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Mystical force stirs spoon-bender Geller to splash out on 'pyramid of the Forth'

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Published Date: 12 February 2009
RELAXING in his luxury Thames-side mansion, Uri Geller, the world-famous spoon-bender, was suddenly riveted by an advert for the sale of a mystical Scottish island.
But while the prospectus for Lamb Island, off the east coast of Scotland, listed the disadvantages – "it is completely bare, and uninhabitable because it's so rocky, does not come with planning permission" – Mr Geller realised it was his chance to be part of a legend linking Robert the Bruce, King Arthur and the ancient kings of Ireland.

Mr Geller's attraction to Lamb Island, a volcanic outcrop in the Firth of Forth near Edinburgh, is its claim to be one of the three "great pyramids of Scotland", which mirror the layout of the pyramids at Giza, near Cairo in Egypt. The other islands are Craigleith and Fidra.

Last night Mr Geller, 62, who paid £30,000 for the island, said: "It might seem forbidding, but it is one of the keystones to British mythology, and I am thrilled to be its owner.

"I am fascinated by the connection between the pyramids and these islands. It has been known for centuries – you can read about it in a 15th-century manuscript called the Scotichronicon by Walter Bower, the Abbot of Inchcolm.

"So when I heard Lamb Island was for sale I felt a strong instinctive urge to buy it – and the more I delved into the history and archaeological lore that surrounds it, the more certain I became that this was one of the most significant sites in Britain."

According to research published by Jeff Nisbett, a historical investigator, in the magazine Atlantis Rising in September 2002, lines drawn between Scotland's three important Templar sites – Temple in Midlothian, Rosslyn Chapel and the Isle of May – cut through Craigleith and Fidra, with Lamb Island between them.

The Isle of May is believed by some scholars to be the real location of Avalon, where King Arthur was laid to rest.

Mr Nisbett said the three islands were arranged in precisely the same crooked line that marked the layout of the pyramids at Giza, built by the pharaohs 4,500 years ago.

The layout also matches the three stars known as Orion's Belt. Mr Nisbett also discovered that anyone standing on the battlefield of Bannockburn, where Robert the Bruce defeated the English in 1314, on the anniversary of the battle on 24 June, would see the three stars rise exactly over the three islands.

As well as the connection to Arthur and Bruce, the line extended from the Isle of May through Lamb Island will cross Tara, burial place of the ancient Irish kings.

Mr Geller added: "I am a great believer in what Carl Jung called synchronicity, the power of connections between things which are linked by forces we don't understand. And there are many clear synchronicities that come together on Lamb Island."

Mr Geller said he planned to visit the 1.2 acre island soon.

Lamb Island can be accessed only by a ten-minute journey by boat, and there are no landing facilities.

Michael Yellowlees, partner at the law firm Lindsays, which acted for Mr Geller, said: "He is profoundly interested in the folklore and mystery which surrounds the island and its links to other mystical sites within Scotland and further afield."

The previous owner, internet entrepreneur Camilo Agasim-Pereira, originally wanted £75,000 for the island.


Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 11 February 2009 9:27 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

,

12/02/2009 01:52:44
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
2

senza nome,

12/02/2009 02:06:10
#1:I don't see what Geller's religion has to do with Euro 96.
3

Yok Finney,

Ross-shire 12/02/2009 02:19:31
The New Physics suggests that Universe is teeming with intelligent life. They're bound to be checking out our solar system. My prediction is we'll see them land in Holyrood Park in 2009. Where else in so utterly steeped in myth, legend -- and science too! Let's hope they're good aliens and not afflicted with the forces of darkness as evidenced in humanitiy's leaders.
4

jnisbet,

USA 12/02/2009 02:29:51
Dear #3

An interesting photo of The Lamb, and the sky above it, can be seen at the following link:

http://www.mythomorph.com/mm/content/2005/0218incident_at_north_berwick.php

5

donald,

glasgow 12/02/2009 03:56:17
Silence of the bams.
6

Yok Finney,

Ross-shire 12/02/2009 06:40:57
#4,
That was a well presented and argued article and great photographs.

"You mean the moon (Iapetus) was built by aliens!" she was asking.

