Lebor Clann Glas


iconGreat Age of Hyksos [1627-1353 BCE]

1

1In the Great Age of the Hound and Young Bull,
2Two thousand seven hundred and ninety three years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (1627 BCE),
4A terrible calamity befell,
5All the civilizations of the North and Eastern shores
6Of the Inland Sea.
7The Great mountain upon the Isle of Thera (Santorini),
8Did erupt with such violence and fire.
9Great earthquakes it caused,
10Buildings did fall as far as Ebla.
11Great waves of water did come,
12Swamping all cities by the shore.
13Countless numbers did the sea claim.
14All the ancient cities of the Greeks,
15Were lost.
16Civilizations such as the sacred isle of Krētē,
17All were lost.
18Many of the cities of the Hittites were lost.
19Then came the rocks of fire,
20And scorching ash.
21It burnt the cities,
22It turned fields and cattle into dust.

2

1Then came the dust and blinding ash,
2So that day was pitch night,
3Blanketing everything for hundreds of miles.
4To the North as far as Hattusa,
5And Zalpa on the Black inland sea.
6To the South from Dimašqa (Damascus),
7And even to Ye-ru-sa-lu-um (Jerusalem),
8To the East as far as Assur,
9And even to Babylon.
10Ebla was utterly destroyed,
11The (H)Ibiru of the North,
12The sons and daughters of Eber,
13Under Shalik,
14Did travel south and then west,
15Bringing with them,
16The foundation stone of Ebla,
17The white rock of limestone.
18To seek union with the (H)Ibiru Of Egypt,
19The sons and daughters of Emon,
20Now the priest class of Thebes.

3

1King Mursili I of the Hittites,
2A creative king with truth,
3Did abandon his people and his court,
4Like rats,
5East and then south towards the ruins of Ebla,
6To escape the doom of the gods,
7Later to claim that he And not the gods,
8Did level Ebla.
9And he did vanquish,
10The descendants of Hammurabi.
11Like crows the Hittite remnants,
12Picked the empty temples of Babylonia,
13And scavenged for shelter,
14Driven out by the descendants of the Elam,
15As the Kassites from the Zagros mountains.

4

1King Samsu-Ditana of Babylonia,
2Did witness the consuming darkness,
3The withering of crops,
4The looting of towns.
5The King did take his scribes,
6His artisans and masons,
7His magi druid priests,
8And did abandon his cities,
9Abandoning his temples,
10A great exodus,
11To the Valleys of the India,
12To form the great Vedic Civilization.

5

1In the Great Age of the Hound and Young Bull,
2Two thousand seven hundred and ninety six years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (1624 BCE),
4King Shalik of the abandoned (H)Ibiru Empire of the levant,
5Did meet his cousin,
6A-NUN, son of Emon,
7First High Priest of Amen-Ra,
8Priest-King of the (H)Ibiru (Hebrew),
9Of the most sacred Isle.
10His name meaning,
11Son of the primordial gods of the heavens.
12For since the great calamity,
13And midst the war within Egypt,
14A-NUN had risen in power.
15Greatly superstitious were the people.
16He did tell them,
17The calamity was punishment,
18From the Gods,
19For not following Ra,
20On orders sent by Nun.

6

1Upon their meeting,
2A-NUN and Shalik did embrace.
3A-NUN did proclaim,
4Upon the mercy of our ancestors,
5The great HORUS (E-SUS),
6The mighty PE-TAH (PETER),
7The blessed IM-HATAP,
8United we be.
9Upon this day I shall crown you,
10Pharaoh over all Egypt.
11Your name shall be AL-ATTIS,
12Which means the sole (only) Saviour of Humanity,
13And the Good Shepherd.
14And I shall be your priest.
15Shalik then did kneel,
16Upon the white limestone rock,
17The foundation stone of Ebla,
18And A-NUN did anoint him,
19AL-ATTIS.

