Six of Eight Branches — This Cannot Be Coincidence

“Such a coincidence is, I’m going out on a limb here, IMPOSSIBLE. So, we are left with, the third possibility: A common source (note that immanent in Common is the sacred M-N- sound).”

Source: The M-N- Sound · Manuscript Section 12 (Who was Menua?)

The “three possibilities” argument (coincidence, borrowing, common source) resolved in favour of common source. The parenthetical noting M-N- in “common” is characteristically self-referential.

The count is now six of eight branches: Vedic India (Manu), Germanic (Mannus), Celtic (Érimón / Manannán / Manawydan), Greek (Minos / Rhadamanthus), Armenian (Menua), and Iranian (Aryaman) — the celestialized Treasurer who gave his name to Iran and whose mythological descendant manifests as Yama, Manu’s twin, and the first self-sacrificing monarch in Indo-European Indian culture. The earlier “five of eight” formulation predates the explicit recognition of Aryaman as the Iranian branch’s M-N- founding figure.


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