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Catuvellaunus, form of Cassivellau- | Chedi or Cedi, title of Phonics., 262
nus, see Cassivellaun

Caty-euchlani tribe of A.B., 68,
200-2, 207, 210-12
Cauldron of Hell, of Serpent cult
of aborigines, 94-5, 104-6
Cave gravings, prehistoric, in A.B.,
of Trojan and Hitto-Phoenic.
emblems, 198, 335, 350
Ceasair, prehistoric Irish matriarch,

91, 93-4, 101-5

Cedi, n. for Getae or Phoenician
Goths, 168, 262

Celt, origin and meaning of n., 99;
misuse of term, 127, 139; modern
introd. of n. to British Isles,
127f.
Celts or Kelts, confused racial use
of terms, 127-30, 134-7; British,
127f.; re Caledons, 117, 125;
re Culdees, 117; Gaulish, 129f.;
re Khaldiş, 99, 125, 139f. ; re
Picts, 139-41; physical type of,
133f.; 140; psychology of, 375
Celtic, art of Bronze Age is Brito-

Phonic., 182; Cross is Hitto-
Phoenic., 334f. and see Cross;
language, dialect of British Gothic
180; question, the, 127f.; race-
type in Britain, 139f.
Centaur, v. Canterbury, 405
Cephalic index, of races, 134-6; of
Aryan, 134

Cet-gueli, or Kid-welly, ancient port
of Catti, 71

Ceti, form of n. Getae, Goth, Scot
and Phonics. (Cedi), 71, 168,
209, 262

Ceti-loinn tribe n. on Yarrow stone,
near Cat-rail earthwork, 72
Chaldee (and Culdee) origin of n.,

99

Chals, Gypsy or Chaldee of Van,
117

Chat-ham, 203

Channel, English, ancient n. Ictis

or Icht, 116, 121, 163f., 201, 405
Chariots, War-, of Britons of Hitto-
Trojan type, 145; buried with
Briton chief, like Syrians in
Egypt, 145

Charms, in A.B., see Amulets and
Cup-marks; horse-shoe for luck,
reason of, 287

Chattan clan, 208

Chatti tribe in Germany, 186
Cheddar caves and Bronze Age
remains, 400

Chiltern Hills and Celts or Kelts,

117

Christ, visits coast of Phoenicia
and works miracles there, 323;
Phoenicians early followers of,
323; "wise men at Epiphany
of, Hitto-Phoenic. Magi or Fire-
worshippers, 279

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Christianity, early centre of, in

Phoenicia, 323; Arianism in
Phoenician, 323, Arianism in
Gothic, 301-3;
Cross symbol

introd. into, by Goths, 301f.;
Phoenician elements in British,
383

Christmas or Yule, winter solstice
festival, 69

Chronicles of Early Briton kings,
historicity of, 146f.; King
Lists in 385f.
Cilicia, homeland of Brito-Phoenic.
Part-olon, 32, 41-2, 45; Barats

of, 55; Britannia and, 55-8;
clans of Phoenicians of, 159; in
A.B., 41, 43, 61; coins of Briton
type in, 43, 55, 346-7; coloniza-
tion by, in A.B., 43; in Carthage
and Sardinia, 42; in Sleswick,
44; Phoenicians of, accomp.
Brutus to Albion, 161
Cimbri (or Cymri) in Jut-land, 186
Cimmerians, as Cymri, 190f.
Circles, on A.B. coins as on Greco-

Phoenician, and on Hitto-Sumer
and Trojan amulets, 237f.; re
Cup-marks as sacred script, 237f.;
concentric on A.B. monuments
and bronze shields and tools,
solar-cult as in Hitto-Sumer,
237f.

Circles, Stone, as Solar observatories
of Amorite Phonics., 216, see
Stone Circles

Cists, Stone, of A.B., cup marks on
and their meaning, 237f.
Citi-um or Kition, Phoenic. port
of Cyprus, Phoenic. factories at,
with amulet seals, as in A.B.,
178, 220

City states of Phoenicians, 55, 212
Civilization in A.B., 146-7; intro-
duced by Brito-Phonics., 168f.,
181f.

