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

204 PHG@NICIAN ORIGIN OF BRITONS & SCOTS

of the Picts or Wans (or Vans) often in the neighbourhoodas the Catti appear to have often settled in the vicinity of old Pictish villages—bearing such names as “ Pitten-den,”’ “ Pit-ney,” ‘ Pitten-ham,” “ Pitch-ley”’ or “ Wan-stead,” “ Wans-den,” etc., or “The Den or Dene or Lea of the Picts or Wans.” Those “ Catti’’ names bearing distinctive Aryan affixes such as “ field,” “well,” “ mill,’ ‘ hurst,’’ “combe,” “‘bury,” “cot” etc., were presumably of somewhat later date, to distinguish these newer settlements from the earlier ones bearing merely the tribal name, The affix “ing” is the Gothic (7.e., Early Briton) tribal affix.

The great number of these early Barat or Brit-on settlements containing the Aryan tribal “ Catti”’ prefix in their names appears to imply that in that early period the Catti ruling vace lived apart by themselves in their own settlements, and did not mix or inter-marry with the aboriginal Picts, and hence they used the prefix ‘‘ Cad”’ or “ Catti’”’ to racially distinguish their early towns from the settlements of the nonAryan aborigines. This would also explain the Chronicle record that Brutus, after building his new capital, “‘ made choice of the citizens who were to inhabit it.”

These “‘ Catti”’ series of early place, river and hill names in Britain, imposed by Brutus and his Phcenician Barats and their descendants, often designate sites upon the old so-called “ Roman ”’ roads, and where are found prehistoric remains, funereal barrows with their cultural objects of the “ Late Stone” and Bronze Ages. They thus disclose for the first time, along with the ‘“ Barat”? and “ Cassi” series, the hitherto unknown racial character and name of the authors of these “ prehistoric’ barrows and Bronze Age weapons and implements, namely, Aryan Barat or “ Catti” Hitto-Pheenicians or Early Britons.

From ‘“‘ New Troy” or London these “ Catti’’ names, in their various dialectic forms, radiate south and westwards as follows :—

Kent : Cat-heim or Cat-hem (or ‘‘ Home of the Catti,” from Gothic heim, ‘““ home”), the ancient Briton name for Dover.

Cf. T.W.P., 148.