bringing an indiana jones sense of adventure to real history & archaeology l o g l i n e In a modern world of high tech, two men, a Brit archaeologist and a Yank historian, travel to historical and archaeological sites across the world, visiting tombs, temples and mysterious places of historical, legendary and mythological lore; uncovering hidden history, ancient magicks, mysteries of the past, links to the future and the very real underworld of gods, demigods and spirits of the dead. Adventure has a new name... two actually. s y n o p s i s Scotty Roberts and Dr. John Ward, while seeking stories of adventure, historical mystery and unexplained phenomena for their publication, Intrepid Magazine, take the viewer on a visually stunning expedition to historical and archaeological sites in various exotic locales around the world, crisscrossing the connectivities in cultures through the ages, delving the historical significance, the monarchs and nobity of antiquity, exploring the cultural changes and the alternative and paranormalist aspects. Not only is this a colorful travelogue, filled with the sites, sounds and visceral experiences of mysterious places of the Ancient World, but also a series that will appeal to those who understand the vast links between ancient civilization and the rest of the world. Its ‘Michio Kaku meets Anthony Bourdain’ in a series of exciting, ‘buddies-on-aroad-trip,’ historical, archaeological ecpeditionary adventures. With an “On the Road” approach, Dr. John Ward, British archaeologist, and Scotty Roberts, American historian, in their first twenty-six episodes, take viewers to sites of historical, religious and spiritual significance, lending their own brand of brotherly comradery to their academic and scholarly theories and positions on the varied historical locations. Its an adventurous travelogue with a bit of reality TV, educational documentary, tonguein-cheek interaction, and swashbuckling adventure all melded into a wild, breathtaking, intimate exploit - a road trip down ancient desert trade routes, mountain climbing in to the ruins of godforsaken temples and spelunking never before seen, rock-hewn tombs carved out of cliff faces and buried 100 feet below the modern world. Combine the humorous-yet-scholarly academics of a Simcha Jacobovici’s, The Naked Archaeologist, Don Wilder’s Cities of the Underworld, the self-serious approach of Scott Wolter’s America Unearthed, the fun-loving styling of Josh Gates’ Destination Truth and the best of Carl Sagan and Leonard Nimoy’s Cosmos and In Search Of, in an episodic, ongoing travelogue expedition led by two men who bring their unique brand of academics and alternative history to the table. History books be damned; established academicia take notice... Because, yes, there is a paranormal world lurking beneath it all that most academics won’t touch with a ten-foot pole. Scotty Roberts and Dr. John Ward crafted what has become a finely honed friendship out of their initial meeting and conversations revolving around their individual quests for the historical Moses and the biblical Exodus. As a result, they authored a book on the topic and have taken groups of people into Egypt to retrace the steps of their expeditions. This fervor for historical truth – academia notwithstanding – has led this pair of adventurers into new places and familiar historical sites, all with a new twist for seeking out what truly lies beneath the textbook tales. Periodically accompanying the duo will be Scottish medium, Chris Conway (former resident medium on British television’s Most Haunted). Chris, a soft-spoken, quick witted, genuine medium sheds light from a spiritual perspective, opening up the diaphanous and revealing these ancient sites, monuments and mysterious places, in ways never before seen by the public. Dramatic recreations, and Graphic 3D reconstructions of temples, palaces and sites, as well as high-tech mapping and GPS graphics bring the ancient world presented by Roberts and Ward into an HD, in-your-face experience. The people, sand, mud and rocks of the past are brought into eye-stunning visuals that explode the past into the present. Indiana Jones sought an ark, a cup and a skull. Roberts and Ward seek the knowledge that comes through the grit of experience, a twist of the paranormalist, and hands-on adventure… and they take their viewers along on their intimate quest for the unknown. e p i s o d e o v e r v i e w Where other