Brit-Am Research Sources (3 December 2013, 2013, Kislev 29, 5774)
Contents:
1. Phonological Similarities in Germanic and Hebrew by Terry Marvin Blodgett.
2. Craig White: More Old British Israel Works Now Available
3. Craig White: Still More Old British Israel Works Now Available (Recommended)
4. A Hyksos Canaanite Goddess in Egypt?
5. Notes on the Gauls of France. HEBREWS IN EARLY GAUL
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1. Phonological Similarities in Germanic and Hebrew by Terry Marvin Blodgett.
http://www.originofnations.org/books,%20papers/Phonological%20Similarities%20in%20Germanic%20&%20Hebrew.pdf
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2. Craig White: More Old British Israel Works Now Available
Dear everyone,
I have added many more old British-Israel and other works to my website for research and your reading pleasure. Many of these works date to the 1800s, so I am sure you will find them of interest. [See item no. 3 below].
Regards to all,
http://www.friendsofsabbath.org/Further_Research/British-Israel/
Craig
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3. Craig White: Still More Old British Israel Works Now Available (Recommended)
There are now a lot more books uploaded the past few days on the tribes of Israel at
http://www.friendsofsabbath.org/Further_Research/British%20Empire%20books%20etc/
http://www.friendsofsabbath.org/Further_Research/BI_Charts/
http://www.friendsofsabbath.org/Further_Research/British-Israel/
http://www.friendsofsabbath.org/Further_Research/Doug%20Morley/
Enjoy your research and reading!
Craig
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4. A Hyksos Canaanite Goddess in Egypt?
How a Canaanite goddess conquered ancient Egypt
Brought over by mysterious conquerors and fused with a local deity, the nameless goddess was a kinder, gentler - and yellow - goddess.
By Julia Fridman | Nov. 11, 2013 | 7:32 AM
http://www.haaretz.com/archaeology/.premium-1.557382
Sometime in the 1800s BCE, a people called the Hyksos (which merely means 'foreign rulers' in ancient Egyptian) first appeared in the Nile Delta.
Who exactly the Hyksos were, not to mention where they came from, remain uncertain. But evidence associating them with Canaan abounds. Ancient texts show that they had Semitic names. DNA analysis of the males associates them with the Semitic peoples. And, their temples had no evidence of pig bones.
The Hyksos lived among the Egyptians for some time, at least from the 12th Dynasty, before rising to power. Eventually they reigned over Lower Egypt from the 15th to the 17th Dynasty (1630-1523 BCE).
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5. Notes on the Gauls of France
HEBREWS IN EARLY GAUL
http://www.friendsofsabbath.org/Further_Research/British-Israel2/hebrews_in_early_gaul.htm
An extract from:
OUR BRITISH ANCESTORS:
WHO AND WHAT WERE THEY?
An inquiry serving to elucidate the traditional history of the early Britons, by means of recent excavations, etymology, remnants of religious worship, inscriptions, craniology,
and fragmentary collateral history.
By the Rev. Samuel Lysons, M.A., F.S.A.
Published by John Henry and James Parker,
Oxford and London, 1865
Extract from pages 174-181
Extracts:
Nennius tells us that the great wall which Severus rolled together across Britain was in the British language called Gaaul. Pen-guual was precisely what is now called Walls-end, from which the London coals come. This shews us the transition from Gaul into Wall, and Gualish to Wallish, or Welsh. The G and W were evidently interchangeable. The name leaves its traces in many parts of England, Wales, and Ireland, as gall-oway, Gallway, Gal-tee mountains, Gal-by; and with the W, in Wales, Walesby, Wallsworth, Wal-ford, Wal-den, Wal-wyn, Wal-cot, Corn-wall, etc. In Gloucestershire, where from its vicinity to Wales remnants of British language still remain, the hay when rolled together in a long row ready for carting is said to be 'put into walley.'
Gal meant everything round. The Phoenician round galleys were gauloi, hence the word 'galley.' The round excresence which grows on an oak-tree is an 'oak-gall.'
Gal means 'the moon,' in Irish. Gwawl is British for Julia. Julia is from Jul, or Yul, or Gal, which is 'the moon,' the Gillian of our ballads and the Jill of fairy-land. The deceptions of Jill or Gul, 'the moon-light,' are perpetuated in the words 'to gull' and 'to jilt.'
Gal also means the colour of the moon, and is referred sometimes to pale yellow, ('yellow' or 'yal-low,' from Gal), at other times to bright yellow, almost red; hence the word 'gules' in heraldry. In Suffolk and Essex 'goel' or 'gole' is still used for bright yellow.
Golan was the chief town of the region of the Gaulonites. The Gallim were mound-makers; also those who wrapped themselves in a peculiar dress. Gallimi were cloaks such as the Chemarim, and Melanchlaeni, and Cassiterides wore. Gallimi, 2 Kings 2:8.