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Forgotten by modern medicine, praised by emperors and priests. |
The Anunnaki knew the properties of this metal very well, and in fact they passed this knowledge on to our ancestors. In ancient times, silver was already known for its properties. Silver vessels and containers were used to preserve liquids and prestigious banquets. During military campaigns, legionnaires immersed silver coins in their canteens. The reason? To avoid fevers, dysentery and infections. In ancient Egypt, silver was considered rarer than gold. They called it "the bone of the gods" and used it to purify water and heal the wounds of the pharaohs. Hippocrates, the "father of medicine", described silver as a healing and purifying remedy. The Greeks used silver cups and jugs, water was preserved longer and did not get moldy. In the Middle Ages, nobles ate only with silver cutlery. Mothers gave a pure silver spoon to their newborns, not out of vanity, but to protect them from epidemics. Before the arrival of antibiotics, doctors used colloidal silver to treat pneumonia, wounds and eye infections. Today it is still used as a natural antibacterial, but it has been overshadowed by the pharmaceutical lobbies. Why? Maybe it works too well? If a metal was used by pharaohs, emperors and doctors for millennia, why was it forgotten so quickly? Maybe it does not earn enough money. But those who know history have an extra weapon. (Tell me if you want me to write an article about gold too.) |