Lebor Clann Glas


iconGreat Age of Eliada [430-323 BCE]

1

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Seven hundred and seventy years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (430 BCE),
4As Athena remained surrounded and sealed as punishment,
5Artaxerxes issued a decree to all satraps,
6From Indus to the east,
7To Armenia in the center,
8To Arabia in the south,
9And Italia to the west,
10That the name of the Empire,
11Was to now be known as Eliada,
12Meaning the states of the Illuminated Divine,
13On account of Elios (Larissa) as the new capital,
14Meaning the city of illumination,
15And the city of the divine sun.
16Yet smaller city states around the Peloponnese,
17Began to rebel in defiance and fear,
18Of the fate of Athena.
19The first of these was Megara,
20Followed by Pylos.
21Other cities and islands quickly followed,
22Such as Eretria on Euboea,
23And the isles of Chios and Lesbos.
24Artaxerxes immediately ordered the rebellion put down,
25Which in turn sparked a greater uprising,
26Of the satraps of Thrace, Ionia, Phrygia, Karia and Graecia (Sicily).
27With the trade of the Aegean threatened by wider revolt,
28Artaxerxes chose to put down the revolt in Thrace first,
29Followed by Phrygia, Ionia and then Karia.
30His generals then dealt with the rebel Peloponnese cities,
31Destroying Megara and Pylos to its foundations,
32And emptying the island of Euboea of people,
33Then sent eastward as forced laborers,
34Into Parthia and Hyrcania.
35In the Great Age of the Ram,
36Seven hundred and seventy nine years,
37Since the dawn of the Great Age (421 BCE),
38The forces of Artaxerxes invaded Graecia (Sicily),
39To seek to re-establish order.
40Yet the Eliada (Persian) fleet was destroyed,
41By a united fleet from Graecia,
42Led by Syracuse.

2

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Seven hundred and eighty years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (420 BCE),
4Artaxerxes (Xenophon) had completed the restoration of Elios,
5And the creation of the great gardens temples and libraries,
6Known as the Academie (Academy),
7As a new center of learning for the world.
8The Ark of the Covenant and the artifacts of Akhenaten,
9Placed in a new Temple complex at the center of the city.
10In the Great Age of the Ram,
11Seven hundred and eighty three years,
12Since the dawn of the Great Age (417 BCE),
13Eliah the twenty first great prophet of Yeb,
14Also known as Eli,
15The son of Osanniah (Hosanna) and the grandson of Osiah (Hosea),
16Did give up the ghost.
17The position then befell,
18To his son whose name was Oadiah,
19As the twenty second Great Prophet of the Yahudi.

3

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Seven hundred and ninety one years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (409 BCE),
4King Artaxerxes of Eliada (Persia),
5Also known as the King of Kings,
6Also known as the Son of God,
7Also known as the foreign voice (Xenophon),
8Also known as the Yahudi tribe of Menes,
9Also known as the ancient Yahudi of Reuben,
10Did give up the ghost.
11The crown did then befall to his son,
12Whose name was Arxenes,
13Also known as Plato,
14And also known as Artaxerxes II.
15Upon Arxenes (Plato) becoming King,
16The Satrap of Hyrcania of the House of Ochus,
17Did Rebel against Artaxerxes,
18Aided by the Parthians.
19Ochus did then seize the most sacred city of Persepolis,
20The ancient home of the Menes,
21And then declared himself anointed by Ahura Mazda,
22As the reincarnation of King Darius the Great,
23In opposition to the Divine Creator known as Theos (God),
24And the teachings of equality amongst men,
25As the Golden Rule of Law.
26Ochus as the Imposter Darius claimed divine right,
27That some men are born greater than others,
28And that the divine permits different laws,
29For the elite of society compared to slaves.
30His message combined with traditional beliefs,
31Caused many of the satraps of the east to pledge loyalty,
32And the empire was now divide in two,
33And the stage for civil war.

