A Spanish rendition (Ѻ), based on the Dorothy Murdock stylized film Zeitgeist, of the “Last supper of Christ”, with the 12 main gods born on Dec 25, namely: Hermes, Dionysus, Zarathustra, Krishna, Jesus, Horus, Mithra, Heracles, Tammuz, and Adonis, eleven of whom are rescripts of the “Osiris-Horus motif” a god syncretism, formulated in the early Dynastic Egypt, each based on older astro-theology models. |
See also: God character equivalencesThe following shows the main rescripts of Osiris:
Figure | Date | Country | Scholar | See also | |
------------------------ | ---------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------- | |||
0. | Osiris → Horus | 3100BC | Egypt | ● Death and Resurrection of Osiris ● Passion of Osiris | |
1. | Nimrod → Tammuz | 1500BC | Syria | (Uvarov ,1812) | |
2. | Krishna | 1200BC | India | (Volney, 1791) (Graves, 1875) | |
3. | Attis | 1150BC | Phrygia | (Graves, 1875) | |
4. | Zoroaster | 900BC | Persia | ||
5. | Dionysus | 800BC | Greece | (Ausonius, 385BC) | ● Osiris, Dionysus, and Bacchus |
6. | Adonis | Greece | (Ausonius, 385BC) (Graves, 1875) | ||
7. | Prometheus | 450BC | Greece | (Graves, 1875) | |
8. | Buddha | 600BC | India | ||
9. | Moses | 400BC | Canaan | ● Osiris, Dionysus-Bacchus, and Moses | |
10. | Liber | 300BC | Rome | (Ausonius, 385BC) | |
11. | Bacchus | 200AD (Ѻ) | Rome | (Ausonius, 385BC) "Moses = Bacchus" (Vossius, 1630) “Osiris = Mnevis (Ѻ) = Bacchus = Moses” (Huet, 1679) | ● Osiris, Dionysus-Bacchus, and Moses |
12. | Lazarus → Jesus | 300AD | Rome | ● How Osiris became Jesus ● Raising of Lazarus ● Death and Resurrection of Jesus | |
13. | Odin → Thor | 600AD | Germany | (Graves, 1875) | |
14. | Santa Claus | 1800AD | Europe | (Arthur, 2000) | ● Christmas ● Christmas tree |
The Egyptian god Osiris was culturally transmitted into the rescripted figures of: Moses, Jesus, and Santa Claus, to name four dominant characters. |
“Osiris was known amongst the Phoenicians, in Syria and Cyprus, by the title of Thammuz [Tammuz], or Adonis. Ausonius (c.385AD), in the following verses, asserts the identity of Osiris, Dionysus, Bacchus, Liber, and Adonis: ‘Ogygia me Bacchum vocat, Osirin Aegyptus putat, Mystae Phanacem nominant, Dionyson Indi existimant, Romana sacra Liberum, Arabica gens Adoneum, Lucanianus Pantheum’.”— Sergey Uvarov (1812), “On the Mysteries of Eleusis” [1]
“Tammuz and Adonis are proved to be the same divinity. Jerome, who lived in Palestine when the rites of Tammuz were observed, up to the very time when he wrote, expressly identifies Tammuz and Adonis (vol. ii., p. 353), in his Commentary on Ezekiel, viii. 14, where the Jewish women are represented as weeping for Tammuz; and the testimony of Jerome on this subject is universally admitted. Then the mode in which the rites of Tammuz or Adonis were celebrated in Syria was essentially the same as the rites of Osiris. The statement of Lucian (De Dea Syria, vol. iii., p. 454) strikingly shows this, and Bunsen (vol. i., p. 443) distinctly admits it. The identity of Osiris and Nimrod has been largely proved in the body of this work. When, therefore, Tammuz or Adonis is identified with Osiris, the identification of Tammuz with Nimrod follows of course. ”— Alexander Hislop (1853), The Two Babylons