Wednesday, August 28, 2013

666

666 - the number of children Adonicam who returned from Babylon to Jerusalem (the Jews from exile). (Ezra 2:13).












666 (number)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For the year 666 AD, see 666.
← 665 666 667 →
List of numbers — Integers
← 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 →
Cardinal six hundred and sixty-six
Ordinal 666th
(six hundred and sixty-sixth)
Factorization 2 · 32· 37
Roman numeral DCLXVI
Binary 10100110102
Ternary 2202003
Quaternary 221224
Quinary 101315
Senary 30306
Octal 12328
Duodecimal 47612
Hexadecimal 29A16
Vigesimal 1D620
Base 36 II36
Greek numeral χξϛʹ[1]
Chinese numeral 六百六十六
Arabic numeral ٦٦٦
666 (six hundred and sixty-six) is the natural number following 665 and preceding 667.
In mathematics

666 is the sum of the first 36 natural numbers (i.e.  1 + 2 + 3+ ... + 34 + 35 + 36 = 666), and thus it is a triangular number. Notice that 36=15+21; 15 and 21 are also triangular numbers; and 15^2+21^2=225+441=666.

Since 36 is both square and triangular, 666 is the sixth number of the form n^2(n^2+1)/2 (sequence A037270 in OEIS) and the eighth number of the form n(n+1)(n^2+n+2)/8 (doubly triangular numbers) (sequence A002817 inOEIS).

The number of prime numbers up to 666 is 121, which is the square of 11, which is the number of prime numbers up to 36.

666 is an abundant number.

The harmonic mean of the decimal digits of 666 is (trivially – all repdigit natural numbers have this property) an integer: 3/(1/6 + 1/6 + 1/6) = 6, making 666 the 54th number with this property.

In base 10, 666 is a repdigit (and therefore a palindromic number) and a Smith number. A prime reciprocal magic square based on 1/149 in base 10 has a magic total of 666.

The Roman numeral for 666, DCLXVI, has exactly one occurrence of all symbols whose value is less than 1000 (D=500, C=100, L=50, X=10, V=5, I=1).

(60 and 360 were used as bases in Babylonian mathematics, as in the degrees of a circle; 360=10x36 and 666 is the sum of the numbers from 1 to 36.)

666 is 1010011010 in the binary numeral system which is the same as its one's complement in reverse digit order.

666 is a member of the indices of prime Padovan numbers: 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 14, 19, 30, 37, 84, 128, 469, 666, 1262, 1573, 2003, 2210, ... (sequence A112882 in OEIS).

The Number of the Beast

666 is often associated with the Devil.

Main article: Number of the Beast

In the Textus Receptus manuscripts of the New Testament, the Book of Revelation (13:17-18) cryptically asserts 666 to be "the number of a man," associated with the beast, an antagonistic creature that appears briefly about two-thirds into the apocalyptic vision. Some manuscripts of the original Greek use the symbols chi xi stigma (or digamma), while other manuscripts spell out the number in words.

In modern popular culture, 666 has become one of the most widely recognized symbols for the Antichrist or, alternatively, the Devil. The number 666 is reportedly used to invoke Satan. Earnest references to the number occur both amongapocalypticist Christian groups and in explicitly anti-Christian subcultures.

References in contemporary Western art or literature are, more likely than not, intentional references to the Beast symbolism. Such popular references are therefore too numerous to list.

It is not uncommon to see the symbolic role of the integer 666 transferred to the digit sequence 6-6-6. Some people take the Satanic associations of 666 so seriously that they actively avoid things related to 666 or the digits 6-6-6. This is known ashexakosioihexekontahexaphobia.

In some early biblical manuscripts, the number is cited as 616.

Other occurrences

In the Bible, 666 is the number of talents of gold Solomon collected each year (see 1 Kings 10:14, 2 Chronicles 9:13).

In the Bible, is the number of Adonikam's descendants who return to Jerusalem and Judah from the Babylonian exile (see Ezra 2:13).

