This began with reading about the Bayeux Tapestry in the light of New Chronology and my own emotional resistance to something that now makes COMPLETE SENSE. I will return to the whys and wherefores another time but the postulation is that the Bayeux Tapestry doesn’t depict the Battle of Hastings 1066 but the Sack of Constantinople 1204.
I know! Utter madness (!?)
If this is correct then ‘1066 and all that’ is just a Paper Twin of another event. Which is my polite way of saying that our 11th/12th century British History is a crock of ….!
So, have I wasted three years of my life researching a false history? Well…No. So why?
Because I know stuff and can make connections that I wouldn’t otherwise be able to do. Bear with me as we take a look at Brân the Blessed – the mythological hero of Welsh History,

Brân the Blessed
Brân the Blessed or Bendigeidfran or Brân Fendigaidd, (“Blessed Raven/Crow”) was a Giant and High King of the Island of the Mighty. His story is best known through the Second Branch of The Mabinogion story of Branwen ferch Llŷr.
Branwen was the sister of Bran and she is married off to the Irish King who treats her very badly. With the help of a starling, she sends word to her brother who takes up arms in her cause and ends up badly wounded.
Brân tells his friends to cut off his head. return it to Britain and bury it under the White Hill.
Historians have come to think that the White Hill meant the place where the Tower of London now stands because of its association with ravens (!) etc etc
So – as the later legend goes- Brân the Blessed’s head was buried in London facing East towards France and it was the guardian of our nation. Whoever should disinter this head would leave us open to war and invasion.
King Arthur of Glorious Fame can’t have believed these old stories for he is said to be the one who dug up the head and plunged us into eternal warfare. Whatever and so on.

Thank you for staying with me so far ;o) Just a bit more waffle before I get to the point.
Google Translate does my head in. Reading Russian texts “translated” by GT day after day does my head in, but, yesterday it did me a huge favour.
Reading about Cicero, the Gospels, Andronicus Comnenus, 1204, Isaac Angelos ….John the Baptist – I came across the name Vran. It took a while to work out that Vran referred to Alexios Branas, a general of Emperor Andronicus, who was unfortunate enough to have had his head chopped off!
The point of this post about Paper Twins…….AT LAST.
If Andronicus Comnenus is who I’m beginning to feel he is, then he had an older brother called John.
The Forerunner?
Mainstream sources are very foggy about John Comnenus’s story but I’m thinking that Alexios Branas is John Comnenus’ Paper Twin and we can learn about the fate of brother John through Vran/Bran/Alexios Branas.
Think about it :o)
