Ebook: The Kolbrin Bible
Author: Janice Manning
- Genre: Religion
- Tags: Kolbrin Bronze Bronzebook The Great Book Bible Philosophy Ancient Celtic Egyptian Druid Texts Coelbook
- Year: 2006
- Edition: 7
- Language: English
- pdf
In their day, Phoenician traders operated the most advanced fleets of
ocean-going vessels in all the world. Before their fall to the Roman Empire,
their principal trade routes stretched throughout the Mediterranean area, out
along the shores of Western Europe and up as far North as Britain.
Of note to this body of work is that the Phoenicians imported papyrus
from Egypt and sold it abroad along with ancient wisdom texts. In doing so,
they distributed the earliest known variant of The Kolbrin Bible, called The
Great Book, to their various ports of call.
The Great Book was originally penned in Hieratic by Egyptian
academicians after the Exodus of the Jews (ca 1500 BCE). Its original 21
volumes were later translated using the 22-letter Phoenician alphabet (which
later spawned the Greek, Roman and English alphabets of today).
The only known copy of The Great Book to survive the millennia was the
one exported to Britain by the Phoenicians in the 1st century BCE.
Regrettably, much of it was destroyed when the Glastonbury Abbey was set
ablaze in 1184 CE. The attack on the Abbey was ordered by English King
Henry II, after he accused the Abbey priests of being mystical heretics.
Fearing for their lives, the Celtic priests of the Abbey fled into hiding
with what remained of The Great Book. There, they transcribed the surviving
Phoenician translations to bronze sheets and and stored them in copper-clad
wooden boxes. This effort became known as The Bronzebook.
In the 18th century CE The Bronzebook was merged with a Celtic
wisdom text called the Coelbook to become The Kolbrin Bible.
ocean-going vessels in all the world. Before their fall to the Roman Empire,
their principal trade routes stretched throughout the Mediterranean area, out
along the shores of Western Europe and up as far North as Britain.
Of note to this body of work is that the Phoenicians imported papyrus
from Egypt and sold it abroad along with ancient wisdom texts. In doing so,
they distributed the earliest known variant of The Kolbrin Bible, called The
Great Book, to their various ports of call.
The Great Book was originally penned in Hieratic by Egyptian
academicians after the Exodus of the Jews (ca 1500 BCE). Its original 21
volumes were later translated using the 22-letter Phoenician alphabet (which
later spawned the Greek, Roman and English alphabets of today).
The only known copy of The Great Book to survive the millennia was the
one exported to Britain by the Phoenicians in the 1st century BCE.
Regrettably, much of it was destroyed when the Glastonbury Abbey was set
ablaze in 1184 CE. The attack on the Abbey was ordered by English King
Henry II, after he accused the Abbey priests of being mystical heretics.
Fearing for their lives, the Celtic priests of the Abbey fled into hiding
with what remained of The Great Book. There, they transcribed the surviving
Phoenician translations to bronze sheets and and stored them in copper-clad
wooden boxes. This effort became known as The Bronzebook.
In the 18th century CE The Bronzebook was merged with a Celtic
wisdom text called the Coelbook to become The Kolbrin Bible.
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