7

1Thus the age of the Shepherd Kings,
2The HYKSOS age was born.
3For three hundred years,
4They reigned supreme.
5Such fables that do contest this truth,
6Born from malice,
7And crafty hands,
8Of the Ramesses,
9And later kings.
10The pretenders and false Pharaohs,
11Who did loot the tombs of the ancient Pharaohs,
12For their own ends,
13And blamed the most ancient and sacred blood.
14Cursing the land,
15Akhenaten was the last.
16Of the real Pharaoh.
17Ahmose a mere boy,
18The Thebians a careless ruse,
19For They were always Hyksos.
20To strengthen a Dynasty,
21Without noble blood.

8

1Within Twenty years,
2The sons of the King,
3And the sons of the High Priest,
4Had regained all that had been lost.
5Science had returned to Egypt.
6Crops and land tilled with skill,
7An army undefeated.

9

1The mighty Hyksos Pharaoh KHAY-AN,
2Did prepare a throne,
3The greatest of all lands,
4Inlaid with fine detail,
5Of Green marble and gold.
6The Throne of Amen-Ra it be,
7And only those of most ancient blood,
8Had right to be seated.
9The High Priest did refine their craft,
10HO-SHUA (Joshua), son of A-NUN,
11To protect the new Pharaoh,
12And increase his power,
13Did fashion an ark,
14And such an Ark was named,
15The Breath of Ra.
16For within the Ark did reside,
17The Living spirit of the living God,
18And no army could withstand its power.
19At the head of the army did it travel,
20For wherever the Ark of the Pharaoh Did go,
21All enemies would be vanquished.

10

1And the priests of Amen-Ra,
2Did fashion for each Pharaoh,
3A second standard,
4On which A likeness,
5Of the most ancient Anubis (Dog-God),
6Upon the ancient plain of Giza,
7As the living protector of Egypt,
8And servant of Amen-Ra.
9And HO-SHUA (Joshua), son of A-NUN,
10Did replace the wooden staff,
11Of most ancient Holly,
12And Druid,
13With a Gold encrusted staff,
14With a head in the shape of a two headed serpent,
15In honor and power,
16As the representative of,
17The hidden serpent,
18The great speckled serpent (Milky Way),
19Of the heavens.

11

1And the priests of Amen-Ra,
2Did fashion for each Pharaoh,
3A third standard,
4In the Deed (Djed),
5As a living embodiment of illumination,
6And the backbone of the divine,
7And the tree of life,
8Being the eleven centers of priests,
9Of the east and life,
10Of the middle of the waters and intercessors,
11Of the west bank and the afterlife.
12From the island of elephant,
13Also named Yei-Hu,
14To the temple of Isis.
15The Ka,
16The vital spark of life.
17The Ba,
18The soul and unique Character.
19The La,
20The spirit of heart and virtue.
21The Ah,
22Of ultimate wisdom and immortality.

12

1Such was their power,
2Their science and wisdom,
3The Hyksos Kings were unchallenged,
4Trading with all the known powers,
5The lands of Egypt unsurpassed.
6An Empire when Egypt was at her greatest,
7Treaties with the rulers of Assyria,
8With the Mitanni (Northern Syria),
9The Vedic lands (India),
10To the Hittites and Babylonians.

13

1Under the Hyksos,
2The Holly, the druids,
3Did regain their glory.
4In all the great capitals,
5Of all the great civilizations,
6They did build their own temples.
7The first embassies,
8And upon the floor of each embassy,
9They did forge a mighty seal,
10Being the wheel of life (symbol of Heaven),
11The symbol of the (H)Ibiru,
12And the sacred Isle.
13The druids did become,
14The first ambassadors,
15Wearing astoundingly bright colored cloaks,
16With all the colors of the rainbow,
17Including the colors only reserved,
18For Royalty and most sacred priests.
19No other men and women,
20Did wear such color,
21Not even kings,
22Not even high priests of Amen-Ra.

14

1In the Great Age of the Hound and Young Bull,
2Three thousand and nineteen years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (1401 BCE),
4Shepherd King of the Hyksos,
5Pharaoh Amenhotep II,
6Did give up the ghost.
7The Kingship did then fall to his son,
8Pharaoh Thutmoses IV,
9His name meaning,
10Thut, Thoth, the god of truth.
11Moses meaning son,
12So Son of truth.