travelogue, research and historical series leave off, History Trippers will begin... Not only will Ward and Roberts visit ancient sites of historical significance, but they will dig deeper into the esoterics, magicks, occultist and hermetic practices that underpinned the works and deeds of the ancients, from Europe to the Americas, Asia, northern Africa and Great Britain. By taking the viewer through ancient sites and archaological records, tracing historical personages and places of mystery, History Trippers exposes the great missing links between our ancient past and modern cultural practices. Many episodes will include interviews and guest appearances by scholars, theorists and authors who are friends and associates of Roberts and Ward, who expound on the various sites and theories ranging from the poure historical to the often times mystical and occultic hermetics involved with the sites. A history tripping, traveloguing romp through history that is all at once as entertaining as it is educational, playing heavily on the repartee and comradery of Roberts and Ward. 1) Göbekli Tepe - On a hilly ridge called Göbekli Tepe in the Taurus Mountains of southeast Turkey, near the ancient city of Sanliurfa, archaeologists have uncovered the oldest stone temple complex in the world. Constructed most probably during the second half of the tenth millennium BC, some 7,000 years before Stonehenge and the Great Pyramid, the site consists of a series of rings of enormous T-shaped pillars, many bearing carved reliefs of Ice Age animals, strange glyphs and geometric forms. 2) The Standing Stones and Dolmens of England, Ireland and Scotland and the quarries in Wales and Marlboro - including Stonehenge, Avesbury, the Man-an-Tol and other stone circles and megaliths shrouded in ancient mystery. 3) The Tower of London - the stronghold of generations of English monarchs, and prison to the Crown’s most intimate enemies. 4) Stirling Bridge - the site of William Wallace’s defeat of the English armies of Edward I, “Longshanks” of the Braveheart legend. 5) The Temple of Djeser Djesru at Deir el Bahri - the Temple of Hatshepsut, the female pharaoh of the 18th dynasty, in Luxor Egypt. 6) Carnak in France - The standing stones outside the town of Carnac in Brittany. Although the stones date from 4500 BC, modern myths were formed which resulted from 1st century AD Roman and later Christian occupations, such as Saint Cornelius. A Christian myth associated with the stones held that they were pagan soldiers in pursuit of Pope Cornelius when he turned them to stone. Brittany has its own local versions of the Arthurian cycle. Local tradition claims that the reason they stand in such perfectly straight lines is that they are a Roman legion turned to stone by Merlin. Included in this episode is an homage to the WWII fallen at Omaha Beach. 7) The Opium Trail - from the Forbidden City in China to the East Indian Trading Company, we trace the great opium trail, and the founding of western capitalism. China, being the focal point of occultist activity from ancient days will include the ancient palace of the emperors to the Great Wall and onward. 8) Hereford and Garway Church - adorned with symbols and iconography that belie a much more ancient origin; the Map of Mundi, the largest medieval world map known to exist. 9) Rosslyn Chapel - is touted as being one of the most mysterious places in Scotland, purportedly with hidden secrets that lurk within every crack of stone at this venerated place. The exquisite carvings are some of the best in the whole of Europe, and portray scenes not found in any other 15th century chapel. It has become a kind of Mecca to those interested in the mysteries of life, and contains many carvings relevant to biblical, masonic, pagan and Knights Templar themes. 10) The Burrows Caves - in southern Illinois, Russell E. Burrows discovered the caves and claimed they contained a number of Egyptian and Phonecian artifacts. 11) Rennes-le-Château became the focus of sensational claims during the 1950s and 1960s involving Blanche of Castile, the Merovingians, the Knights Templar, the Cathars, the treasures of the Temple of Solomon, the booty of the Visigoths that included the Ark of the Covenant and the Menorah from the Temple of Jerusalem. From the 1970s onwards claims have extended to the Priory of Sion, the Rex Deus, the Holy Grail, ley lines, sacred geometry alignments, the remains of Jesus Christ, alleged references to Mary Magdalene settling in the south of France, and even UFOs. Well-known French authors like Jules Verne and Maurice Leblanc are said to have left clues in their novels about their knowledge of the “mystery” of Rennes-le-Château. 