Clans, see Tribes

Clas Merddin (or Diggings of Merd,
Marut or Amorites) early n. for
Albion, 190, 216

INDEX

Cluny, Hitto-Phoenician n. var. of
Gioln, 72

Clyde, Clwydd, Clutha, Cald, river
names, Sumerian meaning of,
117, 197

Clytie, w. of Brutus (?) 405
Coins of A.B. with Phoenic. legends,
Aesv, 284f.; Ando, 317, 336;
Att, 6; Cas, 48, 212; Catti,
6, 212; Inara, 317; Tasci, 212,
339, etc., etc., with symbols, as
in Phoenician coins, 6, 284f.,
339f., 346f., 349; Circles on, 237;
Crosses on, 6, 237, and see Cross;
Hercules on, 347; St. Michael on,
347f.; pellets on, 284; rosettes
on, 284f.; Macedonian theory of,
212f., 284; Tin, of Cornwall,
335f.

Col, or Coil, king of Britons, 185
Coldrum megalithic monument
(giant's tomb), 121

Colonies, British, Briton elements

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Colour, complexion
Britain, 133f., 371
Conn-the-hundred-fighter,
hero of Irish Scots, 109
deified solar hero Khanu of
Sumers

=

(?)

Cor Gawr, Cymric n. of Stonehenge,
192

Corineus, Phoen. Duke of Cornwall

about 1100 B.C., 154, 160-70 ;
as Homeric Coronos Caineus,
214f., 404f.
Corn, cultivation established by
Aryans, 49; introd. to A.B.
presumably by Phonics., 170;
ear of, on A.B. Catti coins, 6,
213; as on Hitto-Sumer seals
and Phoenic. coins, 213-4; as
Cross on A.B. coins, 214, 289,
339; assocd. with goat as in
Phoenic. coins, 346

Corn Spirit of Hittites worshipped
in A.B., 338f., 342f.; Briton
represent. of., like Hitto-Phoenic.,
339f., 346f.; Origin of discovered,
340f.; Hittite origin of Dionysos
as 339f.; and see Tascio
Cornwall and Cassiterides, Tin-

mines of Phonics. in, 160, 201f.;
Bel-Fire rites at, 281f.; coins of
Cilician and Phoenic. type in,
212f., 335f.; Tin-port of Phoenic.
in., 160, 164f.; Amorite Tin-land

of Sargon I. (about 2800 B.C.), as

429

160, 167-71, 216, 413f.; Tin
A.B. coins in, 335-6

Corunna and Phoenic. trade with

Britain, 170; and Hercules, 170
Coss-ini tribe in Cornwall, 202
Cotentin port of Brittany, Stone
Circles and Sun-cult of, 103, 216
Cotswold Hills, 400f.

Cowrie Shells at Stonehenge, 219
Cradle-land of Aryans, Britons,

Goths and Hitto-Phonics., 8, etc.
Craig Narget stone with pre-
Christian Crosses and solar em-
blems, 15

Cranial form in diff. races, 134f.
Creator title of Father-god in Hitto-
Sumer, 252, 265

Cremation in A.B. a solar rite, 365
Crescent and Sceptre symbol, mean-
ing of, 355

Cresset stone for sacred Fire pro-
duction in Britain, 272
Crete colonized and civilized by
Phoenicians, 27, 63, 161
Cro-Magnon race, of Aryan type
in Wales (Gower), 224-5
Cross, in A.B., pre-Christian of
Hitto-Phoenic. origin, 6f., 278,
289f., 294f.; name C. also Sumer,
290, 314; origin and meaning of
C. discovered, 290f.; is invincible
Fire-sceptre symbol of Sun-god,
250, 262, 29of.; on prehistoric
A.B. monuments, 295f.; on A.B.
coins, 6, 285, etc.; True C. not
the Crucifix, 299f.; introd. into
Christianity by Goths, 301f.;
Resurrection by C. in A.B., 259f.
Cross, as Crucifix, only medieval,
290f., 301f.