15

1As was custom then,
2With druids as ambassadors,
3They did rotate To a new court.
4Upon the death of a king or Queen,
5Within one year of the Anointment,
6Of Pharaoh Thutmoses IV,
7A great and mighty druid,
8Known as YO-YAH (Joseph),
9which means lover of Yah (God),
10Did arrive to the court of Thutmoses IV.
11His cloak and vestments,
12Of all the colors of the rainbow,
13Were particularly bright.
14A man of tall stature,
15And fine mind,
16Who had served the courts of many great kings.
17At first the priests of Thebes were fearful,
18But soon gained trust,
19As YO-YAH (Joseph) did speak,
20Of many wisdoms,
21And the stars of the heavens.

16

1In the court of Thutmoses IV,
2YO-YAH (Joseph) did meet all the royal family.
3One who was in awe,
4Of his robes Of many colors,
5And his stories of the world,
6Was the young crown prince Nibmu-areya.
7He did follow YO-YAH (Joseph),
8And ask him questions,
9Which YO-YAH (Joseph) did reply.
10When Nibmu-areya the young prince was four,
11His mother Mutemwiya did have YO-YAH appointed,
12Chief Tutor to the prince.
13A great and rare honor.
14YO-YAH (Joseph) did meet with the crown prince,
15Many days,
16And speak of all manner of things,
17From the time of the ancients,
18To the meaning of the heavens.

17

1Upon his visits to Thebes,
2YO-YAH (Joseph) did come across,
3A beautiful daughter of Amen-Ra,
4Named Tjuyu.
5He did fall in love with her.
6But as was custom of the druids,
7As an ambassador,
8He was forbidden to marry,
9With a foreigner,
10Even of noble birth.

18

1In the Great Age of the Hound and Young Bull,
2Three thousand and eighty nine years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (1391 BCE),
4Shepherd King of the Hyksos,
5Pharaoh Thutmoses IV,
6Did give up the ghost.
7The Kingship did then fall to his son,
8Nibmu-areya,
9A child of only eight years,
10When anointed Pharaoh Amenhotep III.

19

1As was custom YO-YAH (Joseph),
2Was to be recalled from service,
3And leave Egypt forever.
4But he called upon the High Priest of Amen-Ra,
5And request permission,
6To wed his daughter Tjuyu.
7The High Priest did agree,
8And ask to the most sacred druids,
9That YO-YAH (Joseph) Stay in court.
10But the Druids of the most sacred Isle,
11Would not be moved.
12So the priests of Amen-Ra did provide,
13YO-YAH (Joseph) with sanctuary and an ample estate,
14Near the town of Akhmin,
15Where Tiye was born.

20

1Within eight years of his regency,
2The mother of Amenhotep III,
3Named Mutemwiya ceased as stewardess.
4Amenhotep III then called for YO-YAH (Joseph),
5To return to court.
6The priests of Amen-Ra,
7Urged the Pharaoh to reconsider,
8For the word of the druids,
9Of the most sacred isle,
10Since the beginning of time,
11Was stronger than stone,
12And never broken.
13But Amenhotep III Would not be moved,
14He refused to acknowledge,
15The current druid ambassador,
16And ordered him sent away.
17Again the priests did warn him,
18For a druid curse was a mighty omen,
19But Amenhotep III was even more determined.
20He did then come up with a plan.
21He announced his first Great Royal Wife,
22To be Tiye,
23The daughter of YO-YAH (Joseph).
24The Pharaoh did greatly anger,
25The priests of Amen-Ra.
26For the first great wife,
27During the days of the Hyksos,
28Was usually reserved for a princess,
29Of the royal line of priests of Thebes,
30Not to a foreigner,
31Even if of most ancient noble blood.
32But Amenhotep III would not be moved,
33So he did wed Tiye,
34And YO-YAH (Joseph) returned to court a noble.