In the Bible, there may be a latent reference to 666 in the name of the great sixth-century B.C. king of Babylon. Commonly spelled Nebuchadnezzar, transliterating from the book of Daniel, the name is Nebuchadrezzar or Nebuchadrezzur in the book of Jeremiah (see Jeremiah 49:28–30). The number of each name can be calculated, since Hebrew letters double as numbers (see Hebrew numerals). Nebuchadrezzar is 663, and Nebuchadrezzur, 669. Midway between the two variants is 666. If the mysteries of Jeremiah are to be related to those of Revelation, Nebuchadrezzar, who came (though bidden by God) to crush God’s people, may prefigure the end-times beast.

Using the same system in Hebrew of generating a number from the letters of a name, Neron Caesar written in Hebrew produces the number 666.  Thus in the Bible, 666 may have been a coded reference to Nero the Roman Emperor from 55 to 68 CE.
In Kabbalistic Judaism, 666 is the number which represents the creation and perfection of the world. The world was created in 6 days, and there are 6 cardinal directions (North, South, East, West, Up, Down).

666 float in a Paris parade
is the magic sum, or sum of the magic constants of a six by six magic square, any row or column of which adds up to 111.
is the sum of all the numbers on a roulette wheel (1 through 36).
was a winning lottery number in the 1980 Pennsylvania Lottery scandal, in which equipment was tampered to favor a 4 or 6 as each of the three individual random digits.
was the original name of the Macintosh SevenDust computer virus that was discovered in 1998.
The number is a frequent visual element of Aryan Brotherhood tattoos.
Aleister Crowley adopted the namesake 'the Great Beast 666'. As such, 666 is also associated with him, his work, and his religious philosophy of Thelema.
The most common carbon isotope (Carbon-12), the basis of all known life on Earth, consists of 6 protons, 6 neutrons and 6 electrons



Cвоими вычислениями и размышлениями по поводу числа 666. Так я считаю что Все пути Истинны, но только один из них ведёт на возрождение, иные на разрушение и падение. Поэтому и при исчислении мы тоже видим двойственность рассуждений и каждый должен сам решить для себя, что ему ближе по духу.
Идея о духовном возрождении человечества присутствует во всех религиях, и она же способна примирить их. Согласно древнему пророчеству – из рода царя Давида (потомков Моисея) придёт Мессия. Конечно, в это уже никто не верит, но, само пророчество таит глубокий смысл, и только тот, в ком сила слова, сможет подтвердить пришествие своё, как это уже было, и тем царём объявлен был Иисус, который обещал вернуться.
Глаз ВселеннойС тех пор Христом себя считали многие, но никто из них не был признан миром, значит, должно быть что-то кроме дел его и взгляда, что подтвердит его причастность к роду царя Давида. Не потому ли было сказано: «Здесь мудрость. Кто имеет ум, тот сочти число зверя, ибо это число человеческое; число его шестьсот шестьдесят шесть».
Чтобы объединить народы, необходимо примирить религии, а чтобы примирить религии, необходим для всех один ведомый (избранный самой Истиной). А чтобы смог он активировать себя, в книгах был заложен ключ (число) – печать пророков. Хотите верьте, хотите нет, но полное имя автора данной версии в дословном переводе значит: Возрождённый – Сын ведущего правильным путём – внук Моисея, а сложив значения букв, получится число 666. (152 + 63 + 88 + 150 + 79 + 51 + 83 = 666).
Фактически, само имя его говорит о новом пришествии, а фамилия и отчество – отражают жизнь и путь представляющего собой Истину, ведь первичным письменным источником авраамических религий является Тора, которая основана на изречениях Моисея, это значит, и объединить их сможет только сам Ведомый – представляющий собой всех, Моисея, Иисуса,  Мухаммад.

666: What's in a Number?2005 10 18
By Lon Milo DuQuette | fatemag.com
Picked up from: conspiracyarchive.com

666 cough syrup
Are you afraid of the number 666? If you were issued an automobile license plate or a telephone number that included a string of three sixes would you ask for a different number? Do you think the number 666 is inherently evil? Do you believe any number can in and of itself be evil?

The issue of FATE magazine that you are holding in your hands right at this moment is issue number 666. The 666th word in this article is "dead." Does this make you just a little bit nervous?

