Aran holy isles, off Ireland, Sumer source of n., 65, 191, 199 Arch, Gothic, in early Scythic sculptures, 70, 303; Gothoid in Hittite, 70 Archangel Michael, Hitto-Phœnic., in A.B., 246, 341f., see Michael, St. Argonauts as Phoenician sailors re Early Albion, 359, 406 Ari, Amorite for Aryan, 257 Arianism of Goths, Hittite origin of, 301, 303; of Early Christian Church at Tyre and Sidon, 323 Armorica, Amorites in, 216; Phoenician Sun-cult in, megaliths in, 216-7; Fire worship in, 26; bihan Arran and Holy Isle and Goat Fell, with Stone circles, 197-9, 208 Arreton Downs, Stone Circles and Bronze Age remains in, 357 Arri, Hitto-Sumer for Aryan race or tribe, 6, 191, 235, 345f., 361, 394
Arriya, Mede (or Mitani) for Aryan,
Art, in A.B., 181-2, 325; Celtic, is Brito-Phoenic., 182; decora- tive, key patterns, spirals, etc., as Hitto-Phoenic., 182, 249, 285f., 295, 335f.; Egyptian "New as Phoenician with parallels in A.B., 182, 220-1, 335; high, of Hitto- Sumers, 245f.; Phoenician motives in A.B., 182, 221, 249, 285, 295, 335f., 347f.; superiority of A.B. over medieval and Anglo-Saxon, 182 Arthur, legendary king, Gothic Eddic Heria-Thor, 195, 198, Cad- bury camp and trad. of, 400; oven (Fire temp.?) of, 198; seats of, 196, 198
Arya, Indo-Aryan title of Aryan, 5-8, 12, 132 Aryan, a racial title essentially, vi,
5, 132, 257, 345f., 361; used by Hitto-Phoenic., 6, 14, 257; by Indo-Aryan and Medo-Persians, 8, 14, meaning of n., 191, 345f., 361; n. in Cymric Irish-Scot, etc., 191, 394; physical type of, 134f., 365; Phoenicians of A. type, 12; languages derived from Hitto-Phonics., 132f.; Aryan Phoenician script, 26, 33
Aryans, The, origin and cradle-land of, discovered, 8f.; Agriculture established by, 49; chosen people of God,” 11, 324, 363; civilizers of world, 11, 324, 363 enter Albion, 142f., 169f.; Hitt- ites, the primitive, 8f., 14-15; intermarriage with aborigines, 363f.; physical type of, 133f., 365; plough invented by, 348; script of, 26f., 33
Asa, Gothic title of God, derived from Sumerian, 240
Asia Minor, homeland of Aryans, formerly called Kur, Kuur or Syria, 12, 305
Astronomical theories of Stonehenge and other Stone Circles, 225f. Astronomy, proficiency of Early Britons in, 216f.
Aswin, Twin Sun-horsemen of Vedic Aryans on Briton coins, 58-9, 285-6
Aten worship as, Phoenician, 265f. Atrebates tribe in S. Britain, 213 Att legend on A.B. coins of Catti as Hatt or Hittite, 6, 203 Atte-cotti tribe of N. Britain, 45 Avon, river n., Phoenician, 174 Axe emblem of Catti or Hitt-ite and Saxon in A.B., 320f.; double in A.B., 320f.
Axe, river n., Trojan, 173f. Axes, bronze, in A.B., of Hittite type, 183
ay affix of Gothic isle and shore names, as Phoenician, 43
Baal, Semitic for Sun-god Bil or Bel, 42, 267; Jehovah as, 268, 276; Jupiter as, 244, 281 Babylonia, Cassi or Kassi ruling clan of A.B., in, 49, 291; Phoenicians in Early, 11, 13f.; Sun symbols of, in A.B., 294-5f. ; Tin-mines of, in A.B., 160, 413f. Bahika, Sanscrit n. for Picts(?), 201 Bairthy, Egyptian n. for Britannia, 6of.
