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{{otherpeople|John Michell}} {{otherpeople|John Michell}}


'''John F. Michell''' (born 6 February ]) is an ] philosopher and a prolific writer on subjects including ], ], ], "]", ]s i.e "]", ], and the lives of noted ]s. He is also a columnist for an English publication called "The Oldie". '''John Michell''' (born 06 February ] in London) is an ] philosopher and a prolific writer on subjects including ], ], ]s, ], the lives of notable ]s and gamatria (also spelled gematria). Gamatria, a key to studying ancient texts, is the study of words turned into numbers. In Greek and Hebrew there are no numeric characters, only alpha characters.

Michell was educated at ] and ]. John Michell, educated at ] and ], served in the Royal Navy. He qualified as a Russian
interpreter and Chartered surveyor before publishing his first book.


==Books== ==Books==
His better known works include ''The Flying Saucer Vision'' (1967), ''The View Over Atlantis'' (1969, later revised as ''The New View Over Atlantis'', 1986), which stimulated renewed interest in ], ''City of Revelation'' (1972), which concerns ], ''A Little History of Astro-Archaeology'' (1977) and "Who Wrote ]?'"(1996), an investigation of the many claims and counter-claims about the identity of the bard. He has also produced a series of "Radical Traditionalist" pamphlets urging a return to the principles of ]. In one of these, ''A Defence of Sacred Measures'', he questions the use of the ]. His better known works include ''The Flying Saucer Vision'' (1967), ''The View Over Atlantis'' (1969, later revised as ''The New View Over Atlantis'', 1986), which stimulated renewed interest in ], ''City of Revelation'' (1972), which concerns ], ''A Little History of Astro-Archaeology'' (1977) and "Who Wrote ]?'"(1996), an investigation of the many claims and counter-claims about the identity of the bard. He has also produced a series of "Radical Traditionalist" pamphlets urging a return to the principles of ]. In one of these, ''A Defence of Sacred Measures'', he questions the use of the ].

In 1996, he also published on the question of ], favouring
] or ], besides ] in what was judged a "lame study" and an "unconvincing piece of shaky scholarship" by '']'' (1996).


==Paintings== ==Paintings==
Michell is also a painter whose works have been displayed at prestigious venues such as his 2003 show at the Christopher Gibbs Gallery in London. His oils from the 1960s are in major collections. Michell's vast "Execution of the Emperor Maximillian" in the Jane Ormsby Gore Collection is a case in point. Christopher Gibbs called his later geometric water colours, "rainbow fragments of eternity, echoes of the divine." Michell is also a painter whose works have been displayed at prestigious venues such as his 2003 show at the Christopher Gibbs Gallery in London. His oils from the 1960s are in major collections. Michell's vast "Execution of the Emperor Maximillian" in the Jane Ormsby Gore Collection is a case in point. Christopher Gibbs called his later geometric water colours, "rainbow fragments of eternity, echoes of the divine."


==Reception== ==Overview==
Critics of Michell's work range from those who consider him eccentric to those like fellow author ], who says, "It is not too much to say that John Michell is a prophet." Godwin, a professor at Colgate College in Hamilton, N.Y., wrote the introduction to ''Confessions of a Radical Traditionalist'', a collection of essays culled from Michell's long-running monthly "An Orthodox Voice" column in "]", which provides a convenient introduction to Michell's ideas for those unfamiliar with his work.
{{NPOV}}
Critics of Michell's work range from those who consider him eccentric to those like Joscelyn Godwin, who says, "It is not too much to say that John Michell is a prophet." Godwin wrote the introduction to ''Confessions of a Radical Traditionalist'', a collection of essays culled from Michell's monthly "An Orthodox Voice" column in "]", which provides a convenient introduction to Michell's ideas for those unfamiliar with his work.


Paul Broadhurst, in the Introduction to "The Measure of Albion" wrote of John Michell and his co-author Robin Heath, that "two of the most experienced and respected researchers into the wisdom of the ancients each present their own perspective on a discovery, one which reveals how ancient wisdom was preserved within the landscape...". A recurring theme, seen in his books from "Living Wonders" to "Twelve Tribe Nations" to "The Measure of Albion", is of universal truths codified in nature and discovered by humankind over and over again, a path leading from ancient societies to today. Paul Broadhurst, in the Introduction to "The Measure of Albion" wrote of John Michell and his co-author Robin Heath, that "two of the most experienced and respected researchers into the wisdom of the ancients each present their own perspective on a discovery, one which reveals how ancient wisdom was preserved within the landscape...". A recurring theme, seen in his books from "Living Wonders" to "Twelve Tribe Nations" to "The Measure of Albion", is of universal truths codified in nature and discovered by humankind over and over again, a path leading from ancient societies to today.

Revision as of 16:21, 22 November 2007

For other people named John Michell, see John Michell (disambiguation).

John Michell (born 06 February 1933 in London) is an English philosopher and a prolific writer on subjects including archaeoastronomy, sacred geometry, sacred sites, Fortean phenomena, the lives of notable eccentrics and gamatria (also spelled gematria). Gamatria, a key to studying ancient texts, is the study of words turned into numbers. In Greek and Hebrew there are no numeric characters, only alpha characters.

