10) FYI…

This is too long to put into the final post about the Hidden History of the British Isles. But it is important. I don’t agree with everything that Alan Wilson, the Welsh Historian says, (The timelines are BS) but these are his own words about how the Cymric Coelbren alphabet was used to translate previously […]

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9) The Language Reset

Not all RESETS were huge, physical catastrophes. Some were much more subtle. And insidious – “gradually and secretly causing harm.” The last two posts about language were necessary because, to my mind, one of the greatest, invisible manipulations has been the LANGUAGE RESET. This is a subject that I intend to cover in depth (when […]

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7) Consonantal Alphabets

“Consonantal writing systems, as the name implies, represent the consonantal value of a syllable while ignoring the vocalic element. Such a system, therefore, would represent the syllables pa, pe, pi, po, pu with a single character. Such scripts have graphs for consonant sounds but not for vowel sounds, with the result that a certain amount of guesswork is involved in determining […]

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6) OK. I Lied!

I’m finished with the Brutus’s’s’s (Bruti?) for the mo’ But he will come back later. Along with Julius Caesar, Mark Anthony and Cleopatra. The next part of the True History of the British Isles will have Nothing to do with Britain, per se.   And…. It still won’t make sense. Hey. Whatever. It’s all a  […]

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5) Gogmagog

Let’s return to 3,000 years B.C. and Brutus the Trojan as written by Geoffrey of Monmouth.   “The island was then called Albion, and inhabited by none but a few giants. Notwithstanding this, the pleasant situation of the places, the plenty of rivers abounding with fish, and the engaging prospect of its woods, made Brutus and his […]

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4) Brutus the Roman Consul

What if… Britain was not named for Brutus the Trojan (3,000 years ago) but Brutus the Roman Consul ? (2,000 years ago) Did some of the old English chroniclers pick the wrong man? Nennius cites the Roman Brutus who came to Britain with his adopted father, friend and mentor Julius Caesar in the 1st century […]

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3) Brutus of Troy

“Britain, the best of islands, is situated in the Western Ocean, between France and Ireland, being eight hundred miles long, and two hundred broad. It produces everything that is useful to man, with a plenty that never fails. It abounds with all kinds of metal, and has plains of large extent, and hills fit for the finest […]

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2) Those Pesky Stray Arrows

I’m still going backwards with this True History of the British Isles. The end of the debunking debacle came when I realised just how many silly so-and-so’s were galloping around the 12th century only to meet a fatal stray arrow. How careless! The most famous is King Harold at Hastings. Then you have William Rufus, […]

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1) The True History of The British Isles?

I have a certain article about British History that I’ve been, desperately, trying to debunk for months. That’ll have been a big, fat failure on my part then! Heyho. When something makes sense, it makes sense. End of. Now, I’m NO high-falutin’ expert but after a few years researching the 12th century, I have a […]

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The Powers that Came to Be…

It’s looking as if those powers that took over our world were in a bit of a hurry to escape all aspects of the “Tartar-Mongol Yoke.” It’s like a soul that has lost it’s other half. A world that has lost it’s other half??? I’m on a lonely eagle binge today :o)       […]

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Orf with his Head!

The German map in the image above is dated 1633. The German map below is dated 1662.     Spot the difference? It seems that in the latter part of the 17th century some one decided to decapitate the Imperial Eagle. Strange fact – the original Imperial was bi-cephalous, facing East, facing West. But after […]

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The Triumphal Procession of Emperor Maximilian I

The Triumphal Procession of Emperor Maximilian I was a series of engravings produced in Germany in the 16th century to celebrate the glory and family tree of Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor, But there is something rather strange about these pictures. Too many blank cartouches. Strange black blobs all-willy-nilly-over the place.         […]

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