If it does, you are not alone. There is a name for your condition - "Hexakosioihexekontahexaphobia" - the fear of the number 666.

Everyone has at least one or two superstitions that we feel somehow comfortably obliged to observe. My father was a geologist and a high-degree Freemason. He was for the most part a very logical and scientific man. Still, he was oddly superstitious about little things like spilling salt and walking under ladders.

For a lot of people the number 666 is particularly terrifying. After all, it's the devil's number, isn't it? For the better part of 2,000 years many in the Western world have certainly thought so. What is it about these three digits that makes so many of us uncomfortable?

The Revelation of St. John
The dreaded number makes its first and only appearance in the last book of the New Testament, the Revelation of Saint John the Divine (often mistakenly called Revelations) - a book that for centuries has been interpreted by theologians as a document prophesying the terrible events that will take place at the end of the world.
Early Church fathers decided that John, the author of the Revelation, was the same John who wrote the Gospel According to John (the last of the Four Gospels). Modern experts from a wide range of religious and non-religious persuasions agree this is probably not the case. The style of the Greek writing and other obvious differences suggest the two books were penned by different individuals.
Currently, many Bible students are reassessing other theories concerning the Book of the Revelation - exactly when it was written and what it was originally trying to communicate. There is now a growing consensus among scholars that what John was actually describing (in veiled imagery understandable to his contemporary audience) was not the millennial end of the world, but an expose' of the all-too earthly details of the horrendous holocaust at the hands of the Romans that ended the second Jewish revolt in a.d. 72. This event destroyed Jerusalem and the Jewish Temple and dispersed the Jews.
For our purposes it really doesn't matter. The fact remains that the book has become a permanent fixture in the cultural consciousness of Western civilization. So let's look for a moment at what tradition informs us about John, the man Jesus called his "beloved disciple."
After the crucifixion John was arrested and banished to the tiny isle of Patmos in the Aegean Sea, a place renowned in the ancient world for two things: its barren isolation and the fact that the powerful hallucinogenic mushroom Amanita muscaria grew there in abundance. We will never know for certain whether or not John (knowingly or unknowingly) was influenced by the magic mushroom. He does, however, take care to tell the reader that he was "...in the Spirit on the Lord's day" when the vision began, and few can deny his book does indeed read like a classic shamanistic or psychedelic experience.
The vision is peopled with an awesome array of strange and terrible characters: seven angels; four horsemen; a lamb; a lion; an eagle; a dragon; locusts with tails like scorpions and heads like long-haired women; a woman clothed with the sun, with a moon under her feet; the archangel Michael; Babylon the Great, the mother of harlots and abominations; and of course the Antichrist. There are wars and plagues and what sounds suspiciously like an asteroid collision with the earth. Lots of people die, and the good dead people are rewarded while the bad dead people are made to wish they were deader. It's written in such a way to make you feel pretty darned worried, even if you're confident you'll be one of the good dead people.

In chapter 13 we meet two beasts, one from out of the sea and the other from out of the earth. The first beast has seven heads and ten horns, and looks like a leopard with the feet of a bear and the mouth of a lion. To this beast is given power and authority from a great fiery dragon - the serpent called the "Devil and Satan" (a character who was introduced to us in a preceding chapter). The second beast comes out of the earth and has two horns like a lamb, and speaks like a dragon. This beast is identified by a numeric code in the last verse of chapter 13:
"Here is wisdom. Let him that hath understanding count the number of the beast: for it is the number of a man: and his number is Six hundred threescore and six."
This second beast performs all sorts of miracles that confuse most everyone about just exactly who are the good guys and who are the bad guys in this whole messy affair. The book is so cryptic that it is open to almost infinite interpretations. It is not at all clear whether or not this Beast 666 is the Antichrist, or the Antichrist's friend, or exactly what. It is all very frightening and bewildering, and biblical scholars and theologians have debated for centuries over just who's who and what it all might mean.

