember, they took refuge in egypt until herod stopped killing firstborn.
second: who do you think the wisemen were, and where did they come from? it's highly probable that at least one of the wise men was from asia (probably china, considering their technological advancement at this stage in history)...
third: around or about 2000 years ago (between bce and ce--remember, our calendar, up to a few hundred years ago, was notoriously inaccurate; so we could be years off) europe wasn't really worrying about astronomy (the romans were worried about conquest, the gauls were worried about the romans' conquest, the teutons and huns and visigoths and ostrogoths were moving around constantly and had no time for astronomy...(one exception: the celts. they were competent at astronomy, at least the druids were--and guess what, the celts were decimated by internecine warfare and roman conquest. the druids were nearly stamped out))
on to the new world: either they noticed it and didn't care, or they noticed it and their books talking about it were burned by catholic zealots in the conquest of the new world. there are only 3 known mayan codexes that survived the spanish conquest. how many were burned, and how many of those might have told of a great star in the east? (besides, they might not have seen it at all, the new world is how many thousand miles away)
the phoenicians, one group that is not mentioned, probably saw it while sailing (the phoenicians that were left, if i remember correctly carthage was destroyed) but again, they don't really exist anymore. they were assimilated into other cultures or just died out, and left little history.
the only people to have history that we actually read are the romans (transmitted through the byzantines) and some of the europeans who grew up in the aftermath of the roman fall. the byzantines kept history alive, but who knows what they changed to suit their needs? they became christian, if you'll remember, constantine apparently saw a great cross in the sky. the chinese have some fantastically recorded history, (good luck getting at it, i doubt the chinese gov't will let you poke around in their history)...but unless you take an eastern history course, the only thing EVER taught to students now is western: starting with cradle of civilization and leading up, in broad strokes, through roman history right up to modern day.
so it's little wonder that other civilizations "didn't talk about" the star of bethelehem: it was either a local occurrence, or held to just be another astronomical event (not a rare thing, remember) oh, and history has been rewritten over and over.
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