The Phœnician origin of Britons, Scots & Anglo-Saxons : discovered by Phœnician & Sumerian inscriptions in Britain, by preroman Briton coins & a mass of new history : with over one hundred illustrations and maps
428 PH@NICIAN ORIGIN
Catuvellaunus, form of Cassivellaunus, see Cassivellaun
Caty-euchlani tribe of A.B., 200-2, 267, 210-12
Cauldron of Hell, of Serpent cult of aborigines, 94-5, 104-6
Cave gravings, prehistoric, in A.B., of Trojan and Hitto-Pheenic. emblems, 198, 335, 35¢
Ceasair, prehistoric Irish matriarch, 91, 93-4, IOI-5
Cedi, n. for Getae or Phoenician Goths, 168, 262
Celt, origin and meaning of n., a9; misuse of term, 127, 139: modern introd. of n. to British Isles, 1274. .
Celts or Kelts, confused racial use of terms, 127-30, 134-7; British, 127f.; ve Caledons, 117, 125; ve Culdees, 117; Gaulish, 120f. ; ve Khaldis, 99, 125, 139f.; ve Picts, 139-41 ; physical type of, 133f.; 140; psychology of, 375
Celtic, art of Bronze Age is BritoPheenic., 182; Cross is HittoPheenic., 334f. and see Cross ; language, dialect of British Gothic 180 ; question, the, 127{.; racetype in Britain, 130f.
Centaur, v. Canterbury, 405
Cephalic index, of races, 134-6 ; Aryan, 124
Cet-gueli, or Wid-welly, ancient port of Catti, 71
Ceti, form of n. Getae, Goth, Scot and Phoenics. (Cedi), 71, 168, 209, 262
Ceti-loinn tribe n. on Yarrow stone, near Cat-ra‘l earthwork, 72
Chaldee (and Crldee) origin of n.,
68,
of
99
Chals, Gypsy or Chaldee of Van, Ti7
Chat-ham, 203
Channel, English, ancient n. Ictis or Icht, 116, 121, 1r63f., 201, 405
Chariots, War-, of Britons of HittoTrojan 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 remains, 400
Age
OF BRITONS & SCOTS
Chedi or Cedi, title of Phoenics., 262
Chiltern Hills and Celts or Kelts,
li7
Christ, visits coast of Phcenicia and works miracles there, 323 ; Phoenicians early followers of,
323 ; “ wise men”’ at Epiphany | ae Hitto-Pheenic. Mogi or Fireworshippers, 279
Christianity, early Phoenicia, 323; Pheenician, 323, Gothic, 301-3; Cross symbol introd. into, by Goths, 3o1f.; Pheenician elements in British, 333
Christmas or Yule, winter solstice festival, 60
Chronicles of Early Briton kings, historicity of, 146f. ; King Lists in 385f.
Cilicia, homeland of Brito-Phcenic. Part-olon, 32, 41-2, 45; Barats of, 55; Britannia and, 55-8; clans of Pheenicians of, 159; in A.B., 41, 43, 61; coins of Briton
centre of, in Arianism in Arianism in
type. iN, 43, 55: 346-7 ; colonization by, in A.B., 43 ; in Carthage and Sardinia, 42; in Sleswick, 44; Phoenicians of, accomp. Brutus to Albion, 161
Cintas (or Cymri) in Jut-land,
Cimmerians, as Cymd 19 f.
Circles, on A.B. coins as on GrecoPho:nician, 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 MHitto-Sumer,
23741.
Circles, Stone, as Solar observatories of Amorite Pheenics., 216, see Stone Circles
Cists, Stone, of A.B. and their meaning,
186
, cup marks on af
237%
Citi-um or Kition, Pheenic. port of Cyprus, Pheenic. factories at, with amulet seals, as in A.B., 178, 220
City states of Phoenicians, 55, 212
Civilization in A.B., 146-7; introdnced by Brito-Phoenics., 168f., r8rf.
Clans, see Tribes
| Clas Merddin (or Diggings of Merd,
Marut or Amorites) early u. for
Albion, 190, 216