Cross as Devil and Death banisher
in A.B., as with Hitto-Sumer and
Phonics., 255f., 293f., 303, 305f.,
344f.

Cross as Sceptre of Aryan Hitto-
Sumer kings, 262, 290; and Sun-
priests, 278-9

Cross and pre-Israelite Hittite
temple of Jerusalem, 278
Cross and Resurrection in A.B.,
259f., as among Amorites, Hitto-
Sumers, Phoenic. and Trojans
255f., 289f.

Cross and St. Andrew, 338f.
Constantine, 300f.
St. George, 291, 304f.

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Cross and St. Michael, 334f., 349f.,

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360, and see Tascio

St. Patrick, 327-8
Hercules (or Dionysos),
335, 339f., 346f.
Tascio, see Tascio
Cross and Sacred Animals in A.B.,
as in Hitto-Phoenic. Eagle, 349;
Goat and Deer, 334f., 346f.,
Goose, 349-50; Hawk and
Phoenix, 349f.; Horse, 6, etc.,
285f., 339f.; Wolves and Lions,
re 308, 334f.
Cross, Forms of, in prehistoric A.B.,
as with Hitto-Sumers, Phonics.
and Trojans, 290f., 294f.; An-
drew's or God Indara's, 316f.;
Anthony's, 299; Cassi, 49, 51,
77, 294f.; Celtic, 294,f. etc.;
Hittite origin, 298f.; Corn, 49,
295, 339f.; Egyptian, 250, 293f,
314; Fiery, and why so-called,
290f., 303f., 350-1, 360;
George's, and why so called, 291f.,
304f.; Gothic or Runic, 291f.,
298; Grain, or Harvest, 295, 49,
339f.; Greek, 291; High, of
Hitto-Sumer and Trojans, 294,f.

St.

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XV 338, 354

Daxa, Vedic

n. for Tas or Tasc,
or Tax, 249, 352-4

299; Hittite, 294f., 314; Key-Daŝi, for Tascio or Dias Corn Spirit,
pattern, 295, 321; Latin, 294f.,
299; Maltese, 293f.; Phoenic.,
294f..; Red, 290f., 303f., 350-1f.;
Resurrecting, 298f.; Revolving
Sumer, 294f.; Swastika, 297f.,
316f., 333.

Cross, Wood-, of Hitto-Sumer, 255f.,
278-9, 291f., 311, 344f., 412
Crucifix not the True Cross, 299f.
Cruithne n. for Briton, 86; misuse
for Pict, 86

Cudder (Gadir) Point in Penzance
Bay, 172, 200, 207

Culdee n. of Columba's miss. to
Picts and Celts, 125
Cumber or Cymr

190, 195, 228

=

Sumer (?),

Cumber-land, Land of Cumbers,
Cymrs or (?) Sumers, 190, 228
Cumber-nauld, 198
Cumbrae Isles, 197, 208
Cunobelin, coins of, 213, 385, 391;
as Belinus III., 388; as sun-
worshipper, 262

Cup and ring marks in A.B., 258-9
Cup markings, prehistoric, in A.B.,

15, 236f., 258f., 308; key to
script of, 238f., 242-6, 253-8,
261; prayers of A.B. in., 258f.,

Dead, solar orientation of face of,
in A.B., 225

Deas, form of n. Dias or Tascio

on A.B. coins, 339

Deasil, Sumerian rite in A.B., 282-3
Death, figured as Dragon, 344; as

Lion, 331f.; Serpent or Wolf,
331f.; prayers for Resurrection
from, in A.B., 259; wolf and lion
as emblem of, 308, 334-5
Decorative Phoenic. designs in A.B.
and in mod. British art, see
Spirals and Key Patterns
Deer sacred in Hitto-Phoenic. as
in A.B., 334f.

Demons, worshipped by aborigines,
183; banished by Aryan Cross,
305, 344f.