John Michell, educated at Eton College and Cambridge University, served in the Royal Navy. He qualified as a Russian interpreter and Chartered surveyor before publishing his first book.

Books

His better known works include The Flying Saucer Vision (1967), The View Over Atlantis (1969, later revised as The New View Over Atlantis, 1986), which stimulated renewed interest in ley lines, City of Revelation (1972), which concerns sacred geometry, A Little History of Astro-Archaeology (1977) and "Who Wrote Shakespeare?'"(1996), an investigation of the many claims and counter-claims about the identity of the bard. He has also produced a series of "Radical Traditionalist" pamphlets urging a return to the principles of Platonism. In one of these, A Defence of Sacred Measures, he questions the use of the metric system.

Paintings

Michell is also a painter whose works have been displayed at prestigious venues such as his 2003 show at the Christopher Gibbs Gallery in London. His oils from the 1960s are in major collections. Michell's vast "Execution of the Emperor Maximillian" in the Jane Ormsby Gore Collection is a case in point. Christopher Gibbs called his later geometric water colours, "rainbow fragments of eternity, echoes of the divine."

Overview

Critics of Michell's work range from those who consider him eccentric to those like fellow author Joscelyn Godwin, who says, "It is not too much to say that John Michell is a prophet." Godwin, a professor at Colgate College in Hamilton, N.Y., wrote the introduction to Confessions of a Radical Traditionalist, a collection of essays culled from Michell's long-running monthly "An Orthodox Voice" column in "The Oldie", which provides a convenient introduction to Michell's ideas for those unfamiliar with his work.

Paul Broadhurst, in the Introduction to "The Measure of Albion" wrote of John Michell and his co-author Robin Heath, that "two of the most experienced and respected researchers into the wisdom of the ancients each present their own perspective on a discovery, one which reveals how ancient wisdom was preserved within the landscape...". A recurring theme, seen in his books from "Living Wonders" to "Twelve Tribe Nations" to "The Measure of Albion", is of universal truths codified in nature and discovered by humankind over and over again, a path leading from ancient societies to today.

Harcourt Brace Janovich, the publisher of his "Eccentric Lives and Peculiar Notions", wrote that "his "The View Over Atlantis" (1969) helped to change the attitudes of a whole generation to the culture, wisdom, and science of ancient and traditional societies."

In the words of Patrick Harpur (from the flyleaf of "Confessions of a Radical Traditionlist") the noted author of "Daimonic Reality", "If Socrates were to write a column, this would be it." Michell has shared his discoveries of the sacred mysteries of the ancient world and the living wonders of the present world through a steady steam of books, articles and pamplets from "The View Over Atlantis" to the "Old Stones at Lands End". His manifestos include the rediscovery of the Temple at Jerusalem and the sacred geometry of its design.

Partial Bibliography

  • 1969 The View over Atlantis
  • 1972 City of revelation: On the proportions and symbolic numbers of the cosmic temple
  • 1974 Flying Saucer Vision
  • 1974 The old stones of Land's End
  • 1977 Phenomena: A book of wonders
  • 1979 Natural Likeness: Faces and Figures in Nature Thames and Hudson Ltd, ISBN 0-525-47584-2
  • 1982 Megalithomania: Artists, Antiquarians & Archaeologists at the Old Stone Monuments
  • 1983 The New View over Atlantis
  • 1984 Eccentric Lives and Peculiar Notions Thames and Hudson Ltd, ISBN 0-15-127358-8
  • 1985 Stonehenge - Its Druids, Custodians, Festival and Future , Radical Traditionalist Papers
  • 1989 The Traveller's Key to Sacred England
  • 1989 Secrets of the Stones: New Revelations of Astro-Archaeology and the Mystical Sciences of Antiquity
  • 1989 Rushdie's insult, Radical Traditionalist Papers
  • 1989 Earth Spirit: Its Ways, Shrines and Mysteries
  • 1991 Twelve Tribe Nations and the Science of Enchanting the Landscape, with Christine Rhone
  • 1994 At the Center of the World: Polar Symbolism Discovered in Celtic, Norse and Other Ritualized Landscapes
  • 1996 Who Wrote Shakespeare?, Thames and Hudson Ltd, ISBN 0-500-01700-X
  • 1997 New Light on the Ancient Mystery of Glastonbury
  • 2000, with Bob Rickard, Unexplained Phenomena: Mysteries and Curiosities of Science, Folklore and Superstition, Rough Guides, ISBN 1858285895
  • 2000 The Temple at Jerusalem
  • 2001 The Dimensions of Paradise: The Proportions and Symbolic Numbers of Ancient Cosmology Adventures Unlimited, ISBN 0-932813-89-5
  • 2001 A Little History of Astro-Archaeology
  • 2005 Confessions of a Radical Traditionalist (collected essays, ed. Michael Moynihan) Dominion Press, ISBN 0-9712044-4-6.
  • 2006 The Lost Science of Measuring the Earth: Discovering the Sacred Geometry of the Ancients, with Robin Heath, , Adventures Unlimited Press, ISBN 1931882509

External Links

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