4

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Seven hundred and ninety one years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (409 BCE),
4Upon news of the death of Artaxerxes,
5Navigator Himilco of Carthage,
6Led an invasion force to Graecia (Sicily),
7Seeking first to capture Selinus to the west.
8The Greeks did ferociously defend their city,
9And while Himilco was victorious,
10It was at the expense of many men.
11Upon news of the fall of Selinus,
12The elders of Syracuse quickly appointed Dionysus as tyrant,
13That he defend the city against attack.
14Dionysus then sought alliances with smaller cities,
15That he be capable of holding the Carthaginians,
16From direct siege.
17Himilco soon had reinforcements,
18That Dionysus and Syracuse were outnumbered.
19Yet Dionysus appealed to all the people of Syracuse directly,
20Declaring he be the son of the god Zeus (Xerxes),
21And the son of the Semele the daughter of Kadmos,
22The true name of Baal.
23That if any man or woman or slave pledge absolute obedience,
24And fight for him then he be free.
25Dionysus then created a ritual whereby men and woman,
26Died to themselves and suffered symbolic trial,
27To be reborn and possessed by spirits and demons,
28Claiming they then had great strength and wisdom.
29When the Carthaginians attacked,
30They were overwhelmed by the frenzied forces of Dionysus,
31Until Himilco himself was under siege.
32In the Great Age of the Ram,
33Seven hundred and ninety four years,
34Since the dawn of the Great Age (406 BCE),
35Navigator Himilco of Carthage,
36The first amongst equals,
37Of the Carthage Council of Elders,
38Did give up the ghost,
39During his failed campaign in Sicily.
40The office did then go to Mago,
41Who agreed to terms with Dionysus.
42To celebrate victory,
43Dionysus declared himself patron god of Graecia (Sicily),
44Commencing a week of celebrations,
45Where people consumed wine and other drugs,
46And obscene orgies of lust went unchecked,
47While Dionysus introduced a new secret ritual,
48To the leaders of all the cities of Sicily,
49Who pledged their loyalty to him,
50In the sacrifice of a new born baby,
51Slaughtered and eaten in a cave,
52As a symbol of eternal loyalty to Zeus (Xerxes),
53Who gives and can take away eternal life.

5

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Seven hundred and ninety two years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (408 BCE),
4King Arxenes (Plato),
5Also known as Artaxerxes II,
6Sought first to appeal to the satraps,
7To pledge their loyalty to the empire,
8From common love of wisdom and culture,
9Than the shallow lust for power and wealth.
10Yet the appeal to reason was taken as a sign,
11Not of strength of character but weakness,
12And Alcibiades the Satrap of Karka (Church),
13Declared from his city at Ephesus,
14To be the King of Lydia,
15Encompassing the satraps of Ionia, Karka and Phrygia.
16Never before had Lydia existed,
17Yet Alcibiades to support his false claim,
18Invented untold frauds and fantasies,
19Of a mythical kingdom emerging from Troy,
20And kings as heroes who first invented money,
21That possessed the power of foresight and forethought,
22To which King Arxenes (Plato) famously cried out in frustration,
23What does it profit a man to gain the whole world,
24Yet lose his soul?

6

1Midst the empire of Eliada falling into anarchy,
2King Arxenes (Plato) of Persia,
3Also known as Artaxerxes II did summons his loyal generals.
4No more would he appeal to merchants and administrators,
5But to men of loyalty and honor as soldiers of the Divine.
6King Arxenes (Plato) then presented the Fasces,
7Being a bundle of wooden rods and a single axe,
8Strapped together by leather,
9To which King Arxenes (Plato) announced,
10These sticks and axe held by straps,
11Be the symbol of the perfect state,
12As the symbol of justice and rule of law,
13The wooden sticks as corporal punishment,
14And the ax as the symbol of capital punishment,
15Bound by knowledge and love of law.
16A king be like a father,
17And his subjects be like his children.
18He may speak to them of knowledge,
19But without disciplines the children cease to learn.
20That all men who gain self knowledge are immortal,
21That life is a dream and all the world is made up of ideas.
22Thus the pursuit of wealth is futile,
23As too is the desire for power.
24But men who pledge themselves to austerity and obedience,
25To honor and humility can never die.
26Thus as single sticks, we may be divided and broken,
27But as Divine Soldiers of the Sons of God,
28We are unconquerable.
29King Arxenes (Plato) then issued each general,
30With the sacred text called Republic,
31Saying that all men who seek self knowledge are equal,
32And choose then to be rulers,
33Yet men who choose to live like animals,
34In the pursuit of wealth and pleasure,
35Choose themselves to be ruled.

7

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Seven hundred and ninety four years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (406 BCE),
4The forces of King Arxenes (Plato) of Eliada,
5United under the symbol of the fasces (Republic),
6Utterly destroyed the forces of Alcibiades,
7And captured the city of Ephesus,
8Burning it to the ground as punishment.
9King Arxenes (Plato) and his army then moved east,
10To confront the imposter and pretender Darius,
11Capturing Mesopotamia and returning law.
12In the Great Age of the Ram,
13Seven hundred and ninety nine years,
14Since the dawn of the Great Age (401 BCE),
15The army of the false King Darius,
16Of the House of Ochos,
17Was defeated at Cunaxa,
18Near the city of Babylon.
19Ochos himself was killed.
20Yet his son did escape,
21And sought refuge in Syria,
22Before being rescued by the priests of Mithra.
23Ochos the Younger was then brought before Ezra,
24Where Ezra the false High Priest did declare,
25That if Ochos the Younger did swear obedience to Mithra,
26And the supremacy of the priests,
27And the return of the Ark of the Covenant,
28To the city of Jerusalem,
29Then they would help him create,
30The greatest empire in history.
31Ochos the Younger then did become the first king,
32Ordained under the religion of Mithra,
33And proclaimed himself to be Cyrus.