12) Vercingetorix and the Battle of Alesia - In 52 BCE, one Celtic tribal leader maintained a stand against Julius Caesar, by uniting the Gauls in a revolt against Roman forces during the last phase of Julius Caesar’s Gallic Wars. 13) The Little Big Horn - the “Greasy Grass,” where in July of 1876, an armed engagement between combined forces of the Lakota, Northern Cheyenne, and Arapaho tribes, against the 7th Cavalry Regiment of the United States Army framed the ill-fated “last stand” of General George Amstrong Custer. 14) Wounded Knee - where in 1896, U.S. Cavalry forces massacred over 100 Native Americans who gathered to dance the Ghost Dance of peace. Later, the site of the American Indian Movement’s standoff with federal forces in 1974. 15) Hadrian’s Wall - the fortress built by Roman emperor Hadrian to keep the Pictish tribes of Scotland north of Britania. 16) Fort Ticonderoga - In 1759, during the French & Indian War, Montcolm and his French forces battled the English at this fort formerly known as Fort Carillon - standing on the spit between Lakes George and Champlaign in upstate New York. One can still walk the 250-year-old battlements and trenches through the haunted forests around the fort. 17) The Monastery of St. Simeon - Surrounded by the deseet sands of the Sahara, outside Aswan on the Nubian border to Egypt, is the fortress-like 7th century Monastery of St. Simeon. It was first dedicated to the 4th century local saint Abba Hedra, who renounced the world on his wedding day, and was rebuilt in the 10th century, dedicated to St. Simeon. From here the monks traveled into Nubia, in the hope of converting the Nubians to Christianity, until Salah ad-Din destroyed the monastery in 1173. Through the centuries the place was a Roman fort and settlement and a bastian of Chritianity. The halls still echo with voices from the past. 18) Robin Hood Never has a more enigmatic legendary figure existed than that of the outlawed nobleman who stole from the rich and gave to the poor. But did he ever really exist? Following the old King’s Highway, exlporing the forests of Barnsdale and Leeds, north of the traditional Sherwood in central England, there are countless connections to the Robin Hood legend, some dating back into the 12th century. The Duo makes a pilgrimage to the various sites associated with the legendary Prince of Theives and root out the real man behind the legend, as well as the figure’s curious connections to the Templars and the “Hidden Hand.” 19) Culloden Moor - In 1746, Bonnie Prince Charlie (Charles Edward Stuart) and his ragtag army of Highland Scot Jacobites, met the superior forces of Lord Cumberland on the marshy wetlands of Culloden Moor, outside Inverness near the shores of Loch Ness in Scotland. It was at this decisive battle that the Scots were completely routed and the Hanoverian monarchy established its superiority over the Stuart line. The moor is still palpable with the ghosts of the fallen Highlanders. 20) Serabit el Khadim - On the quest for the historical Moses, Ward and Roberts visited the little mountain of Serabit el Khadim under the protection of Shiek Barakat in the Sinai wilderness. It is atop this mountain that stands the ancient ruins of the Temple of Hathor, the calf goddess of Egypt, and it is here that 19th century archaeologist Flinders Petrie bleieved believed to be the famed “Mountain of God” from the Old Testamnet scriptures. 21) King Arthur - From his legendary birth at Tintagel on the stormy coast of Cornwall to his Knights of the Round Table at Camelot, Arthur has lived on for 150 years as a symbol of the earliest unifying king of the Britons. But his life and deeds are so much the stuff of myth and legend, that deciphering the facts from the fantasy has been the task of many an Arthurian scholar. The lads traverse the English and Welsh countryside, searching through the historical clues to the existence of this monarch, raised to power by the great Merlin of the Britons. 