Billy:
Good, thank you. How were Minoa and the Minoan culture destroyed? Do
you know much about this?
Quetzal:
143. The history of the Earth and the history of nations fall into
my area.
145. Two factors were to blame for the fall of the Minoan culture,
namely on the one hand, the disorder of the Minoan society, which
was very divided in some respects and which created evil hatred in
the various social structures, even due to the disagreement that the
Minoan empire threatened to fall apart.
146. The cultural structures split apart, and soon, the whole thing
threatened to degenerate into a war of the entire citizenry and,
thus, of all levels of society.
147. But before this could happen, a tremendous natural disaster
occurred, namely as the Santorini Volcano erupted and burst forth
lava, gas, steam, and ash, whereby the ash
148. Also vast sulfur fumes belonged to this, whereby the whole
atmosphere was so polluted and shrouded in a veil that the Sun was
darkened, and climate changes emerged from this, which lasted for
several years.
149. Low temperatures arose from the veil of smoke and dust in the
atmosphere, which caused many years of harvest failures.
150. The bad and poor harvests led to the great famine during the
following period.
151. In addition, the Santorini volcano did the rest, for as a
result of its powerful eruption and the subsequent explosion – which
triggered gigantic tsunamis that devastated the large areas of the
Minoan island when the waters raged across the island – many
buildings and lands were destroyed, while very many people lost
their lives.
152. The largest tsunami, however, the huge tidal wave caused by the
explosion of the volcano, rolled far across the sea to Egypt, being
red with the blood of countless slaughtered aquatic animals, by what
means the river Nile then colored itself red, and many people in
Egypt died.
153. But the tsunami found no end in Egypt and rolled back into the
sea, where it united with another tsunami, which was generated by
the explosion of the Santorini volcano, and rolled eastward, where
the country was destroyed once again and people were killed, when
the wild waters penetrated into the country.