The Second Beast
One thing seems clear, at least on the surface: the second beast (Number 666) is somehow in cahoots with the dark forces that work their mischief to bring about the end-time events. The idea that has tantalized people for 2,000 years is the thought that this key player in the end-of-the-world drama is not some invisible angel or spiritual abstraction but a flesh-and-blood man - a man we might be able to identify by his number.
How can a number represent a man? The obvious answer is numerology - but what system of numerology - Hebrew? Greek? Latin? Aramaic? English? Nobody really knows.
John's book was written in Greek by a Jew who spoke Aramaic (the language spoken by Jesus and his disciples), and he lived in a Roman-occupied world. Hebrew, Greek, Latin, and Aramaic are all written in alphabets whose letters also represent numbers. It's anybody's guess which - if any - of the languages should be used to count the number of the beast.

The earliest Christians (who believed the world was going to end immediately) used Aramaic, Greek, and Hebrew numerology to finger as 666 the wicked Roman emperor Nero (whose monstrous reign parallels the horrors of John's vision), and many ancient and modern experts agree.

But, since the apocalypse didn't happen in the first century (at least not in the way predicted in the Revelation), people have been eagerly looking forward to the end of the world, seeking out individuals they don't like and trying to make their names add up to 666. Likely candidates have been Martin Luther, Henry VIII, Robespierre, Napoleon Bonaparte, George Washington (and his alleged Illuminati double, Adam Weishaupt), Lenin, Adolf Hitler, Stalin, Chairman Mao, Franklin Roosevelt, Winston Churchill, Harry S. Truman, Prince Charles, King Juan Carlos of Spain, Mikhail Gorbachev, Bill Clinton, Osama Bin Laden, and both George Bushes - and, oh, I almost forgot, all the Popes.

Anyone Can Be 666
It takes some doing, but given enough time (and armed with the numerological tricks of the Hebrew, Greek, Aramaic, Latin, and English alphabets), you can make anyone's name add up to 666. But there is one thing that all these accused beasts have in common: none of them actually came right out and confessed to the world that they were the "Beast 666."
There was, however, one man in the not-too-distant past who proudly claimed the title. His name was Aleister Crowley, and during his lifetime the newspapers called him "the Wickedest Man in the World."
Chances are if you have heard anything about Aleister Crowley it probably wasn't very good. During his lifetime and for many years after his death his reputation has been that of perfectly nasty man - a black magician. Admittedly, for Victorian England he was a pretty wild character. If he were alive today, however, I'm afraid he would not be considered very frightening at all. In fact, in the last few years several excellent and very well-researched biographies of Crowley have been published that have dispelled many untrue rumors and false accusations, including some very compelling (and remarkably un-evil) reasons why he would claim the title of the Beast 666.
World's Wickedest Man

