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

PART-OLON’S PHG@NICIAN TITLES 70

title of “ Khildni,’ and a term which was especially current in Cilicia, whence, our author tellsusin his inscription, he came. And we thus see why the Briton Catti king, with lineage directly continuous from the first Brit-on king “ Brut ” (see Appendix I), and living in the more highly civilized part of Britain in the south, with only nominal rule north of the Forth (according to the Chronicles), should have befriended his fellow-clansman Part-olon in extending Hitto-Phcenician civilization and colonization in this remoter part of Britain, when he learned that he was of the ‘‘ Bar-clenses,” for this was the same Catti or Hitt-ite clan to which that Early Briton king himself belonged.

The further title given to Part-olon of “Son of Seva or Syuw in the Irish chronicles? is a striking confirmation of his Hitto-Phcenician ancestry. This ancestral name “ Sera or Sru” obviously preserves the patronymic king Barat’s front title of ‘‘ Sav,’ which was the favourite form of the ancestral Barat’s name selected by the founder of the First Phoenician Dynasty in Mesopotamia, who regularly called himself “Son (or descendant) of Say.”* It thus attests the remarkable authenticity of the tradition of the Trish-Scots, whilst further confirming the Aryan HittoPheenician ancestry of Part-olon, who is now revealed on the solid basis of concrete history as the first civilizer, not only of Ireland, but of the north of Scotland, about four hundred years before the dawn of the Christian era.

The migration of Part-olon from Cilicia to the British Isles about 390 B.c., according to the British Chronicle historical tradition (see Appendix I), was probably owing to the massacring invasion and annexation of Cilicia and Asia Minor by the Spartan Greeks in 399 B.c. These Spartan invaders were significantly opposed by the Phcenician fleet in 394 B.c., but not finally defeated by the Phcenicians at

a he D., Book oe L einster (Book of Dun) 15a, 234, etc. “‘ Partolon mac Sdairn meic Seuva meic Syu (see CAN 229), For re wane Sera see R.H.L., 580f. Goialdus in Topographia Hibernica (Dict. 302, Rolls ed. 5, p. 140) calls him “ Sere filius de stirpe Japhet filii No& (Noah),”’ * Detailed proofs in my Aryan Origin of the Phenictans.