8

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eight hundred and one years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (399 BCE),
4The Imposter King Cyrus did declare,
5Under the direction of Ezra,
6That 14th Nisan (14th March) of the year,
7Seven hundred and forty five years,
8Since the dawn of the Great Age (455 BCE),
9Being the Day and Year Jerusalem was granted,
10Its own constitution and laws by Xerxes,
11Be year zero of a new calendar,
12Of the refined religion of Mithra,
13To celebrate the birthday of Mithra,
14And the birth of a new world.
15Cyrus ordered the old solar calendar to be rejected,
16To be replaced by a complicated moon based calendar,
17That Ezra and the priests of Mithra created,
18The first month being Nisan of March/April,
19The second month being called Iyyar of April/May,
20The third month being called Siman of May/June,
21The fourth month being called Duzu of June/July,
22The fifth month being called Ab of July/August,
23The sixth month being called Ulul of August/September,
24The seventh month being called Tasrit of September/October,
25The eighth month being called Ashsam of October/November,
26The ninth month being called Kisilim of November/December,
27The tenth month being called Tebet of December/January,
28The eleventh month being called Shabat of January/February,
29The twelfth month being called Adar of February/March,
30And every six years the month of Shaitan (Satan) added,
31To correct the calendar due to its gross error.
32Cyrus under orders from Ezra also decreed a new zodiac,
33Ending thousands of years of tradition of eight houses,
34For twelve houses in the heavens,
35For which the heavens did not evenly match.
36Imposter King Cyrus did then declare that the 14th Nisan,
37Be known as the new Year and the Day of Blood,
38And the Day of Passover, when death was conquered,
39That Mithra was the light of the world,
40That he was born from the sacred Rock of Jerusalem,
41And that all good men must make a pilgrimage to Jerusalem,
42Or else their soul in the afterlife be in peril.
43Thus despite the falsities and absurdities,
44Of this false religion,
45Many people subscribed to the demand for fear and awe,
46And for blood atonement,
47And the fear of divine judgment.

9

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eight hundred and two years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (398 BCE),
4Dionysus of Syracuse and Graecia (Sicily),
5Broke his peace treaty with Carthage,
6And attacked the city of Motya in Sicily,
7Killing all its inhabitants and raising it to the ground.
8The elders of Carthage then ordered Navigator Mago,
9To take a massive army and retake Motya in Sicily,
10While a second invasion army under the command of Hanno,
11Landed in the north near Ostia,
12To stop any reinforcements,
13And outflank the Graecians.
14The massive forces of the Carthaginians under Mago,
15Took Dionysus by surprise,
16Recapturing the ruins of Mago,
17Then taking Messina, Catana, Naxos and Lentini,
18Before laying siege to Syracuse and capturing the city,
19Not its fortress island of Ortygia.
20Dionysus and his remaining forces escaped for their lives,
21And headed east to Attica,
22Hiding amongst the abandoned and cursed ruins of Athena,
23That neither King Arxenes (Plato) or the Spartans,
24Were at first aware of his presence.
25The Roman tribes quickly formed into Legions,
26And sought to defend against the Carthaginian invasion.
27However, the Persian (Praetorian) Guard remained,
28Protectors of the city,
29While the Romans were pushed back by the Carthaginians.
30To stop the slaughter of the Romans,
31The Praetorian broke their sacred oath,
32And left Rome unprotected to engage the forces of Hanno,
33Putting them into retreat and saving the Roman people.
34But in a deliberate act of brutality,
35The Carthaginians burnt and sacked Rome,
36Killing every woman and child.
37In response the Romans pledged an eternal and unbreakable oath,
38To the defense of Eliada and to the true kings of Persia,
39And a high curse that one day, they would wipe Carthage,
40From the face of the earth.
41In the same year,
42Holly High King Ailil mac Art,
43Of the most ancient Cuilliaéan,
44Of the Messiah bloodline of King Da’vid,
45Did give up the ghost.
46The throne of Amen-Ra did then befall to his son,
47Whose name was Eochaid mac Ailella.