Aleister Crowley
Paradoxes define the life and careers of Edward Alexander (Aleister) Crowley (1875 - 1947). He was a very strange man who often behaved like a cad and a scoun­drel. Notorious as he was, however, he was never charged with, arrested for, or convicted of any crime whatsoever. Apparently his greatest "crime" was that of poor judgment. He believed that any publicity was good publicity and he happily cultivated a public reputation for being a black magician. He thought everyone would get the joke. Unfortunately, few people during his lifetime got the joke or appreciated his genius.
Be that is it may, he led quite a life. Among other distinctions, he was a world-class mountaineer, chess master, painter, poet, sportsman, novelist, literary critic, and theatrical producer. As ghostwriter for Evangeline Adams, he introduced astrology to the modern world by writing the two most popular books on the subject ever penned, Astrology: Your Place in the Sun (1927) and Astrology: Your Place Among the Stars (1930).
One of the most astonishing roles Crowley played on the stage of world events was that of secret agent. At a moment in history when the United States was seriously considering entering World War I on Germany's side, Crowley, working undercover for British Intelligence, secured a job writing for an English-language German propaganda newspaper in New York. There he wrote a series of outrageous and insanely inflammatory editorials that hailed Kaiser Wilhelm as the new Jesus Christ, advocated unrestricted submarine warfare against all of the world's civilian shipping, and boasted that it was God's will that Germany rule the world.
These wild statements did not reflect Germany's foreign policy, but the citizens of the United States did not know that. In short order Crowley's editorials were being quoted by U.S. senators and congressmen who used them as evidence that Germany was a nation gone mad. The U.S. finally joined the conflict on England's side largely due to Crowley's ingenious disinformation campaign.
At the request of his friend, naval intelligence officer Ian Fleming (creator of James Bond 007), Crowley provided Winston Churchill with valuable insights into the superstitious mindset of the leaders of Hitler's Third Reich during the Second World War. He suggested that Churchill exploit the Nazis' magical paranoia by being photographed as much as possible giving the two-fingered "V for Victory" gesture - a powerful symbol of destruction and annihilation that, according to magical tradition, is capable of defeating the perverted solar energies represented by the Nazi swastika.
Crowley's adventures and achieve­ments, more than any dozen men of ambition and genius could hope to garner in a lifetime, are dwarfed by his monumental exploits of spiritual self-discovery. His visionary and mystical writings and his efforts to bring together the spiritual systems of East and West make him one of the most fascinating cultural and religious figures of the 20th century.
Crowley Reborn - Frequently
Crowley's reputation did not die with him in 1947. His mystique continues to such a degree that today he is the favorite past life of many individuals who are, shall we say, unbalanced. Over the years I've met quite a few individuals who have claimed with grim-faced conviction to be Aleister Crowley reborn. By the late 1970s I had logged so many encounters with "Aleister Crowley #2s" that I was contacted by famed occultist Israel Regardie (one-time secretary to Crowley) who suggested he and I pool our letters and anecdotes and publish them in a book titled Liber Nutz.
My favorite case was a gentleman in Southern California who self-published a spiral-bound book supporting his claims. Regardie forwarded me his information and suggested I go to the book-launching party at the man's home to investigate. I thought it might be fun, so I went.
This incarnation was a pleasant enough fellow in his mid-20s with a thick, dark beard that nearly obscured his entire face. His book displayed his own photograph alongside one taken of Crowley in his late 20s. Crowley's photo, however, had been altered by the addition of a thick black beard, drawn in crayon, which obscured his face so much that the images of the two men did indeed look very much alike. I resisted the temptation to comment that both pictures also looked very much like Che Guevara.
When I revealed that I was somewhat knowledgeable about the life of Aleister Crowley, the dear man became very excited. With poignant sincerity he confessed, "I don't really have any memories of my life as Aleister Crowley, but if you would be kind enough to tell me things about his life, I'm sure I'll be happy to remember."
Youthful Rebel
Let's return to Crowley himself and try to see why he identified so passionately with the Beast 666.
Crowley's father was a lay preacher of the Plymouth Brethren, a fundamentalist Protestant sect. His mother was also a devout (Crowley says "fanatical") member of the church. Together they did their best to raise their son within the strict tenets of the faith. However, young Crowley was a mischievous and headstrong lad, and his mother equated his behavior to the rebelliousness of the devil himself. In moments of aggravation she called him the "Beast 666." He loved the idea. As he grew up he delighted in identifying with the name and number as representative of all things joyously opposed to the spiritual, intellectual, emotional, and sexual restrictions that he believed enslaved the human soul.
As a young man, just beginning his study of Hebrew and Christian mysticism, Crowley discovered that the number 666, rather than being a number associated with evil, was especially sacred to the life-giving powers of Sun. It was also identified with the heart chakra (or psychic center) in the human body - also called in other traditions the Christ center.

