The Origin of Numbers

We use our number system, countless times every single day, taking it for granted: after all we assume that
numbers have always been here.

But have you ever wondered where our numbers came from and how our system for counting came to be?

An ancient civilisation created and named our numbers using the heavens – journey back in time and listen to them speak.

Join Hugh Evans, author of ‘The Origin of the Zodiac’ on a journey back in time to listen to our ancient ancestors, and understand once again, the origin of our number system.

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You can count on Hugh Evans to explore, explain and enumerate the multiple fascinating connections between the Welsh script of the ancient Broitons and Hieroglyphs of Egypt

Martin Gray, World Pilgrimage Guide, sacred sites.com

An ideal companion to The Origin of the Zodiac that reinforces the author's expertise, attention to detail and passion for how Ancient British has informed so much of what we take for granted today.

College Lecturer

The greatest Neolithic story on Earth

The Origin of the Zodiac

Cadair Idris and the
Star Maps of Gwynedd

The Star Maps are the key to a language and culture that connects all the ancient civilisations, back in time to the Gods before the Great Flood.

black sun icon illustration

Somewhere on Earth, sometime in the distant past, the Constellations of the Zodiac, as we know them today, came into existence...

Only now rediscovered, covering 1,500 square miles. 1,000,000 acres:
the Star Maps of Gwynedd, Wales.

Centered on the sacred mountain of Cadair Idris, the Star Maps are the Origin of the Modern Zodiac.

Hugh Evans has made sense of the language of the antediluvian culture that mapped age stars. In doing so he can retell the ancient stories of the night sky.

Technology CEO

To understand our past, ancient astrology and astronomy must be seen together. Hugh Evans lifts the forgotten star maps of North Wales out into the light for all to see.

Author of “Unlocking the Mysterious Kolbrin: Genetic and Global Cataclysms / Sacred and Scandalous Egypt”

The Origin of the Zodiac by Hugh Evans book cover

The Origin of the Zodiac

Cadair Idris and the Star Maps of Gwynedd

The Origin of the Zodiac has been rediscovered in Gwynedd, North Wales. The features on the ground in North Wales actually determined the choice of stars for the constellations in the heavens above. If true, the Star Maps of Gwynedd may change everything we believe about our recent history.

Hundreds of hours of painstaking research, hieroglyph interpretation and language translation identify all the features of the present zodiac and circumpolar constellations across the land features of Gwynedd. This information is presented in maps of the ground and star maps correlated with the same in the night sky above. The myth is explained and retranslated, as are the landmarks and the corresponding astrological icons associated with each of the signs of the zodiac.

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A fascinating read! Clearly tirelessly researched and definitely thought provoking.

Airline Pilot

I feel enlightened and intrigued. The author’s passion comes across and brings the book to life…

Healthcare professional

Field Journal

It was again a sunny day when we visited Llanelltyd. We parked across the river [OS grid ref: SH719192] and walked over the beautiful stone bridge, its arches bed on the washed gravel of the meandering Afon Mawddach below.

This bridge was a medieval link between the Abbey and village when the river was in flood, perhaps previously an ancient ford. Today, true to its name, ‘he fluid expands’ peacefully out towards the sea. The path rose the the church, perched on the north road on the way out of town.

Everything matches so well, there is no way this can be a coincidence!

Videos

Watch all of the Origin of the Zodiac videos

The Plough: Ursa Major

Locating The Plough on the ground

A star map of the Ursa Major constellation
A map of Cadair Idris in Wales

At the celestial azimuth, the top of the celestial sky, are the constellations that are visible: the circumpolar constellations. The clearest and most well known are The Plough and The Little Plough, with Polaris at the end of its ‘tail’.

From Polaris we can try to position The Plough, much brighter and clearer than its smaller companion, The Little Plough. Now the majesty and grandeur of the Cadair Idris range’s sensational peaks come to the fore. Soaring peaks west along the ridge of Cadair Idris are like the stars along the length of The Plough.

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