Ballymote, key to Ogam script in
book of, 22, 74-5, 91
Baltic and Cattegat, Phoenician trade in, 171, 218, 222 Ban, Van or Fene, pre-Briton aborigines of Brit. Isles and Asia Minor, 91f.; matriarch priestess
of, in Ireland, 94-5, 99, 104f., 123; tribe in Alban, 95-7, 103; see Van
Ban-bha, n. of Hibernia, 91 Baptism, Hitto-Sumer Sun-cult rite, non-Judaist, 273f.; intro- duced into A.B. by Phoenic. Goths, 273f.
Barat or Barat or Brihat, patronym of Early Aryans and Phoenicians and source of " Briton," 1-8, 15, 38, 52f., 188f.; in place-names in Britain, 65, 118, 188-199; in Ireland, 199; n. on Phoenician coins, 9; origin of n., 188, patronym of Cassis, 53; Syria- Phoenicians the chief, 188 Barates, n. on A.B. monument of a Syrio-Phoenician, 71-2 Barati, early n. of Britannia as tutelary of Phoenicians, 58f. Barats or Brits" or Brit-ons " in A.B., 52f., 169f.; in Carthage, 9; in Cilicia, 54-55; in Italy, 214; in Sardinia, 53; "chosen people of God," 1, 363; Phonics., chief clan of, 188; as Sun- worshippers, 292; see Briton Bar-clensis, Phoenic. clan in A.B., 78 Barley, cultivation in A.B. introd.
by Phonics.(?), 155; on A.B. coins, 6, 289, 338f.; on Phoenic. coins, 213f.; and the Corn Spirit in A.B., 338f., 390; see Corn Barrow tombs, long, of Brito- Phonics., 204, 224f., 365; see Head-form
Barter trade of Phoenicians, with A.B., xiii Barthol Chapel
mon., 19, 81-2 Bartholomew, St., an Aryan Phoeni- cian (?), 82-3; festival of, in Britain, 82-4 Barton Mere and Bronze Age remains, 193
Basques and the Picts, 118, 154, 374
Bath, fire-temple at, 387; founding of, about 870 B.C., 387 Beads, blue glazed Phoenic., in A.B. abt. 1400 B.C., 219-20 Beaker-men, race of, in Britain, 134f., 141, 365, and see Alpine and Hun
Beards, long, with clean upper lip, of early Aryans and Hitto-Phonics., 239, 245, 247
Beirut, or Biruta, Barat port of Phoenicia, 71, 173; coins of, with legends as in A.B., 354; relations of, with Brit., 71-3
Bel (or Bil) Father-god of Phoeni- cians, 2, 13, 32, 42, 61, 267f.; of Sumerians, 267; Fire festival of, in Britain, 263, 269f., 271, 281, 282f.; and John-the-Baptist, 273f., as Jehovah, 268, 276; as Jupiter, 244, 281; inscriptions in A.B., 32f., 356; as personal n. in A.B., 42, 89; do. of Phoenicians of Cilicia, Tyre, etc., 42; and see Bil
Belgae, immigr. of, to S. Brit. and Wales, 264
Beltane or Summer solstice Fire festival in Britain, 269-71; in Brittany, 269-73 ; in Ireland, 270; in Phoenicia-Palestine, 270; in Spain, 273; on May Day, 271; n. origin and meaning, 269 Belerium, old n. for Cornwall, 281 Bennachie Mt., at Phoenic. monu- ment at Newton, 17-19, 39; St. Blaze at, 268
Beowulf's Anglo-Saxon, 180 Berouth, Phoenic. n. for Britannia, H.C.P., xlvi
Berth, n. for Perth, 198 Berytus, Greek n. for Beirut Beyrout, see Beirut
Bharat, see Barat
Biana, n. of pre-Aryan aborigines of Van, 98, 123-5
Bil, or Bel, Father-god; cult of, in A.B., 1, 32f., 46, 262f., 273; n. and meaning, 267-8; n. in A.B. inscripts., 1, 32f., 356; personal n. in A.B., 42, 89; see Bel
Bili, personal n. of Briton kings, 89
Bird men in A.B., 362; in Sumer seals, 253; Sun- in A.B., 251f.; see Sun-bird
Biridiya (Barat or Brit) personal n. in Syria-Phoenicia, 53 Blaze, St. of Cappadocia, worship of, in Britain, 40, 268; at Bennachie, 40, 268
Bleezes, 40, 268, St., see above Blue leg, tribe of aborigines, 95, 109; in Ireland, 109; re Picts, 117 Boann, matriarch, of R. Boyne, 94 Boats, skin-, of aborigines, 104; and see Ships
Boghaz Koi anc. capital of Catti, Hitt-ites or Early Goths, 7, 70, 78 Boots of Hittites of Gothic type, 7, 340
Brain, developt. of frontal lobes in
Aryan, v. Celts," 122, 134-5f. Brennus, (Brian), Briton king of Gaul, sacks Rome about 390 B.C., 34, 387, 389
Bretons, Sun Fire cult amongst, 216 Bride, St., or Brigit, and her serpent, 106f.