The "magic square of the sun". Image source: greatdreams.com
To understand why 666 is a magick number of the Sun, we must turn to the sacred teachings of the Hebrew Kabbalah where it is taught that the sphere of the Sun is the sixth emanation from the pure essence of God. To express this concept mathematically (something Kabbalists love to do) a square is composed of 36 squares (6 x 6). The numbers 1 to 36 are then arranged in a balanced way so that every row and every column add to the same number. That number is 111, and the sum of all the squares is 666.
Little Sunshine
Crowley tried to explain this in court when he testified in a 1934 lawsuit. He was asked, "Did you take to yourself the designation of 'the Beast 666'?"
"Yes."
"Do you call yourself the 'Master Therion'?"
"Yes."
"What does 'Therion' mean?"
"Great wild beast."
"Do these titles convey a fair impression of your practice and outlook on life?"
"It depends on what they mean."
"The Great Wild Beast and the Beast 666 are out of the Apocalypse?"
"It only means sunlight; 666 is the number of the sun. You can call me 'Little Sunshine.'"
Crowley believed that spiritual ages on earth are determined by humanity's evolving level of consciousness, and that around the turn of the 20th century we did indeed enter a new age. A new age naturally means the "end of the world" of the previous age. In Crowley's dramatic and colorful mind, the Book of the Revelation of Saint John the Divine provided the perfect narrative of this cosmic event.
For Crowley, the Whore of Babylon, the great Dragon, and the Beast 666 now represent perfectly wholesome spiritual characters who are instrumental in bringing about the birth of a new and eventually wonderful age.
Of course, not everyone will appreciate Crowley's point of view or his admiration of the number 666. But the 21st century is a kinder, gentler place for the memory of the wickedest man in the world. Even his native England, whose opinion of him in life was so terribly misguided, has now awakened to the fact that the man who called himself the Beast 666 was a national treasure. In 2002, the BBC conducted of poll of 30,000 Britons, asking them to vote for the person who was in their opinion the "Greatest Briton of All Time." Named number 73 in the top 100 (sandwiched between King Henry V and Robert Bruce) stands the "famous poet, author and philosopher, Aleister Crowley."
Wrong Number?

A fragment from the oldest surviving copy of the New Testament. Image source:americanvision.org
The number 666 is strange and wonderful. But what would happen if we were to discover that there had been some kind of mistake and that 666 was not the number Saint John referred to in the 17th verse of the 13th chapter of his book? Would the nature of evil change? Would satanic rock bands have to change their tattoos?
Maybe they'll have to. Recently a 1,500-year-old papyrus manuscript was examined, using new technologies to "read" the heretofore illegible script. The document is written in Greek and is the oldest known version of the Book of the Revelation. The tiny fragment confirms what many scholars and churchmen have long suspected. The text actually reads:
"Here is wisdom. Let him that hath understanding count the number of the beast: for it is the number of a man: and his number is 616."

Lon Milo DuQuette is an internationally recognized occult studies expert. He is author of numerous books, including The Magick of Aleister Crowley.


666 - Its Meaning and Significance

Background
This article is based on an extract from the book The Keys to the Temple, which describes a vast twin circle landscape temple set out over the Marlborough Downs in England. The circumference of these circles is very closely proportional to the equatorial circumference of the Earth by the ratio 666.  See article: Keys part 1
The article explores some of the references to the number 666 and why it might have been seen as significant in past times.

What is so special about the number 666?
The Book of Revelations says:
 Here is wisdom. Let him that hath understanding count the number of the beast for it is the number of man; and his number is six hundred, threescore and six.
 Revelations (13:18)
Many people have associated 'the beast' with the anti-Christ and interpreted this quotation to mean the666 is the Devil's number. But the Book of Revelations is full of enigmatic numbers. For example, it talks about the measurements of the New Jerusalem:
 And he that talked with me had a golden reed to measure the city and the gates thereof. And the city lieth foursquare, and the length is as large as the breadth; and he measured the city with the reed, twelve thousand furlongs. The length and the breadth and the height of it are equal.
 Revelations (21:15-16)
A cubed city of twelve thousand furlongs would be of immense size particularly as it would reach 1500 miles into the air - the stuff of science fiction. St John might have glimpsed a distant technological future of planet Earth, but it is much more likely that the verse has symbolic rather than factual meaning. Number symbolism, found extensively throughout the Bible, is very significant in Judaic belief. Indeed, as I was to discover, the first mention of the number 666 is not Revelations, but the Book of Kings which say
  Now the weight of gold that came to Solomon in one year was six hundred, three score and six, talents of gold.
 Kings (10:14)
The name Solomon is derived from the Hebrew word Shalom, meaning peace, but has then been translated in the King James version as an alchemical amalgam of sol (sun), and omon (moon).
Alchemy, as it emerged in the Middle Ages, had its origins in the Hermetic sciences that stemmed from the esoteric wisdom of ancient Egypt. The ancient Egyptian name for their land was Kemet, from which we get the words chemistry and alchemy. The esoteric Judaic tradition seen in the Kabbalah is also thought to have derived some of its concepts from Egyptian beliefs.
In alchemy the sun and the moon expressed archetypal principles, which, when united, symbolised the harmonious relationship between the masculine and feminine elements.