"I'd say reasonable people." (Thinking of the likes of Herd and Mackenzie, Jones of Buckie or the Ardrossan ship and moonbuilding co. For if you can construct proper fishing boats for Scotland's great waters, then moon-building's the next big step. From larch on oak to carbon nano-tubes. R Hoagland's got his best story yet at

www.enterprisemission.com/moon1.htm

An electric powered well-braced icosa seems the job for interplanetary voyages. Which would make a "flying saucer" an atmospheric (and subsea) disc-shaped moonship or EAMS to give it more technical cred. Bigger stuff's been reliably reported flying out of Icelandic waters.
7

Lee Hutchison,

Fife 12/02/2009 08:39:52
erm yeah ok, alien robots built an enormous wall 12 miles high and the fact that we can build massive skyscrapers in Dubai proves it would be possible......

how exactly ? how does anything we have done on this planet prove anything about what may or may not be possible on some icy moon hundreds of thousands of miles away ?

Why would any race of beings anywhere need a wall 12 miles high and 12 miles wide ?

Interesting ? maybe, plausible ? not very...

Oh and Rulesbutnorulers, just because someone dismisses this as rubbish does not make them a numpty anywhere except in your eyes.
I am quite prepared to believe that there is intelligent life out there but to point to wee dark blotches on a sketchy photo taken from a probe floating thousands of miles away from the planet surface, and then to hold them up as some sort of evidence.....stretching things just a wee bit I think
8

Yok Finney,

Ross-shire 12/02/2009 09:10:20
The beginning of the story:

In early 1856, JCM decided to return to Scotland to be nearer his ailing father, accepting an appointment to Marischal College in Aberdeen. When St. John's College at Cambridge announced that the subject for the following year’s Adams Prize was “The Motion of Saturn's Rings,” Maxwell decided to compete for the prize. His research concluded that stability could be achieved in Saturn’s rings only if the rings consisted of numerous small solid particles, an explanation confirmed about 140 years later by the Voyager spacecraft. Maxwell's findings won him the Adams Prize and acclaim for making one of the most remarkable applications of mathematics to physics ever seen.

Apparently "communicating his ideas to other people was not his strongest point." Which hardly surprises me. Einstein said, “One scientific epoch ended and another began with James Clerk Maxwell.” Many believe this quiet man to have had the greatest impact of anyone ever born on Scottish soil.
9

Tweedmouth,

Coldstream 12/02/2009 09:52:52
Mr Geller saidL
""I am a great believer in what Carl Jung called synchronicity, the power of connections between things which are linked by forces we don't understand."

Like the connection between his bank account and the gullible idiots who pay to watch his spoon-bending and other fatuous rubbish. "There's one born every minute": P.T. Barnum
10

AJ Fife,

12/02/2009 09:59:35
Well done to the estate agent who sold the useless lump of rock to the arch loony tune.

Never forget the 'hot air balloon over Wembley' shenanigans!
11

nSyratzcGlaw,

12/02/2009 10:08:33
12 :)

No doubt I will be called a numpty in the past (i can predict this due to my powers) but i think this is a load of rubbish.

Expect more ludicrous nonsense from this friend of michael jackson fiend as he gets older and nearer to his coffin, where he cant bend spoons or media anymore.

The penalty at euro 1996 was a good one though Uri.

"During the big game Geller hovered 1,200 feet above the stadium clutching 11 energized crystals - one for each England team member - plus a giant crystal he uses "to receive and transmit positive thoughts."

I see.

12

Brodric,

12/02/2009 10:14:31
Wonderful. Life - and the mystery of life - is around us and its not all about the credit crunch.
13

W U Merchant,

Aberdeen 12/02/2009 10:32:15
Message to Uri Geller - help!

Alex Salmond.
14

The Scotchman,

12/02/2009 11:16:27
Message to Uri Geller - help!

Gordon Broon more like
15

nSyratzcGlaw,

12/02/2009 11:22:44
Political infighting over THIS ?!

Give us a break !
16

Ewan Oosami,

12/02/2009 11:27:36
Urine Geller (to quote his full name) must be running out of ways to attract publicity. 1200ft above Wembley? yeh, in his mind! what is he on FFS? and a friend of Michael Jackson? says it all really!
17

Syrsa,

Davie, Florida USA 12/02/2009 11:36:19
This is kind of reminiscent of....

