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
PREFACE vil
records his personal name and native town in Cilicia, which is a well-known ancient city-port and famous seat of ‘“ Sunworship ' in Asia Minor.
This British-Pheenician prince from Cilicia is, moreover, disclosed in his own inscription in Scotland to be the actual historical original of the traditional “ Part-olon, king of the Scots,’ who, according to the Ancient British Chronicles of Geoffrey and Nennius and the legends of the Irish Scots, came with a fleet of colonists from the Mediterranean and arrived in Erin, after having cruised round the Orkneys (not far distant from the site where this Phoenician monument stands) and colonized and civilized Ireland, about four centuries before the Roman occupation of Britain. And he is actually called in this inscription “ Part-olon ’’ by a fuller early form of that name.
This uniquely important British-Phoenician inscription, whilst incidentally extending back the existence of the Scots in Scotland for over eight centuries beyond the period hitherto known for them to our modern historians, and disclosing their Phoenician origin, at the same time rehabilitates the genuineness of the traditional indigenous British Chronicles as preserved by Geofirey of Monmouth and Nennius. These chronicles, although formerly accorded universal credence in Britain and on the Continent up till about a century ago, have been arbitrarily jettisoned aside by modern writers on early British history, obsessed with exaggerated notions of the Roman influence on Britain, as mere fables. But the genuineness of these traditional chronicles, thus conclusively established for the period about 400 B.c., is also now confirmed in a great variety of details for other of these traditional events in the pre-Roman period of Britain.
This ascertained agreement of the traditional British Chronicles with leading ascertained facts of pre-Roman British History wherever it can be tested, presumes a similarly genuine character also for the leading events in the earlier tradition. This begins with the arrival of ‘ King Brutus-the-Trojan and his “ Briton ’ colonists with their wives and families in a great fleet from the Mediterranean about 1103 B.c., and his occupation, colonization and civiliza-