10

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eight hundred and three years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (397 BCE),
4The false prophet known as Ezra,
5Of the false Yahudi of Babylon,
6Also known as the High Priest of Mithra,
7And son of Nehemiah,
8Did give up the ghost.
9The title of High Priest of Mithra,
10Did then befall to his son,
11Whose name was Habakiah.
12In the same year,
13King Arxenes (Plato),
14Also known as Artaxerxes II,
15Ordered King Agesilaus of Sparta,
16To lead an army to Asia,
17To defeat Cyrus and rid the world of Mithraism.

11

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eight hundred and four years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (396 BCE),
4Dionysus and his surviving troops in Athena,
5Had stumbled into the greatest tomb of riches,
6Of the ancient world.
7For no man dared cross the Persian and Spartan guards,
8Who stood as sentinels to the cursed city of the dead.
9Yet more feared that a painful death by people,
10Were the demons and ghosts said to inhabit such a place.
11Dionysus then struck upon an idea.
12So vast were the treasures of the cursed city,
13He would use it to fund the greatest militia army in history.
14To each of his men he gave the most valuable of jewels and artifacts,
15And ordered them to travel to every city across the world,
16To proclaim that Dionysus had conquered death,
17And traveled to the underworld to face the king of souls,
18Who then granted Dionysus the keys to eternal life,
19And the power to command or ward off spirits,
20And whosoever he condemned would be tortured forever,
21In the bowels of the furnaces of Hades.
22The men of Dionysus were told to say,
23That upon his resurrection from death,
24Dionysus then ascended into heaven,
25To be granted the power to heal and live a prosperous life.
26That if any man take up arms in the name of Dionysus,
27So long as he believed in the resurrection,
28And the truth of Dionysus as savior of the world,
29Then he shall be granted such riches in this world and the next.
30So the men of Dionysus followed his orders,
31And traveled to the cities of the world,
32And within a few weeks the dead city of Athena,
33Was full of tens of thousands of militia,
34And the coast with hundreds of warships.
35Dionysus then declared a new name for Athena,
36Calling it Thebes,
37And the capital of a new kingdom,
38The Kingdom of Thebes.

12

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eight hundred and five years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (395 BCE),
4King Arxenes (Plato),
5Also known as Artaxerxes II,
6Was enraged upon hearing of the acts of Dionysus,
7And his false spiritual teachings,
8That what kind of madness entrap the world,
9That a man may utter such falsities,
10Yet people believe them?
11King Arxenes (Plato) then ordered the Spartans to return,
12And take Athens from Dionysus and his Theban band.
13King Agesilaus of Sparta and his forces returned,
14To be overwhelmed by the numbers of militia,
15First at Haliartas in the Boeotia region,
16Then at Koronea then Nemea and then at Cnidus.
17Yet even the superiority of the Spartans,
18Could not replace their ranks,
19With the numbers of militia and mercenaries,
20That had come from the four corners of the world,
21To worship the gold of Dionysus.
22The false king Cyrus of Persia,
23Had also noted the power of Dionysus now of Thebes,
24And sent his best general Bardyllis,
25To meet with Dionysus,
26So that a treaty might be agreed,
27And that together King Arxenes (Plato),
28Be defeated.
29Yet Dionysus had no interest in attacking Plato,
30Nor in engaging with any treaty with Cyrus.
31Instead he launched a great invasion,
32To recapture Syracuse and Graecia,
33From the Carthaginians.
34Within two years Dionysus had regained Syracuse,
35And fought Carthage to a standstill,
36Whereby Dionysus controlled the east,
37And Carthage controlled the west of Graecia (Sicily).

