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This paper summarises previously unpublished records relating to a series of unusual, and perhaps associated enclosed medieval settlements in the area of Akasha and Ukma West, excavated in 1969 by the Archaeological Survey of Sudanese Nubia. When excavated, one site, namely [21-N-11], which contained a small church, was thought likely to have been a monastery. An unusual site close by is also briefly discussed. Two other enclosed sites, and perhaps a further uncompleted example, have some features in common with the putative monastic site, although other functions may be considered. That some of these might relate to the historically recorded government ‘customs post’, the ‘Upper Maqs’, is also possible. While definitive identifications are not possible, a number of features of these sites, which cannot be easily paralleled elsewhere in Nubia, suggest their wider interest, and that they merit further study.
EN
The author performs an analysis of the Lord’s Prayer by juxtaposing its two versions present in the Polish edition of the Ecumenical Bible. He compares a longer narrative variant edited by St. Matthew the Evangelist (15 verses) with a version shorter almost by a half (9 verses), left by St. Luke the Apostle. He focuses on the word “Heaven” and the expression “Your Kingdom”, finding experimental cosmological references for them. The researcher, based on an etymological observation which states that the word “Akasha” means “heaven” in Hindi, locates the Kingdom in its New Testament sense in space understood as the Bank of Internal Data. The author concludes that the three units – Heaven, Akasha and the Kingdom of Heaven – are the synonyms of the IT space universe, the place of residence of the Most Perfect of the Consciousnesses, the Most Powerful of the “Universe Data Controllers”, namely, as understood by the followers of numerous religions – of God. The lack of cosmological elements in Oratio Dominica in St. Luke’s version substantially impoverishes people’s knowledge of their real place in Space and the existence of parallel worlds they may potentially communicate with by means of an exemplary prayer gifted to Christians by Jesus.
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