21

1Within three years,
2Of marriage to Tiye,
3Amenhotep III was blessed,
4With a son,
5Which he named,
6Crown prince Thutmoses,
7The Son of Truth.
8Within a further year,
9Amenhotep III was blessed,
10With a second son,
11Which he named Naphu-rureya (Akhenaten).
12As had he been raised,
13Amenhotep III Called upon YO-YAH (Joseph),
14To be Chief Tutor to the two royal princes,
15A mighty and rare honor.

22

1Within the 30th year of the reign (1361 BCE),
2Of Amenhotep III,
3After the mountains of the North,
4Did erupt,
5In the lands of Ice (Iceland),
6The rain did not come of Egypt,
7The sun did not shine as bright,
8The crops did wither and die.
9Throughout the empire,
10People grew weak and hungry.
11The towns became restless and angry.
12The Pharaoh did call his chief viziers,
13The chiefs of the treasury,
14The chiefs of the stores and water,
15All of whom called it a sign,
16Of the displeasure of the gods.
17They could offer no solution,
18Except to pray to the gods.
19The Pharaoh did send for the chief priests,
20Of the Temple of Thebes,
21Of the Temples of Memphis,
22And most ancient Heliopolis,
23All of whom called it a sign,
24Of the displeasure of the gods.
25The Pharaoh dismissed them all,
26He then sent for his old tutor,
27His second father, YO-YAH (Joseph).
28YO-YAH told him,
29That it be but a season of the heavens,
30That no god did cause such action,
31But one god, the lord of all gods- Aten.
32To feed the hungry,
33And save the empire,
34The Pharaoh must re-organize the treasury,
35And the grains,
36Ridding them of ancient superstitions,
37That stops work,
38And devote better effort,
39To the use of water and channels,
40To expand good land, not reduce it.
41The Viziers of the Treasury and the Grainery,
42Upon hearing these words,
43Cursed such blasphemy against the gods,
44Who guided every decision,
45And every act of every day,
46To expand land in time of famine,
47They called utter madness.

23

1But Pharaoh trusted YO-YAH,
2More than any of them.
3In his court he declared:
4I appoint you (YO-YAH) my one and only official,
5To you I bestow the greatest of titles,
6You shall hold the ring of Upper Egypt,
7You shall manage the grainery,
8You shall be my Treasurer,
9You shall be my highest vizier.
10And upon these words,
11YO-YAH did set about ridding,
12The minor gods that ruled,
13Every decision of every day.
14He did change the waters,
15And increase fertile land,
16And Egypt was abundant with food,
17While the rest of the world was in famine.
18Such was the greatness of his work,
19That great numbers of refugees,
20From all parts of the world,
21Did flood into Egypt,
22And YO-YAH did set about tasking them,
23With great public works.

24

1Day and night,
2YO-YAH did toil,
3Without rest,
4For his adopted land.
5Confidant of the King.
6Day and night,
7YO-YAH did plan and direct,
8Without rest.
9The Wise One,
10The Pharaoh,
11Did praise him,
12And reward him great title,
13And YO-YAH did apply himself,
14Even harder,
15So that every field was named,
16EverY road measured,
17Every store accounted,
18Every person fed.

25

1In the Great Age of the Hound and Young Bull,
2Three thousand one hundred and twenty four years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (1356 BCE),
4YO-YAH (Joseph) did suddenly give up the ghost.
5A great mourning befell all of Egypt,
6All the Empire,
7Even neighboring Empires,
8Did send princes and Kings to mourn.
9The death of YO-YAH (Joseph),
10The kingdom saved.
11Amenhotep III had lost his father,
12His teacher,
13His friend.
14His sons did leave the royal court,
15Thutmoses to Memphis,
16Akhenaten to Thebes.
17Amenhotep III shut his court.
18He refused visits.
19His kingdom saved,
20He became recluse.
21No doctor did he see,
22Though Sickness wracked his body,
23And within 3 cycles of the sun,
24Of the death of YO-YAH,
25The Pharaoh gave up the ghost.