13

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eight hundred and fourteen years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (386 BCE),
4After ten years of fighting,
5Wave after wave of Spartans,
6Dionysus of Thebes and Syracuse agreed to secret treaty,
7With the imposter King Cyrus of Persia,
8And to aid in the theft of the most sacred Ark of the Covenant,
9And the treasures of Moses (Akhenaten),
10From the custody of King Arxenes (Plato),
11The true King of Persia and Eliada.
12Dionysus appointed his most skilled diplomat,
13Whose name was Antalcidas,
14To seek terms with King Agesilaus of Sparta,
15And end the ten years of constant war.
16King Cyrus did then withdraw his forces to the east,
17Towards Parthia and pretending,
18That his strength was much weakened.
19King Arxenes (Plato),
20Also known as Artaxerxes II,
21Seeking to end the madness of two false religions,
22Committed his main army to Asia,
23To finish Cyrus,
24While Cyrus secretly sent Bardyllis,
25And his main army and fleet to land at Labeates,
26And travel east into the mountains of Illyria,
27To attack from the north.
28King Agesilaus of Sparta agreed to terms,
29Through Antalcidas to Dionysus,
30As his forces had been greatly weakened,
31By constant fighting.
32In the Great Age of the Ram,
33Eight hundred and fifteen years,
34Since the dawn of the Great Age (385 BCE),
35The forces of Bardyllis attacked Elios from the north,
36While Dionysus landed from the east of Epirus,
37And attacked Elios from the East.
38King Arxenes (Plato) was taken by surprise,
39As his Immortals Guard could defend against most attacks,
40Yet a swarm of over one hundred thousand mercenaries,
41And the professional forces of Bardyllis were overwhelming.
42King Arxenes (Plato) implored the Great Prophet Oadiah,
43Come with him and escape with the Ark of the Covenant,
44To which Oadiah did reply,
45That the King must choose whether blood be more sacred,
46Than a mere box of gold and jewels.
47It be true that the greatest of empires and kings,
48Had spilled the blood of millions for its control,
49But always in ignorance and never in wisdom.
50For the Ark of the Covenant be nothing more than a symbol,
51That all Pharaoh of the Hyksos did possess.
52The true power always be in the knowledge,
53Of a philosopher king or priest,
54And the blood that honors such ancient wisdom.
55For if the King seized the Ark then all will surely be lost,
56Yet if the Immortals and the Ark remain,
57Then the King his household and the priests may yet survive.
58King Arxenes (Plato) bowed to Oadiah and pledged,
59So long as there be breath in my body,
60As long as there be heirs to defend my honor,
61Let no man if he truly be a man dishonor your name,
62Let your name and memory be praised forever as Alelujiah (Halelujiah).
63Verily a hero is born among a hundred,
64A wise man is found among a thousand,
65Yet a complete man of austerity and honor and virtue,
66Be not found even among a hundred thousand.
67King Arxenes (Plato) then departed north east,
68Protected by his closest guard,
69As the Great Prophet Oadiah (Halelujiah),
70And only a thousand Immortals remained at Elios,
71To face the largest army ever assembled,
72Since the times of Xerxes.

14

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eight hundred and fifteen years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (385 BCE),
4As soon as word of the forces of Cyrus under Bardyllis,
5And Dionysus were attacking Elios,
6Reached King Agesilaus of Sparta,
7He dispatched ever able bodied Spartan,
8To defend his lord and sacred ally.
9Never before had the Spartans moved so swiftly,
10Then or since.
11Dionysus anticipating the Spartan support,
12Had placed thirty thousand troops,
13North east of Corinth.
14Yet the Spartans cut through the thirty thousand,
15In half a day and continue to advance northward.
16Further north at Elios,
17Oadiah the twenty second great prophet of Yeb,
18Also known forever as Alelujiah (Halelujiah),
19The son of Eliah and the grandson of Osanniah (Hosanna),
20Remained standing at the entrance of the Great Temple of Elios,
21As wave upon wave of the marauders of Dionysus army of greed,
22Were cut down by the Immortals.
23When the buildings of Elios were on fire,
24And the streets clogged with bodies and blood,
25Bardyllis committed his troops,
26Killing the last of the Immortal defenders,
27Until confronting Oadiah in the holy of holies.
28As Bardyllis thrust a mortal blow into Oadiah,
29Oadiah prophecized that Bardyllis would not leave Eliada,
30That the sons of Arxenes (Plato),
31And their legacy of illumination would triumph,
32The wickedness of liars and frauds.
33As Oadiah did give up the ghost.
34The position then befell,
35To his son whose name was Oananiah,
36As the twenty third Great Prophet of the Yahudi.
37Bardyllis then ordered an elite guard of Cyrus,
38To take the Ark and the treasures of Moses (Akhenaten),
39Back to the King at Babylon,
40As he advanced northward to seize Arxenes (Plato).
41The forces of Arxenes (Plato) in retreat set defenses,
42At the north of the great lake of Loudiaka,
43Upon the plain of Pella.
44As the forces of Bardyllis approached,
45The army of King Agesilaus of Sparta,
46Reached the ruins of Elios,
47And the looting militia of Dionysus,
48Cutting down fifty thousand men in a day,
49Before continuing their advance.
50Upon news of the Spartans Bardyllis hesitated.
51And sought his own defenses.
52Yet they were no match for the Spartans,
53Who killed more than forty thousand,
54Of the troops of Cyrus and Bardyllis,
55Saving Arxenes (Plato),
56And the priests of Yahu.
57Upon his rescue King Arxenes (Plato) declared,
58Upon this sacred plain,
59Where the divine ordained we be spared,
60I shall dedicate a city of light and truth,
61Which shall be called Philipi (Thessaloniki),
62As my capital.
63Let it be known to all who come,
64That no man have the right to be a priest or servant,
65Or judge or officer of law,
66If he does not pledge his oath and honor,
67To truth and wise knowledge,
68To rid this world of superstitions and ignorance,
69And the falsities of pirates and messiahs.