Brigit, St., or Frigg, matriarch of Gothic Eddas, 106f.
Brihat, form of n. Brit or Brit-on, I, 53
Britain, or Britannia, origin and meaning of n., 52, 65, 169; n. given by Brutus, 142, 155, 168–9; Anglo-Saxon variations in spelling n., 66; former names of, 190, mixed races in modern, 363f. Britain, Ancient, aborigines of, not Britons, 103, 111, 120-1, 125f., 168, 365; arrival of Britons in, 142f.; Amorites about 2800 B.C. in, see Amorites ; affixes to place-names in, Hitto-Phoenician, 43, 171, 203f.; agriculture introd. by Phoenicians in, 170; Cross in, 289f.; destruction of monuments of, 35; Goths in, 179f.; Hitto- Phonic. Sun-cult in, 262f.; ladies in, 71-3, 185, 245, 388; Part-olon's conquest of N., 67f.; Phonics. in, 159f.; Phonic. civilization and penetration of, 188f., 200f.; Phoenic. inscripts in, 32f., 43, 355f.; Phoenic. place and r. names in, 172f., 188f., 200f.; Resurrection belief in, 256f.; Sumerian inscripts. in, 227f., and see cup-marks, 238f.; trade with Gades, 147, 222; Trojan place and r. names in, 172f.; Trojan symbols in, 149, 294f. Britain, Modern, Phoenician in- fluence in, 363f., 380f. Britanni tribe on Somme, 186 Britannia tutelary, Phoenician origin of n. and form of, 55f.; as Phoenician Barat or Barati, 55, 58; on coins of Carthage, 9, Cilicia, 55, Sidon, 57; in Egypt, 59-60; in Vedas, 58-9; on Roman coins, 56; as Bērouth in Phoenicia, H.C.P., xlvi; re Diana, 45; her Cross, 55, 57, 61; her
Fire-torch (re lighthouse), 58; helmet, 59; her son Neptune, 58 Britenden, and Ogam script, 44 British "camps," prehistoric, 191f., 205f., 397f.
British Chronicles, traditional, his- toricity of, 147-8f.