Diana (or Perathea) form of Phoenic.
tutelary Britannia, 45; temple
of, on Ludgate Hill, 64, 184
Diarmait, solar hero of Irish Scots,
109
Dias, n. of Phoenic. archangel on
A.B. coins, xv., 338-9, 346, 353f. ;
on Sumer seals, 353

INDEX

Di-Caledon, title of Picts, 117
Din-sol, n. of Michael's Mount, 281
Dioc, n. of Dias or Tascio of A.B.
on Phoenician coins, 354
Dionysos, Corn Spirit, worshipped
in A.B., 70, 339f., 347f.; by
Goths, 70; by Phonics., 70,
346f.; Hittite origin of repre-
sentn., 340; Sumer orig. of n.,
354

Dks, Dzk n. of Dias or Tasc of
A.B. on Phonic. coins, 249, 346,
354

Dolmens ve Phonics., see megaliths
Don Valley prehistoric Briton monu-
ments, 18f.

Door, The, title of Phoenic. St.
Michael, 351

Dorians as Trojans, 177f.

Doric lang. as British Gothic, 177-
81

Dragon, as coalesced totems of
aborigines symbolizing Death,
331, 348; as Serpent in A.B.,
311; figured in Hittite seals,
344; Indara as slayer of, 319f.;
Indra as slayer, 315, 324, 343,
363; St. Andrew as slayer, 319;
St. George, 319-360; St. Michael,
(or Tascio), 319f., 343, 359f.;
Tas or Marduk as slayer of, 359
Dress, of A.B. and Goths of Hittite
type, 7, 46, 113, 239, 335; horn-
headdress of A.B., Goths and
Anglo-Saxons of Hitto-Sumer
type, 239, 245, etc.; Early Gothic
or Hittite ladies' d., 7, 245, 248,
etc.

Druid Circles, misnomer for Stone
Circles, 225

Druid origin of trilithon temple
at Stonehenge, 232; and of
Keswick Circle temple," 228
Druid religion of aborigines, lunar
and antisolar, 232; human sacri-
fice in, 232-3; Britons proper
were non-Druids, 184
Drums, prehistoric sculptured stone,
with solar emblems, as Sun-
wheels for rolling rite, 272
Dual cup-marks for Sun in A.B. as
in Hitto-Sumer, 246f., 249f.
Dumnonii tribe of Ceti in A.B., 72,
173, 282

Dun, a fort or town, Sumer orig.
of n., 281

Dun-Barton or Fort of Bartons or

Britons, 143, 159, 170, 197, 281 ;

431

seat of Brit. king Bili, 87; of
Br. king Gawolon 143; of Gildas
143; found. of, abt. 990 B.C., 386;
see St. Patrick

Dun-Edin (Edinburgh), 198, 408
Dwr, Cymric" Water" from Sumer.
Duru, 324, and cognate with Per-
sian Darya

Dyaus, Vedic god in A.B., 244
Dyce and its Stone Circle re Tezali
or Texali tribe, 357

Ea or Ia (Jah) god n. of Sumers,
invoked in A.B., see Ia
Eagle, Hitto-Sumer Sun-bird in
A.B, 251, 284, 349; and see
Hawk; on A.B. coins, 211, 284,
349

Ear, of Barley on Catti coins as in
Phoenician, 6, 339, etc.; to ear
(the ground) n. derived from
Sumer, 345, 361

Écossais, origin of n., 49, 215
Eddas, The, epics of British and
Norse origin, 179; historicity of,
179, 410
Edinburgh, Hedins-eyio of Goths,
408; and see Dun-Edin
Euphrates r. mentioned in Vedas
ve Indra (or Andrew), 324
Egypt, Aryan kings in ancient, 12;
Britannia in, 6of.; Cross in,
295, 351; Flight to, to Sun-
temple of Phoenix, 280; Fire-
drill n. is Sumer, 62-3; Michael
Tascio (Makhial-Resef) in, 350f. ¡
New Syrian art in, is Phoenic.,
220; Phoenicians in, 39, 60-I
Egyptian origin theory of Stone
Circles, 217f.