15

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eight hundred and seventeen years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (383 BCE),
4The imposter King Cyrus called unto all his loyal satraps,
5To attend a celebration of the arrival of the Ark of the Covenant,
6And the sacred treasures of Moses (Akhenaten) to Babylon,
7Yet the satrap of Armenia refused to bear false witness,
8And was put to death.
9Habakiah demanded that King Cyrus return the Ark to Jerusalem,
10As he had pledged before heaven his loyalty to Mithra,
11To which Cyrus expelled all the priests of Mithra from Babylon.
12The forces of Dionysus were expelled from Thebes (Athena),
13And a Spartan garrison established to guard against in habitation.
14Yet upon the loss against Cyrus,
15And the deceptions of Dionysus,
16Arxenes (Plato) sought to build an inpregnable defence,
17While planning a strategy to reclaim the empire.
18King Agesilaus of Sparta maintained control,
19Of the south and central lands,
20Using the uneasy peace to rebuild his forces.
21Dionysus in Syracuse then ordered the scribes Homer and Hesiod,
22To fashion a history for the Graecians,
23As great and wonderful a story that even the simplest child,
24Be in awe of its mystery and power.
25Using the vast library of works stolen to Syracuse,
26Of the former inhabitants of Athena,
27Especially the works of Heroditus,
28Homer and Hesiod set about creating for their master,
29A wholly fraudulent history,
30Full of fantasy and fables.
31Homer and his scribes completed the Iliad and the Odyssey,
32While Hesiod finished Theogony and the Works and Days.
33When Plato eventually saw extracts of what was written he exclaimed,
34How could grown men believe such children stories,
35As if great giants and mythical creatures built our temples,
36And magic and potions created our sciences and arts.
37No man could be such a fool to believe a lie that does not hide itself.
38Yet despite the disbelief of Arxenes (Plato),
39People all over the world embraced the lies and corruptions,
40Of Homer and Hesiod as epics and true.

16

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eight hundred and twenty four years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (376 BCE),
4Navigator Mago of Carthage,
5The first amongst equals,
6Of the Carthage Council of Elders,
7Did give up the ghost.
8The office did then go to Suniatus.
9In the same year Dionysus sent his finest general,
10Whose name was Epaminondas,
11To overpower and secure Thebes (Athena),
12Ahead of a large invasion force.
13Epaminondas succeeded in defeating the Spartan garrison,
14Yet could not hold the city and escaped back to Syracuse,
15Where he was welcomed as a hero and conqueror,
16As Dionysus concluded it was better to boast,
17That the Spartans were not immortal,
18Than to expose his own miscalculation.

17

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eight hundred and twenty nine years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (371 BCE),
4King Arxenes of Persia,
5Also known as the King of Kings,
6Also known as the Son of God,
7Also known as the broad one (Plato),
8Also known as the Yahudi tribe of Menes,
9Also known as the ancient Yahudi of Reuben,
10Did give up the ghost.
11The crown did then befall to his son,
12Whose name was Aristoteles,
13Also known as Aristotle,
14Also known as The Philipi,
15And also known as Artaxerxes III.
16As was custom from the beginning of time,
17Upon the funeral of a great king,
18All armies did cease conflict.
19Thus the Spartans assured no people,
20Be so weak of character to attack,
21Did leave their homeland on mass,
22To attend the funeral of Plato at Philipi.
23At that precise moment Epaminondas,
24And the forces of Dionysus did land at Attica,
25And seize Thebes (Athena),
26Then did march upon the homeland of the Spartans,
27Killing every woman and child,
28Burning every town and farm,
29Until nothing remained.
30As the Spartans rushed back to defend their homeland,
31An army of Cyrus under the leadership of Gorgidas,
32Landed to the north and outflanking the Spartans.
33Still in shock from such perfidy,
34Never before witnessed in history,
35And broken upon the murder of their families,
36The Spartans were given the chance to swear by oath,
37Their surrender or face death.
38For the first and only time the Spartans chose enslavement,
39And Dionysus achieved his greatest victory,
40Through the most wicked and insanity of character,
41Not of evil or magic but transgressions of madness,
42That have stood as the hallmarks,
43Of his religion then and since.
44Upon news that Cyrus participated in the desecration,
45Of the funeral ceremony of King Arxenes (Plato) of Persia,
46Six satraps rebelled against Cyrus,
47And declared themselves as allies of King Aristoteles (Aristotle),
48Including Kappodokia, Armenia, Phrygia, Ionia, Lydia and Kilikia.
49For the next ten years,
50Cyrus was crippled by the consequences of his actions,
51And never fully regained the west of his empire.
52Persian general Gorgidas chose to remain in Thebes,
53Forming an elite bodyguard for Epaminondas as dictator,
54Of 300 pairs of male lovers,
55Called the Sacred Band of Thebes.