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NQu_RRLbVDA
18

response,

Syd 12/02/2009 11:44:24
The end is near och.
19

Geraldine Firequeen,

Pits of Nelson 12/02/2009 11:47:29
I don't see how the three stars of Orion's belt could be 'seen to rise over the three islands'. As seen from earth, they are close together - I don;t know how close the islands are, but they don't sound very close - has anyone a picture, or seen this? I followed the link to the article which, while very interesting, did not illustrate this. I like the thought that ufos move so fast that we never see them (most of the time) so they could be all around - watching me write this even
20

Tartan Viking,

12/02/2009 11:52:38
#15, & #16

Message to Uri Geller. Help us all. God help us all.

Uri - any chance you could use your spoon-bending talents on the House of Commons mace and put it in Comrade Broon where the sun don't shine?
21

Penguin of Alba,

12/02/2009 12:16:43
The pyramids of Giza are aligned north-east to south-west, with the south-westmost pyramid (Pyramid of Menkaure) offset slightly to the east. The islands of Craigleith, Lamb and Fidra are aligned east to west, with the middle island (Lamb) offset to the south. In what way does this "mirror" Giza (or does Mr. Geller intend to bend them into place)?
22

nSyratzcGlaw,

12/02/2009 12:18:44
21

Why would a UFO be watching you write on here. I mean honestly. Why ? Why would that be ?

Would you like to buy a big load of fish ?
23

nSyratzcGlaw,

12/02/2009 12:20:08
23

Maybe the Ancient Egyptians travelled to scotland and studied the alignment of three humps of rock in the firth of forth and based the pyramids upon their geographical positions.

Or maybe this is just f*ing stupid.
24

Calum Crubag,

12/02/2009 12:38:16
Never took Rulersnotrules for a gullible.

Seems like more mumbo-jumbo. Just cause their might be things we don't know doesn't mean that we believe them before we get proof.
25

Calum Crubag,

12/02/2009 12:39:05
#25 - If First Scotrail had their way, the Egytptians would've gone nowhere or else it would've been a train without heating.
26

gordon'sboomhasbust,

glasgow 12/02/2009 12:40:48
The only good thing about this is that Uri wasted £30K on a lump of rock. Lamb to the slaughter. Mind you knowing his luck he'll probably find oil on it.
27

Yok Finney,

Ross-shire 12/02/2009 12:52:16
Well they did travel to Scotland, that why it's called so.

French ships were often better than English ones in the old-style navy days, so we'd capture one, measure it up, and see how it was put together. So something similar could have been done with alien disc-craft (as car manufactures do this sort of thing) But with the best scientist-engineers on the planet and a huge "black-ops"budget amazing advances are possible. So disc-craft could be theirs, or out of our secret military projects.

If aliens (or humans) could read my mind, they'd be doing better than me alot of the time. But it's quite feasible with modern scientific knowledge.
28

Louis Catorze,

12/02/2009 12:58:25
Apparently if you extend a line vertically above the exact geographical centre of Lamb Island, it will disappear up Uri's er5e.
29

nSyratzcGlaw,

12/02/2009 12:59:11
Yok , I have no idea what you just tried to say there, can you run it past me again ?

Geller is a trickster and a proven fraud , and the fact that he "bends spoons" by slight of hand in order to make money is just pathetic.

He cant bend occams razor :)

Now , all you sad and lonely people hoping for something more in life other than the things that are real and tangible - tell me what it is you want so badly and I will sell it to you.
30

bertiblunt,

12/02/2009 13:06:53
ufo sighting are becoming more frequent and there are numerous reports going back thousands of years of ufo sightings, the governments of this world have been hiding information from us for years. One example is the dogon tribe who had a vast knowledge of the solar system ...including sirius B that modern day astronomers never discovered untill 1978. how the hell could primitive tribes know anything about the solar system ????
31

Ewan Oosami,

12/02/2009 13:19:22
#32 Have you read Eric Von Danikens books? it's full of things like that.
I think Urine Geller comes from Uranus
32

radge dug,

12/02/2009 14:42:38
#35 - eh? What's Geller got to do with the SNP?