British, Hitto-Phoenic. origin of n., 52, 65; modern non-racial use of term, 371;
Brito-Martis, title of Britannia, 63-4 Briton, n. of Hitto-Phoenic. origin,
1, 8f., 14f., 52, 65; n. given by Brutus, 142, 155, 168-9; coins, see Coins; n. in personal names, 215; n. in place-names, 188f., in Ireland, 199; kings, list of early, 385; language of Sumerian origin introd. by Brutus is basis of English, 175f.; mod. use of term, 371; war-chariots of Hitto- Trojan type, 145
Britons, or Barats, a branch of Aryan Hitto-Phoenicians, 2, 5, 15, 38f.; false views about, 144f.; not aborigines of Albion, 111f., 127f.; arrival in Albion, 142f.; Anglo-Saxons, a branch of, 44 186-7; agriculture introd. by,, 170; art of, 181f.; Bronze Age introd. by, 183; chronicles of, 142f.; civilization of, 71f., 142, 151f., 184; clans of, see Tribes; coins of, 6, 144, see Coins; colonization of, 186f.; cup-mark inscriptions of, 236f.; home-land of, 8f, 14, 142f.; in Denmark, 186; in France, 186; in Germany, 186; Ireland, 67f.; Italy, 214; king-lists of, 385f.; language of, basis of English, 178f., 190; law-codes of, 181f.; physical type Aryan, 134f.; settlements sep. from aborigines, 203-4; ships of, 408; religion of, 262f.; roads of, 182, 191f, 204f.; Stone-Circles of, 216f.; Trojan elements in, 142f., 177f.; war chariots of, Hitto-Trojan, 145, see Barat, Briton and Britain Ancient
Brittany, Cassi tribe in, 389; Phoenician Sun and Fire festivals in, 103, 216, 273; megaliths in, 103, 216
Briutus, var. of Brutus, 404 Broch, towers of Hitto-Phonic. style, 171; and n. Hittite, 171
Bronze Age in A.B. introd. by | Cabeiri, Phoenic. pigmy luck-golly-
Phoenicians, 183; settlers of, in Don Valley, 183, 357; and see Art
Bronze chariots in A.B. graves,
pre-Briton aborigines, 120, 122, 134f., 140 Brude or Bruide title of kings of Picts, 85f.
Brut, var. of Brutus, 190; the, of
Layamon, 143, 319, etc. Bruteport, 172, 193
Bruttii tribe of Italy, 214, of Greece, 357 Brutus-the-Trojan, 1st king, "First Dynasty in Britain, 142f.; ancestry of, 148, 151; arrival in Albion, 155; associate Phoeni- cians of, 154, 159f.; banishes Sylvius Alba, 162f.; cause of coming, 167; civilizes aborigines, 155, 168f.; conquers giants (Amorites), 155; Cornwall allotted to Duke Corineus by, 155, 165; cultivates land, 155; date of arrival of, 165-7, 385f.; fleet of, 152; founds London, 156, 407f.; at Gades, 154; in Greece, 151, 407f.; gives n. to Britain, 155; gives Phoenician and Trojan place and river names to Britain, 173f.; houses built by, 155;, identity of, with Homeric Peiri- thoos, 163, 404f.; identity with Prydain, 190; iron introd. by(?), 183; as law-giver, 156; Phoeni- cians of Cilicia, Tyre and Sidon accomp., to Albion, 161; Stone of, at Totnes, 162; vision of, 153, 158f.; voyage to Albion, 152f., 157f. Buildings in A.B., 155, 170; wooden architect. of Hitt-ite or Gothic type, 69f.
wogs as Picts or Pihta (Ptah) Tin-miner and galley slaves 267 Cac legend on A.B. coins, 48 and cp. E.C.B. 353
Cad, title of Phonics. and Britons, var. of Cat, Gad or Kad. 19, 71f., 180, 200, 203f., in A.B. place- names, 200, 205-7, 397f. Cad-bury, with Briton "camp" and Phonic. remains and Arthur legend, 174, 192, 398, 400 Cadeni or Gadeni tribe, 396 Cadiz, Phoenician port in Iberia, re Britain Tin trade, 160f.; Gades
Cadmeian, Phoenic. script, 34 Cadmon, 180, see Caedmon Cadmus, Phoenician king as Sea colonist, 41, 202
Caduceus, n. and emblem derived from Sumerian, 239, 242, 245, 252
Cad-van's, St., stone of, 196 Cad-wallon, Cymric form of Cassi-
vellaunus' n., 69, 71, 207, 394 Cad-zow, as Phoenician town, 78, 308; pre-Christian Cross of Hittite type at, 308