Alchemical symbols of the Sun and the Moon
Sol and Luna
Gold in alchemy, represents the purified spirit and is also traditionally associated with the sun. The year, of course, relates to the solar cycle, so there is a suggestion in the Biblical quote from Kings of a link between the number 666 and the sun.
There is another mention of the number 666 in Ezra, referring to the peoples who had returned to Judah from Babylon:
 The children of Adonikam, six hundred, sixty and six.
 Ezra (2:3)
The word Adonikam means : 'In praise of the Lord.'
It is possible that the biblical references to 666 have no other meaning than what is presented on the surface. Yet St. John, in using the number 666, was connecting into a Judaic mysticism that used number symbolism allegorically. He was conveying a message that could be understood by those initiated in the tradition, although precisely what he meant is now obscure.
Coincidentally, the first six Roman numerals written in their correct descending order (DCLXVI) represent666:
D = 500
C = 100
L = 50
X = 10
V = 5
 l  = 1
Total 666
So it is possible that the allusion to 666, being the number of the beast, could have been a sideways swipe at the Roman authorities, who were responsible for the crucifixion.
The Magic Square of the Sun
 632334351
 7112728830
 191416152324
 182022211713
 25291092612
 365334231
The number 666 also emerged in another context- through the number symbolism of magic squares. As John Michell pointed out in his book View Over Atlantis the magic square of the sun contains all the numbers from 1 to 36 and is laid out as follows:
Total number of figures = 36
Sum of each row and long diagonals = 111
Sum of numbers of perimeter = 370

The magic square of the sun has the curious property that if all the numbers between 1 and 36 are added together the total is 666. That this number should again be associated with the sun - as in the Kings quotation mentioned earlier - may indicate some fragmentary knowledge or tradition from the distant past. Symbolic associations were undoubtedly important to ancient peoples. Yet it is likely that originally there was some valid practical thinking behind their number symbolism. We do not know what this can be, so we can only surmise.

To continue our investigation of 666, let's take a close look at the number itself. The factors of 666 are 2 x 3 x 3 x 37 or 18 x 37. The number 37 has the unusual properties that many of its multiples have repeated digits:
1 x 37=37
2 x 37=74
3 x 37=111
6 x 37=222
9 x 37=333
10 x 37=370
12 x 37=444
15 x 37=555
18 x 37=666
21 x 37=777
24 x 37=888

Glasonbury Abbey ground plan








Bligh Bond discovered that the ground plan of Glastonbury Abbey was based on a regular grid of squares of 74 ft or 888 inches.

Although a prime number, 37 strikes a subliminal chord within the human psyche, as psychological research into people's preferences has shown. Offered the opportunity to select at random any number between 11 and 50 with two non-repeating digits - not 22, 33, or 44 - people are most likely to select 37. This has recently been highlighted by the British National Lottery. The reason why this is so is not known, but it is a fact nonetheless.

Of its factors, the numbers 111 and 370 are woven into the magic square of the sun and the number 18 (18 x 37 = 666) may also have been seen as significant because this number is the sum of 6 + 6 + 6.
My research into 666 was tantalising but inconclusive. Nevertheless if ancient measurements are related to the size of the Earth and the number 666 has some ancient symbolic significance, it seemed relevant that the circumference of the Marlborough Downs landscape circles should be almost exactly equal the Earth's equatorial circumference by the ratio of 1/666

Extract from The Keys to the Temple
Useful Links follow on articles giving more details of other landscape patterns.
Twin circles of the Marlborough Downs explores sacred patterns of Wiltshire
Marlborough Downs Sites a tour of the sites that make up the twin circle pattern
The Cotswold Circle an article on a similar sized circle that over-lights the Cotswold area
The Hidden Geometry of Avebury a look at the hidden geometry of Avebury
Silbury Hill and the Sanctuary an article on significance of Silbury Hill and the Sanctuary
The Keys to the Temple information on the book The Keys to the Temple by David Furlong