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Skeletons Of Napoleon's Soldiers Show Signs Of Starvation



Ary Scheffer, The Retreat of Napoleon’s Army from Russia in 1812


As snow lashed across their faces, archaeologists quickly excavated a mass grave in Vilnius, Lithuania.  The jumbled bones, haphazardly oriented, were punctuated with finds of shoes and clothing. Buttons revealed the identity of the dead: over 40 different regiments were represented, all from Napoleon’s Grande Armée. Archaeologists had found the final resting place of over three thousand men who perished during Napoleon’s retreat from Moscow in 1812. Now, new chemical analyses of the bones are revealing where these soldiers hailed from and just how difficult it was to find enough to eat. Napoleon’s exploits are well-known from history. In an attempt to prevent invasion of Poland by Russian Czar Alexander I, Napoleon decided to invade Russia first. He started out with around 675,000 men who came from all over Europe; French, Germans, Polish, Lithuanians, Spanish, and Italians, however, made up the majority. This Grande Armée dwindled on its advance to Russia, then retreated when the czar refused to surrender and there were no supplies for the army in Moscow. By the time the army got to Smolensk, Russia, there were just 41,000 soldiers remaining.  July 25 http://goo.gl/7UDLca

The mass grave containing as many as 2,000 French soldiers who fought for Napoleon Bonaparte during the War of 1812 was unearthed in a Vilnius suburb. The news report from Forbes is dated July 25, just a day after the First Quarter Moon in the lunar cycle that began with the New Moon of July 16.





A New Moon chart for Vilnius, Lithuania has  Neptune [9pi] conjunct the MC and in hard aspect to the luminaries in the Ascendant.  A New Moon that highlights  a retrograde Neptune is referring to an event from the past when there was defeat, disillusionment, physical exhaustion, debilitation  and the ebbing away of life energy. Neptune is conjunct stars of the Chinese asterisms Hiu-Liang and Fan-Mou, which presided over graves, tombs, mausoleums and uninhabited places.  On the horizon axis is Mars-Pluto in hard aspect to Saturn and the TNP Admetus. For the combination, Mars-Saturn-Pluto, Ebertin’s keyphrase is “the death of a great many people”…when combined with the TNP Admetus that stands for “cold” we can see how well it describes the Grand Armee’s retreat.

The New Moon itself is conjunct the star Pollux, beta Geminorum which Diana Rosenberg associates with “great historic battles, invasions and invasion attempts”.





A chart for the July 24 First Quarter Moon adds further details. It aspects the asteroid Ceres, related to food and nourishment or the lack of it in the 6th house associated with armies as well as food [1]. The Moon phase at Vilnius, Lithuania has the Moon [0sc] very significantly placed on the 4th cusp. The 4th house is linked to the grave and conditions at the end of life. It is conjunct the stars Miaplacidus, beta Carinae of Argo and pi Bootis of the Herdsman.  About these stars Diana Rosenberg writes:

The gathering, organizing and shepherding instincts of the Herdsman combine with Argo’s second brightest star to bring about huge enterprises and mass movements: these stars were transited in 1519 when Ferdinand Magellan’s expedition left Spain to circumnavigate the world; in 1804 when the Lewis and Clark Expedition, the 1st overland exploration of unchartered territory of the western US started out; in 1835 at the start of the “Great Trek” of the Voortrekkers from Cape Colony in South Africa; at the 1846 “Miracle of the Quail” on the Mormon pioneer trek to Utah to escape murderous mobs, destitute refugees were visited by a great flock of quail, allaying the threat of starvation; in 1934 at the start of the 7,500 mile “Long March” of 100,000  communist Chinese troops through almost impassable terrain to escape extermination campaigns: only about 10,000 survived [2].

An invasion plan that has been disappointing….a long march….dwindling food and resources...all the elements of Napolean’s retreat are here!

[2] Secrets of the Ancient Skies; Diana K. Rosenberg (v.2, p.147-150)

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