18

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eight hundred and thirty two years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (368 BCE),
4Navigator Suniatus of Carthage,
5The first amongst equals,
6Of the Carthage Council of Elders,
7Did give up the ghost.
8The office did then go to Hanno.
9In the same year,
10King Aristoteles (Aristotle),
11And his wife the daughter of Oananiah,
12Also known in history as Olympias,
13Did give birth to an extraordinary son,
14The true heir to the Persian Empire,
15And the Great Prophets of Yahu,
16Whose name was Alexandros (Alexander).
17In the Great Age of the Ram,
18Eight hundred and thirty two years,
19Since the dawn of the Great Age (367 BCE),
20Dionysus of Syracuse,
21The wicked tyrant and false messiah,
22Did give up the ghost.
23Yet to keep the myth alive,
24His son was also named Dionysus,
25In an attempt to claim him immortal.
26Upon the younger son claiming the throne,
27He ordered Epameinondas to attack Philipi,
28And bring him the head of King Aristoteles.
29King Aristoteles (Aristotle) without the trusted defense,
30Of the Spartans under King Agesilaus,
31Who remained bound to their pledge to Epameinondas,
32Entreated Tribune Gaius Licinius Stolo of Rome.
33Rome then sent general Marcus Furius Camillus,
34Appointing him Caesar (dictator) of a sizable army.
35The Romans and the Persian Guard defeated Epameinondas,
36Causing him to retreat.
37In the Great Age of the Ram,
38Eight hundred and thirty seven years,
39Since the dawn of the Great Age (363 BCE),
40Epameinondas tried once more to attack the north,
41And again he was defeated,
42With the assistance of the Roman Caesar (dictator),
43Whose name was Appius Claudius Crassus.
44This time Epameinondas did not escape,
45And was executed.
46In the same year,
47Holly High King Eochaid mac Ailella,
48Of the most ancient Cuilliaéan,
49Did give up the ghost.
50The throne of Amen-Ra did then befall to his son,
51Whose name was Lugaid Laigdech mac Ailella.

19

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eight hundred and thirty six years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (364 BCE),
4The false prophet known as Habakiah,
5Of the false Yahudi of Babylon,
6Also known as the High Priest of Mithra,
7And son of Ezra,
8Did give up the ghost.
9The title of High Priest of Mithra,
10Did then befall to his son,
11Whose name was Zephaniah.
12In the Great Age of the Ram,
13Eight hundred and forty years,
14Since the dawn of the Great Age (360 BCE),
15King Agesilaus of Sparta,
16Did give up the ghost.
17The crown did then befall his son,
18Whose name was Archidamus.
19Upon the death of the old Spartan king,
20Dionysus the Younger and his general Damocles,
21Did come to Thebes (Athens),
22And summonsed Archidamus to his presence,
23To which Archidamus sent his brave emissary,
24With the message that Sparta still honors its sacred oath,
25Not to attack Thebes or the king,
26Nor shall Sparta attack Eliada.
27Dionysus in rage ordered the emissary slowly boiled.
28In the Great Age of the Ram,
29Eight hundred and forty two years,
30Since the dawn of the Great Age (358 BCE),
31The false King named Cyrus,
32Of the House of Ochos,
33Who claimed to be king of Persia,
34Did give up the ghost.
35His son did then choose,
36The ancient name of Darius.

