Armando Mei

Topic: The Mys­tery of the Satel­lite Pyra­mids and their Secret Code

Armando Mei

Armando Mei is an inves­tiga­tive jour­nal­ist born in Turin in  1967. He has worked in promi­nent Ital­ian News­pa­pers, was the Direc­tor of the News­pa­per Vesu­vius for two years and is part of the Edi­to­r­ial staff of the Daily Roma.

A self trained Egyp­tol­o­gist, he has worked on numer­ous research projects that were the seed for his book Giza, a Secret Code in the Satel­lite Pyra­mids which he Co-authored with Nico Moretto with a Pref­ace by Amer­i­can sci­en­tist Prof. Lloyd Knut­son.
In sci­en­tific terms, the book describes a rev­o­lu­tion­ary dis­cov­ery about one of the pos­si­ble func­tions of the Pyra­mids of Giza and pro­vides a clearer mean­ing to the Papyrus of Turin (Royal Canon) with its long list of Gods, demi-Gods and Sov­er­eigns which ruled Egypt since 36.000 b.C.

The Mys­tery of the Satel­lite Pyra­mids and their Secret Code

Mei’s the­ory is based on Bauval’s OCT and states that the  the builders con­ceived them as a whole, assign­ing to them a spe­cific math­e­mat­i­cal func­tion. Mei believes the builders aimed to con­vey a
mes­sage through archi­tec­tural sym­bol­ism, strictly linked to the cos­mo­log­i­cal reli­gion and
the astro­nom­i­cal knowl­edge of the Ancient Egyp­tians. This sym­bol­ism, analysed through a
math­e­mat­i­cal process (the great dis­cov­ery Mei reached after 7 years of research), turns
out to be essen­tially the same as the Time of the his­tor­i­cal Era of Osiris, i.e. the First Time
of Osiris or Zep Tepi. The pur­pose is sup­ported by a math­e­mat­i­cal process and by a
per­fect astro­nomic con­fig­u­ra­tion that pushes the date to 36.900 BC, when the sky was a mir­ror of the Giza Plateau.

Mei aims at con­tin­u­ing his research by study­ing the Djed. His cur­rent research con­cludes that there
is a cor­re­la­tion between the time period given in the Royal Canon, the Giza Plateau and
the Func­tion of the Djed. Every­thing strictly linked to energy. These stud­ies have been pub­lished in the mag­a­zine “Hera”, the most read Ital­ian mag­a­zine of archae­ol­ogy, his­tory and mys­ter­ies of the ancient civilizations.


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