
Forbidden History
Forgotten Age of Giants
Darius Arkwright(Author)
MATRIX WISDOM (Publisher)
Published on 6. May 2026
Book
Paperback/Softback
276 pages
979-8-233-06179-0 (ISBN)
Description
FORBIDDEN HISTORY: FORGOTTEN AGE OF GIANTS
What if the legends were never meant to be myths?
Across the ancient world, civilizations separated by oceans, languages, and thousands of years preserved the same haunting memory: a forgotten age when giants walked the Earth. They appear in sacred scriptures, royal chronicles, tribal histories, buried tombs, and the ruins of vanished civilizations. From the Nephilim of the ancient Near East to the Titans of Greece, from the giant kings of Egypt to the red-haired giants remembered in Native American traditions, the story returns again and again with astonishing consistency. Forbidden History: Forgotten Age of Giants journeys deep into this mysterious legacy, exploring the lost world of colossal rulers, demigods, pre-Flood civilizations, and the ancient memories humanity refuses to forget.
Blending mythology, archaeology, sacred texts, ancient history, and controversial discoveries, this book investigates the enduring global traditions surrounding giant beings and the civilizations connected to them. Explore the Watchers and the Book of Giants, the sons of Anak, Atlantis and the Titans, the giant pharaohs of Egypt, Lovelock Cave and the Paiute legends, oversized relics, mysterious skeletal remains, and the possibility that humanity inherited the Earth from an earlier and more powerful age. Rather than dismissing the ancient accounts as fantasy, this work examines why so many cultures preserved the same extraordinary traditions and why giants remain connected to the origins of kingship, catastrophe, and civilization itself.
Forbidden History: Forgotten Age of Giants is a journey into the shadows of forgotten antiquity, where myth, memory, and lost history converge. For readers fascinated by ancient mysteries, forbidden archaeology, biblical enigmas, lost civilizations, and the hidden origins of mankind, this book opens the gate to one of humanity's oldest and most controversial legends: the memory of a world that came before our own.
More details
Series
Edition
Large type / large print edition
Language
English
Edition type
Large type / large print edition
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Unsewn / adhesive bound
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
Thickness: 15 mm
Weight
404 gr
ISBN-13
979-8-233-06179-0 (9798233061790)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Darius Arkwright is a scholar-editor whose work moves at the intersection of narrative, archaeology, and the enduring human fascination with origins. As Chief Editor and Senior Writer for Matrix Wisdom Podcast and Media Publishing, he has shaped a body of work that explores ancient civilizations not as distant relics, but as living systems of thought-encoded in stone, myth, and memory. His writing bridges the academic and the atmospheric, bringing together rigorous historical inquiry with a carefully measured sense of wonder.
Arkwright's academic grounding lies in Comparative Ancient Civilizations, with a specialization in Ancient Near Eastern Studies and Archaeoastronomy. His research interests extend across Egypt, Mesopotamia, and the civilizations of Mesoamerica, where he examines the interplay between cosmology, architecture, and cultural identity. He is particularly known for his work on symbolic systems-how ancient peoples expressed complex theological and astronomical ideas through monuments, ritual spaces, and mythological narratives. His approach avoids easy conclusions, favoring instead layered interpretation and cross-cultural synthesis.
Within Matrix Wisdom, Arkwright serves as both curator and architect of ideas. He oversees editorial direction, develops long-form research series, and guides the tone of the platform toward a balance of intellectual discipline and evocative storytelling. His voice-measured, precise, and quietly intense-has become a defining element of the brand, often leading audiences through subjects such as forgotten knowledge traditions, the philosophical underpinnings of myth, and the possibility that ancient cultures encoded far more sophisticated understandings of the cosmos than is typically assumed.
Colleagues describe him as meticulous and exacting, yet deeply imaginative. He is known to spend long stretches immersed in primary texts, inscriptions, and site reports, often reconstructing broader cultural frameworks from fragments others might overlook. At the same time, he maintains a storyteller's instinct, ensuring that even the most complex material retains clarity and narrative momentum. This dual nature-scholar and narrator-has positioned him as a distinctive voice in contemporary discussions of ancient history and esoteric traditions.