Cad-mon, properly Cadmon, as Brito-Phoenician, 179; Briton dialect of, 179-80
Cær, Cymric fort, Sumer origin of n., 175
Cær-Leon or Isca, and Arthur legend, 195
Cær-Lud or London, q.v. Cær-Marthen, re Morites or Amor- ites, 217
Cæsar (Julius), on Briton civiliza- tion, 113, 144; conflict with Cassivellaunus, 408; and London, 408; on Picts, 113, 144-5; on War-chariots of Britons, 145 Cæsarea in Hitto-Cappadocia, art of Briton type, 307, 410
Bull emblem of Indara or Andrew Cait, ancestor of Part-olon, as Cath-
Burial in A.B., solar orientation, 225; re Resurrection, q.v., red pigment in early, 224; Burriton or "place of the Barats," n. of Penzance, 164, 193, 201 -bury or burg, town affix is Hittite, 171
Button amulets of Sun-cult in A.B., 239f., 378; of Hitto-Sumerian and Trojan type, 239
Cambri n. for Cymri tribe, 157 Cambria n. for Wales, Cumberland and Strath-Clyde, 143, 156 Cambreis n. for Britain, 143, 191; n. for Strath-Clyde, 112 Candlemas festival as fire-rite, 40 Cannibalism in British Isles, 271 Canonization of heroic Early Aryan kings 348
Canterbury, founding of, about 900 B.C., 386
Cap, horned of Hitto-Sumers, Goths
and Britons, 239, 245, 247, 250; Phrygian of Hittites, Goths and Britons, 246, 247, 250 Caphtor, the Phoenician port of Abdara in Spain, 415 Cappadocia, central prov. of Hit- tites, 7, 70; home of St. Blaze, 40, 268; home of St. George of England and his Red Cross,
Cassi, title of Briton kings and their clan, 48, 211; a clan title of Hitto-Phoenic. Barat Fire- worshippers, 47-8, 209; a branch of Hittites, 47, 274; in Babylonia, 49-50, 53; in A.B., 201, 209, 416; in Don Valley, 32f.; in Epirus, 202; in France, 389; in India, 47-8; in Mediterranean ports, 202 and see map; in Palestine, 274; in Shetland, 77; coins of, in A.B., 48, 211; Cross of, in A.B., 51, 77, 295f.; n. in place-names of A.B., 200f., 209f.; n. of King Part-olon's clan, 32f., 47f., 211; in modern personal names, 215 Cassibellaun, or Cass-wallon, Cymric
name, romanized as Cassivellaun- us, 207 Cassiobury, city of Cassivellaunus and his Catye-uchlani tribe, 209 Cassi-ope n. of Phoenic. ports,
Cassi-terides, Tin Islands of Phoenic., off Cornwall, 160, 201-2, 209, 415f.; Amorite kings in, 160f.; Amorite Coss-ini tribe at, 202; origin and meaning of n., 201f.; Pytheas on, 202; Sargon I., relations with, about 2800 B.C. (?), 413f.
Cassiteros, Greek n. for Tin, 201 Cassi-vellaun, n. of Phœnic. origin, 69, 71f.; paramount Briton king, 145, 166, 210-2; defeat of, by Cæsar, 145-6, 408-10; war char- iots of, 145; site of capital, 408-9 Cas-wallon, Cymric form of above n., 207
Cat, variant of Catti tribe n., 200f., 209, 403; in Brit. place names for Catti, 203f., 397f.
Cat-ness, old n. of Caithness, 209 Cat-rail, Briton earthwork, 402; Cetiloinn tribe inscript. near,
70f. Cat-stanes, monoliths, 216, 224, 402 Cat-alonia, Phoenic. prov. in Spain, 71 Cat-alauni or Catuellani tribe, in
Britain, 213, 394; on the Marne, 186, 389
Cataonia in Cappadocia, 45, 65 Cathluan, k. of Picts v. Part-olon, 90, 395f. Catte-gat or Gate of Catte," 180, see Baltic
Catti, title of Briton kings and their clan, 6, 200 f.; title of ruling Hittites or Khatti including Phonics., 5-8f., 200f. and see Khatti; coins of, with emblems as on Hittite seals and Phoenician coins, 5, 211f., etc.; origin and meaning of n. Cutters " or axe-sceptre wielders, i.e., rulers, 8, 200, 209, 294-5 (b), 305, 320f.; in place-names in Britain, 200f., 397f.; do. in Don Valley, 19, 199, 403; in modern personal names, 215; and see Khatti Cattedown cave remains, 173, 207 Cattuellauna tribe of Britons, 212, 396, see Caty-euchlani Catuv, n. of Sutherland, 78
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