22) Glastonbury Tor - Rising high above the flatlands surrounding the village of Glastonbury is the enormous hill of Glastonbury Tor, said to be the ancient Isle of Avalon when it was once surrounded by lakes in the basin below. In myth it is said that one who has the power of the enchantment can part the mists and see the mystic Isle standing in place of the barren hill that is adorned today only by the single tower of Glastonbury Cathedral’s ruins. What is the connection to King Arthur in this holiest of places, where the earth grids crisscross and the sacred well still pours fresh waters? 23) Newgrange, Ireland - is a prehistoric monument in County Meath, Ireland, about 1000 feet north of the River Boyne. It was built about 3200 BC, during the Neolithic period, which makes it older than Stonehenge and the Egyptian pyramids. The celestial alignment figures greatly into the precession theory that the structure was used as an ancient calendar in the same fashion as many other structures of the period. 24) The Fae and the Sacred Wells The Fey - or faery - is a type of mythical being or legendary creature in Celtic folklore, a form of spirit, often described as metaphysical, supernatural or preternatural. Various folkloristic traditions refer to them euphemistically, by names such as wee folk, good folk, people of peace, fair folk (Welsh tylwyth teg), and they were originally worshiped as minor goddesses. In the teachings of Theosophy, they are believed to help to guide the operation of the processes of nature such as the process of evolution and the growth of plants. Their appearance is reputedly like colored flames about the size of a human being. In Roman Catholic tradition, smaller, less important, evolutionarily undeveloped minor angels are called nature spirits, elementals, and fairies. Scattered around the British Isles, and especially in Ireland, and many wells and springs attributed to be the place of the Fae. We will explore the various sacred sites an how Christianity usurped them. Debating ancient Inscriptions on the climb up Serabit el Khadim, in the Sinai Desert 25) Jerusalem and King David - Jerusalem is the capitol city of the ancient Israelites, and was founded by the, some say, mythical King David in the tenth century BCE when he sacked and claimed the city of Salem, founding his own City of David.” It was here that David’s son Solomon is said to have built the Temple, and brought the Queen of Sheba into his court. Dr. Eilat Mazar, Israel’s leading archaeologist wil join Ward and Roberts as they seek to find the historical underpinnings of the biblical ancient Isrtaelite monarchy, uncovering the ancient City of David and his great Keep and Palace in the City of Jerusalem. From there, the lads travel to the Valley of Elam, where according to Israelite tradition, David, as a young man, slew the giant, Goliath. 26) Petra - In Jordan, through a narrow passge in the mountains, lies the rock-hewn city of Petra, also known as the Rose City for its pink colored stone. Founded in the late fourth century BCE, the city was home of the Nabateans and is listed in the Amarna Letters of Egyptian conquest. The vast majority - 85% of the city - is still underground and untouched. Its significance as a major center of trade waned after the Roman occupation, and the city fell into obscurity in the clefts of the Jordanian mountains and the sands of the desert for centuries. c h a r a c t e r s Scotty Roberts is publisher of the eclecticly focused Intrepid Magazine, and author of several books focusing on ancient historical mysteries, ancient aliens and paleo-contact. Roberts’ formal education was in theological seminary. He is anillustrator, public speaker, stand-up philosopher and historian. Scotty is co-author of The Exodus Reality with Dr. John Ward, and they are also working on their new release, The Lost Armies of Cambyses. Scotty’s other books include: The Rise and Fall of the Nephilim (non-fic) The Secret History of the Reptilians (non-fic) The rollicking Adventures of Tam O’Hare (fic), author and illustrator c h a r a c t e r s Dr. John Ward is a British historian, Egyptologist, archaeologist and anthropologist with over a dozen years experience living and working in Egypt with his fiancé, the gorgeous, blond-haired, blue-eyed Swedish archaeologist, Dr. Maria Nilsson, at the ancient quarries of Gebel el Silsila on the River Nile. Ward has spent the bulk of his “off-time” calculating and cataloguing the connectivities between ancient Egypt and the Royal Houses of Europe, via the symbolism found from antiquity, making its way through the Templars and to modern day.
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