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Writer's pictureIosua Ioane Fānene

#VIRACOCHA was the #Inca Sun God VI, Lakota WI, Sāmoan UI; Egyptian TAWY?



#VIRACOCHA was the #Inca Sun God

VI = WI = #UI = tawy

#Tagaloa-a-UI was the son of the #Sun #God Tagaloa-#Lā and the #Moon #Goddess #Sina-#Pele-#UI-#Lani, of #Sāmoa (#Hina and Pele of Hawai’i) and the #founder of #prehistoric Sāmoa.

WI-RĀ-CO-CHA UI-LA-TAŪATI-SÂ

The Inca legend says that Viracocha “Disappeared across the #Pacific Ocean”.

Egyptian hieroglyphs describing the ancient gods / ancestors from the ZEP TEPI use the characters TP and WY.

WY = plural marker and the various homophones of WY generally indicate duality, or plurality. For example, 𓈃 means "two lands" and is pronounced /tawy/, or /TA UI/, where TA means "land" or "earth". W can also be rendered as a quail 𓅱 and appended as a suffix makes a noun plural.

The duality of WI in Lakota in reference to the sun and moon deities seems to echo the duality of the Egyptian use of the word as well as the Polynesian use as in the tale of TAGALOA-LĀ and UI (SINA).

LĀ AND UI.

Sun and Moon.

UI (an epithet of the Polynesian Sun God, perhaps a memory of the oracular aspects of UI.LU.ŠA, or ‘Ilios, or Helios, the Luwian Sun God and patron deity of prophecy who preceded the Greek Apollo).

TEA (“white” - a descriptor often applied to the moon and moon goddess or things consecrated to the moon). This may be a remnant and gender bent memory of TIWAZ, the Luwian moon god. Off-site links: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viracocha

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