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

NEWTON STONE BY KING PART-OLON 69

to the ruling tribe of Britons who occupied the home-province of the paramount king of the Britons in Cesar's day, namely Cassi-Uallaunus, or Cassi-vellaunus, which extended from the Thames to the Wash and Humber (see later). And it is also seen to occur in its shortened form by dropping the initial G in the name of that king himself, as Cassi-Uallawn, the Cad-Wallon of the Cymri. This identity is seen in the equation :Newton Irish-Scot Ptolemy Roman Cymric Stone Books Gy-A olownie =Geleoin =Uchlani =Uallaun (i) =Wallon or Gi-Oln Gleoin

The origin and meaning of that clan title now prove to be Hittite. The word JJannu is defined in Babylonian as “The Hittite,’ whilst Allau is ‘an oak”; and ‘“ Khilaani ’ or “ Xilaani ’’ is defined as “a Khatti (or Hittite) word for a corridor and porticoed windowed building or palace ’’; and it was especially used for Hitt-ite buiidings in Cilicia ; 2 and was imitated by the Babylonians.* This Khilaani is obviously cognate with the Akkadian Khullanu or Xullanu ““ wooden’ ;+ which thus discloses the Hitt-ite or Akkadian origin of the Greek word for “‘ wood’ Xulon or Xylon, and also of the English “‘ Yule,” which significantly is spelt in Gothic, Jwile or Jol, and in Early English and Anglo-Saxon Guili or Geola, which also illustrate the dropping out of the initial G in the later word. It thus presumably designated originally the wooden character of these corridors and porticoed palaces of the Hittites, and latterly was applied to the builders themselves. The Phcenician branch of the Hittites were famous for their superior wood-craft as well as their masonry buildings. Thus Solomon says to the Phoenician king of Tyre, ‘‘ Thou knowest that there is not among us [Israelites) any that can skill to hew timber like unto the Sidonians |Phcenicians].’’®

4C.P.N. 31; also name of Kassis; ib. 85. ?M.D. 315.

+ Thus, in the sixth campaign of Sennacherib the latter says (1. 82) that he erected a building “ like a palace of the Khatti-land, which is called in

the tongue of the Muru (or ‘‘ Amorite’’ section of Hittites), [Khilaani (or Xilaant).”’

*M.D., 315. See S.E.D. under “ Yule.” 5 Kings 5, 6. G