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

252 PHGNICIAN ORIGIN OF BRITONS & SCOTS

It will also be seen, in scanning the circle key-list in the table, that the first or single circle, or cup-mark, title for God, Ia or Jove, or “The One God,” has the value 4 (7.e., the Greek Alpha): whilst the last title for Him is - the large double O (7.¢., the Greek O-mega—a name now seen to be also derived from the Sumerian Makh, “ Great,’ and surviving in the Scottish ‘“‘Muckle” and our English “Much” and “ Magnitude,” etc.). It thus appears that the Early Sumerians and our own “ pagan” Ancient Briton ancestors called the Father-God Ja or Jove by the very same title as God is called in the Apocalypse, namely ‘‘ Alpha and O-mega, the First and the Last.” Thus, while finding the essentially Gentile origin of that title, we also gain its original inner meaning.

Having thus recovered the keys to the religious and occult values of the circles or “‘ cup-marks'’ in Sumerian, we are now able, through these keys, to identify for the first time with precision the respective images of God and his angels, or minor divinities, figured on the sacred seals of the HittoSumerians, as in Fig. 33, p. 239. In that seal, of which ten other specimens of the same scene are figured on other seals by Ward,*it will be noticed that all of the personages wear the horned head-dress, like the Goths and Ancient Britons. The Father-God in human form is seated on a throne under the 8-rayed Sun, below which is a crescent ;? and facing him below is the hieroglyph of a head, which in Sumerian is the word-sign for his title of “ Creator.’’* Next to him, as “ Witness,’ stands the official designated by two circles, the Sun-god (see key-list)—the “‘ all-seeing ” Day and Night Sun. He is two-faced, facing both ways, Janus-like (as in Hittite and in some Briton monuments and coins) and bears the Caduceus rod (called Gid or ““ Serpent rod "’ in Sumerian, thus disclosing the Sumerian origin of the name “ Caduceus ’’) which is topped by the double Sun-circle with two subject Serpents of Death and Darkness attached—disclosing the Sumerian origin of the two Serpents attached to the Sun’s

1W.S.C., 291-300. >The crescent is absent in No. 295. *Br., 9112-4. That he is Ja or Indara is evidenced by his being figured in many seals of this scene with the spouting waters, as in Fig. 35.