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SYLVAIN TRISTAN​


ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Sylvain Tristan is a secondary school and university English teacher in Chambéry in the French Alps. He has also lived in New York and Moscow.​
His first book, Les Lignes d'or (The Golden Lines), was published in France in 2005. In this essay he argues that all of the world's ancient capitals are located on Earth meridians and parallels belonging to the age-old, 366-degree geometry rediscovered a few years earlier by his friend and fellow writer Alan Butler.​
In his second essay, Atlantide, premier empire européen (Atlantis, First European Empire), published in 2007, Tristan contends that the myth of Atlantis is based upon the reminiscences of a real civilisation of sailors - the Megalithic civilisation.​
Although the author is fond of mysteries he is also a sceptic who thinks science is the only way to solve them. As a former magician he condemns pseudoscience of all kinds.
His first novel in English, The Divine Number, was published in 2012. In this thriller set in England and France, the author sums up Alan Butler's discoveries as well as his own modest findings, and reveals mind-blowing facts about the Earth, the Moon, the Sun, and the human body.​
In a recent essay entitled Numbers of the Gods, Sylvain Tristan synthesizes his discoveries, showing that 366-degree geometry is not only the world's first circle geometry, it is also a secret geometry still used by Freemasonry today.
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Sylvain Tristan's latest book: RE-DATING ANCIENT GREECE
Ancient Greece is one of the most fascinating cultures of antiquity. It is supposed to have flourished under the Mediterranean sun about 2,500 years ago.
Now what if you were told that Ancient Greece were not as ancient as conventional history claims it does? What if Greek chronology was considerably wrong?
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In a dizzying, revolutionary book that will make you travel both across the Med and through the centuries, you will learn that "Classical" Greece may have occurred less than a millennium ago, and might have been influenced by Vikings, Persians, Arabs and Mongols.
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Was Homer truly a member of the Saint Omer clan—Frankish knights who invaded Greece in the 13th century? Was the Parthenon built as late as the 14th century AD? And was Plato truly Pletho, a 15th-century philosopher?
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Sylvain Tristan's subversive hypothesis might overturn your certainties about what you think you knew of the Ancient World. Will you be bold enough to join the paradigm-shifting ride?
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