I'm sure Geller's a new Labour man. Like Blair and Bush...he has a great talent for lying and boolscheidt -'those WMDs are there'.
33

Otis B. Driftwood,

Abroad 12/02/2009 14:44:54
35. Knees up Gordon Brown.. although it would be painful, I preferred the "House of Commons mace" idea at 17.
34

Brian the Barbarian.,

the slums 12/02/2009 14:55:22
my dad says his garden shed where he goes to meditate with the Pilipino maid has got magical powers.
he can't be all that psycic though because he gives me 50p to warn him when me mum comes back from the bingo.

Stll, Uri, you spoon bending semitical travesty, it's yours for £30,000.00 including the stains on the sofa.
Whaddja say ? whaddja say ?
35

Mcsnagpile,

12/02/2009 15:00:10
Uri is nae fool he is getting his foot in the door tae bend Alex's ear, not tae mention aw the lang spins in Fife.
36

Ewan Oosami,

12/02/2009 15:14:21
Maybe he's been invited to Scotland by Salmond to work some miracles for him...LOL
37

Sylvia in Regina,

Canada 12/02/2009 15:38:14

#4

Thanks for the great site!!! Wonderful pictures and a great story also.
38

Sylvia in Regina,

Canada 12/02/2009 15:50:18

#6

Thank you too for the site: "Moon with a View" - now this will be hours and hours of great viewing and reading...
39

Nellie,

Liverpool 12/02/2009 21:22:44
#11 Read what Jung said, what he defined as Synchronicity and then read about the respected Chaos Theory, then tell me if there is a difference. Mr Geller may be a nut, a fraud and magician or ... whatever; but he may well be right about Jung's idea of Synchronicity. In fact, to my mind, THAT seems perfectly feasible given that everything is a mass of molecules - there is nothing but molecules in between tighter masses of molecules (as objects) so what affects one mass of molecules may well have a domino effect on other masses of them half way around the World, or even all the way!
40

Timocracy,

12/02/2009 21:49:48
Everyone to their own.
41

For Scotlands Future,

Vote for the SNP 12/02/2009 22:38:13
Is "spoon-bender" a euphemism for something??

"Lamb Island can be accessed only by a ten-minute journey by boat, and there are no landing facilities."

How can the island be "accessed" when there are no landing facilities.
42

For Scotlands Future,

Vote for the SNP 12/02/2009 22:48:25
#8
It has been said that 20% of the worlds cranes were in Dubai during it's boom. There is now a heavy fine imposed on anyone publicly saying anything against Dubai, and all the foreign workers are now flocking to leave. Perhaps if there are aliens we should ask them how they managed to build a 12 mile high x 12 mile wide wall on a moon BILLIONS of miles away from their home, where the average temp is -200C, without going bust.

We should contract them urgently to build the new Forth Bridge (or is it the third forth bridge?).
43

Yok Finney,

Ross-shire 12/02/2009 22:57:01
Not aliens but engineers! How d'you build a moon? Well first you'd aquire one - like at a fish auction - you'd plant your flag on it then engineer it to your requirements. Constructing Iapetus is spherical engineering on a big scale (900 miles diameter) but it's clearly the same trade that once built the Forth Bridge.

Whereas to arrive in a modern scottish town center (eg Inverness) gives the impression that an utterly alien species must have designed it. I believe they call themselves architects and have a subtribe named town planners.

I liked Hoagland's quip that the 12 mile high flange round project Iapetus was because it was built in two halves then bonded together. Exactly like I'd do a carbon-fibre yacht! But it's more likely the external feature of the propulsion system.

Do us engineers ever consider the ethical dimension? Fess up, boys. You just liked building planes, missiles, jet bombers etc. and yince you've sold your soul, it's gone. Gone to the bad; and you've lost la grande amitié de choses criés that drives the noble profession.
44

John1,

Stirling 16/02/2009 13:31:49
Why has no-one pointed out that all the above proves that independence for Scotland is inevitable? The arguments presented are unbeatable.
45

John1,

Stirling 16/02/2009 13:33:06
Thought I'd get that in before sombody else did.

 

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