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
348 PHGENICIAN ORIGIN OF BRITONS & SCOTS
Devil-worshipping aborigines. They achieved their success through the leadership of the great warrior Aryan king, the second king of the First Aryan Dynasty of the traditional lists, who was, I find, the inventor of the Plough and establisher of Agriculture.t Later, the Aryans gratefully apotheosized him and made him their patron saint and the prototype of the Archangel of their Sun-cult, and represented him armed as a warrior, and he is thus the human original of the Archangel Taxi or Tas, the “‘ Tash-ub ” or “Tash of the Plough” of the Hittites, the Tascio of the Briton coins and monuments, and St. Michael the Archangel of the Gentiles who, under his Father, fought against and overcame “the Dragon, the Old Serpent, and his angels,” who warred against “the Sons of God ’’—a favourite title of the Aryans, appearing in early Sumerian inscriptions, and reflected in Genesis.
We now discover why the Archangel Tas or Taxi was invoked in the prehistoric ‘‘ cup-mark”’ inscriptions of the Early Britons, and was so freely figured on the great majority of the very numerous mintages of coins of the Early Britons or Catti, many of which bear his name stamped thereon as “‘Tasc, Tascio, Tascia, Taxci, Tevi,’ etc. (see Figs. 61, etc.), along with ears of Corn and Sun Crosses, both the erect True Cross and the X “ Cross’ or Hammer of his Father “‘ Andrew” or Indara, and as Grain-Crosses, and as defending the Goats or Deer symbolizing the “‘ Goths ” or Catti Aryans, and figured in the same conventional manner on the Briton coins as he is represented on the sacred seals of the Catti or Khatti Hitto-Sumerians and on the coins of the Phenicians (compare Figs. 64 and 65 for some of these identities).
We also now see why Tas, as the archangel of the Sun-cult and St. Michael, is figured on the Early Briton coins and prehistoric and pre-Christian monuments often with wings, and often accompanied by the Sun Hawk or Eagle, or the Sun Goose (Michaelmas Goose), or Phcenix of the Phcenicians, as well as with the Sun Horse often winged, and the Sun disc, and all in more or less identical form with the conventional
1 Details in my {rvan Origii of the Phenicians,