The Supernova of 1054 Part III
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So far, the Supernova of 1054 has been traced in impact on both the Southwest Native Americans, the split of the Catholic Churches, and the abandonment of the Native American city of Cahokia. The date of the occurrence of July 4th would seem indicative that the signing of the Declaration in Philadelphia on the same date some 700+ years later would not be a coincidence. Indeed, there is a trail of evidence to suggest it is not.
The document that became the US Constitution was influenced, in part, by an older document that was developed be a person named “The Peacemaker” who was instrumental in bringing about an alignment of the Iroquois in 1142:
“The Great Peacemaker brought peace to the five nations,” explains Oren Lyons in a 1991 interview with Bill Moyers. Lyons is the faithkeeper of the Turtle Clan of the Seneca Nations, and a member of both the Onondaga and Seneca nations of the Iroquois Confederacy.
At that time, the nations of the Iroquois had been enmeshed in continuous inter-tribal conflicts. The cost of war was high and had weakened their societies. The Great Peacemaker and the wise Hiawatha, chief of the Onondaga tribe, contemplated how best to bring peace between the nations. They traveled to each of the five nations to share their ideas for peace.
A council meeting was called, and Hiawatha presented the Great Law of Peace. It united the five nations into a League of Nations, or the Iroquois Confederacy, and became the basis for the Iroquois Confederacy Constitution.
“Each nation maintained its own leadership, but they all agreed that common causes would be decided in the Grand Council of Chiefs,” Lyons said. “The concept was based on peace and consensus rather than fighting.”
source: https://www.pbs.org/native-america/blog/how-the-iroquois-great-law-of-peace-shaped-us-democracy
The story that the above link refers to approaches potentially mythological proportions, but one thing that stands out is another version of the story from a different tribe:
In the Haudenosaunee oral history of how their confederacy came to be, the Seneca received a ‘sign in the sky’ to ratify the Great Peace. Scholars from the University of Toledo, Jerry Fields and Barbara Mann, felt this could be used to challenge the scholarly consensus of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy forming in the 15th century CE. According to their theory, the ‘sign in the sky’ the Seneca had seen was a solar eclipse. Using this data, Mann and Fields searched for solar eclipses that had occurred in western New York state at the site of the treaty’s ratification, Ganondagan. Their findings showed that a solar eclipse had indeed occurred in Ganondagan, but not in the 15th century CE. Rather, they found the eclipse had taken place in August 1142 CE some four centuries earlier than most scholars believe the Haudenosaunee came together.
source: https://www.worldhistory.org/article/1656/origins-of-the-haudenosaunee-iroquois-confederacy/
Whatever the case, the resulting agreement forged looks remarkably similar in certain respects to the US Constitution:
source: https://www.pbs.org/native-america/blog/how-the-iroquois-great-law-of-peace-shaped-us-democracy
This, as will be seen, will have immediate consequences for other tribes, as well as the future US. The echoes of Peacemaker and the star the Maji followed to the “Prince of Peace” is also a strong connection.