Eisv legend on Sun-horse A.B.
coins as Sumer, 285

English, language based on British
Gothic, 178f.; and remotely on
Sumerian, xi., see Words; people,
not a race, 138; of mixed origin,
371; see Anglo-Saxon

Eppi, or Erri, legend on A.B. coins,
261

Er legend on A.B. coins re Erakles,
349

Erc, family n. of King Part-olon
or Ikr, 50, 68, 396

Eremon n. of tribe in Ireland, 395
Erin, Aryan meaning of n., 199
Esk, Exe or Isca, river n. of Trojan
origin, 173-4, 198, 208

Ethel, n. derived from Sumerian, | Fleet, of Brutus, 152; of Part-olon,
182
76; of Phonics., 387; of Britons
in R. Fleet, 408

Ethics of A.B. summarized in

Welsh Triads

Europe, Phoenician influence on
modern, 379f.

Fan, dial. for Van or Fen tribe, 99
Fates, Three, Sumer origin of n.
and function, 243, 248
Father-God in A.B., see Gods in
A.B.

Fel, Isle, early n. of Albion, 190,
405

Female line of descent of Picts and

aborigines of Albion, 113f., 122f.
Fen, dialectic for Van and Van
wolf tribe, 93

Fenes, Feins, and Fians, aboriginal

origin of n., 93-5
Festivals in A.B. of Hitto-Phoenic.
origin: Bel-Fire, 269f.; St.
Blaze day or Candlemas, 40;
St. George's Day, 306; St.
John's Day, 273f.; Harvest,
341; Lammas, 354; Michael-
mas, 341; Yule (or Christmas), 69
Fiery Cross in A.B., origin and
meaning of, 291, 304

Fin, Finn variant of Van, 95;
Finn-men in A.B., 97; place-

names in Britain, 97; in Ireland,
94

Fin-land, migration of Vans to,
100f.

Fire, Bel-, in A.B., 269f.; -Cross
symbol formed by crossed fire-
sticks, 291-2; -festivals in A,B.
(see Festivals); Need-F. in A.B.,
271-2; Perpetual F. in A.B.,
272; -priests chiefly Barat
Phonic., 3, 292, and see Magi;
production of sacred F. in solar
cult in A.B., 271f.; Red Cross
of, 291, 304; -sticks for sacred
f. by friction, 37, 271, 291f.;
-torch in Part-olon's homeland,
45; -worship in A.B., 40, 184,
262f.

Fish, sacred, of resurrecting Sun in
A.B., as in Hittite, 251, 308
Fish-man as god of Waters, 247,
and see Neptune

Five, sacred number of Tascio St.
Michael in cup-marks in A.B.,
as in Hitto-Sumer, xv., 6, 237,
249f., 261, 339, 347, etc.

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Gad, title of Phoenicians, 18, 74f.,

160, 180, 197, 200f.; G. place
and r. names in Britain, 200f.,
397f.

Gadeni, Briton tribe, 163, 180, 197,
308, 402

Gades, ог "House of Gads,"
Phoenic. tin-port in Spain (Cadiz),
68, 74, 159-60; as Agadir, 171;
as Gadeira, 171; Brutus at, 154,
159; Duke Corineus and his
Phoenician kinsmen at, 160;
Hercules visited, 159; perpetual
fire at, 272; Geloni Phoenic.-
Goths related to, 395; trade
with A.B., 147, 222

Gadie, r. at site of Part-olon's monu-

ment in Don Valley, 17f., 403;
Gadi or Gade r. names in Brit.,
203, 397, 402f.
Gaditani Fretum or Frith of Gads,

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Roman n. for Gibraltar Straits
with Pillars of Hercules, see map
Gaels or Celts v. Picts, 136-
140; Iberian type of, 136f.
Gaelic lang., branch of British
Gothic, 180

Galatia, province of the Vans or
Khaldis, 99, 100-2

Galatic n. for Gaul of the Kelts or

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