20

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eight hundred and forty two years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (352 BCE),
4King Aristoteles (Aristotle) of Eliada,
5The true King of Kings,
6The philosopher King,
7Did finally launch his attack.
8Unable to call upon the Spartans,
9Who remained honor bound to Thebes (Athens),
10King Aristoteles (Aristotle) placed his faith,
11In the battled hardened and loyal Romans,
12And Caesar (dictator) Marcus Fabius Ambustus.
13Within a few weeks,
14The forces of King Aristoteles (Aristotle),
15Conquered Thessaly and Molossia,
16And recaptured Larissa and Pherae,
17And the key cities of Dodona and Ambracia.
18In the Great Age of the Ram,
19Eight hundred and forty two years,
20Since the dawn of the Great Age (343 BCE),
21The loyal Roman legions under the command,
22Of Caesar (dictator) Marcus Valerius Corvus,
23Did conquer for King Aristoteles (Aristotle),
24The Kingdoms of Thrace and Maronea and Perinthus.
25In the Great Age of the Ram,
26Eight hundred and fifty nine years,
27Since the dawn of the Great Age (341 BCE),
28The forces of King Aristoteles (Aristotle),
29Under the command of Marcus Valerius Corvus,
30Succeeded in conquering the Island of Euboea,
31And the cities of Chalcis and Eretria.
32Soon after Thebes (Athens) fell,
33And Dionysus the Younger was forced to flee,
34Back to Graecia (Sicily) and Syracuse.
35Upon the defeat of Dionysus and the Thebians,
36King Archidamus and the Spartans rejoiced,
37Upon their freedom from the bond and curse,
38That they had bound themselves.
39King Archidamus did proclaim,
40An eternal pledge to King Aristoteles (Aristotle),
41And his descendants,
42And as forever allies to their Roman brothers.
43Caesar Marcus Valerius Corvus returned to Rome a great hero,
44To one of the most magnificent triumphs of any Caesar (dictator).

21

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eight hundred and fifty nine years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (341 BCE),
4Oananiah the twenty third great prophet of Yeb,
5The son of Oadiah (Halelujiah) and the grandson of Eliah,
6Did give up the ghost.
7The position then befell,
8To his grandson whose name was Adiah,
9Also known as Alexandros (Alexander),
10As the twenty fourth Great Prophet of the Yahudi.
11Adiah (Alexander) had been prepared for such position,
12From the moment of his birth.
13That he would never marry nor have heir himself.
14That he would be lord and savior of the world,
15And enact the plans of his father and ancestors,
16To end the reign of false messiahs and kings.
17In the same year,
18Navigator Hanno of Carthage,
19The first amongst equals,
20Of the Carthage Council of Elders,
21Did give up the ghost.
22The office did then go to Gisco.
23King Aristoteles (Aristotle),
24Did then ensure that throughout the world,
25All peoples did know that Alexandros (Alexander),
26Also known as Adiah was the true heir and prophet,
27And that all who did humble themselves before him,
28Would be saved and all who dishonored him,
29Would be punished.
30In the Great Age of the Ram,
31Eight hundred and sixty two years,
32Since the dawn of the Great Age (338 BCE),
33King Archidamus of Sparta,
34Did give up the ghost.
35The crown did then befall his son,
36Whose name was Eumenes.

22

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eight hundred and sixty four years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (336 BCE),
4King Aristoteles of Persia,
5Also known as the King of Kings,
6Also known as the Son of God,
7Also known as Aristotle,
8Also known as Philippi,
9Also known as the Yahudi tribe of Menes,
10Also known as the ancient Yahudi of Reuben,
11Did give up the ghost.
12The crown did then befall to his son,
13Whose name was Alexandros (Alexander),
14Also known as known as Artaxerxes IV as Son of God,
15Also known as the Great Prophet Adiah,
16Also known as the Lord Savior of the Divine,
17As the twenty fourth Great Prophet of the Yahudi.
18Upon the death of Aristoteles (Aristotle),
19Dionysus the Younger of Graecia (Sicily),
20Through his General Damocles,
21Did hatch a plan to try and destroy Rome,
22Known as the Sword of Damocles,
23Where he did succeed in causing the Samnites,
24And other powerful tribes of Italy,
25To rise up in rebellion against Roman rule to the north,
26And for King Cleitus of Illryia and the Thessalians,
27As well as the Thracians,
28To rebel against Alexandros (Alexander).
29The Romans then would have to choose against their sacred honor,
30As protectors of the true Persian Kings and lose their homeland,
31Or break their sacred oaths and abandon Alexandros (Alexander).
32The Roman Senate appointed Lucius Aemilius Mamercinus as Caesar,
33And the Romans entreated that Alexandros (Alexander) come to their aid.
34Without hesitation Alexandros (Alexander) split his military forces into four,
35Ordering his cavalry led by Spartan King Eumenes and Langarus,
36To crush the Thracian uprising,
37Ordering his heavy infantry led by Perdiccas and Leonatus,
38To crush the Thessaly and Athenian uprising,
39The infantry then led by Ptolemy, Lysimachus and Pyrrhus of Epirus,
40To march into Illryia and defeat Cleitus,
41And the navy led by Craterus under Alexander himself,
42To set sail to blockade Graecia,
43And force Dionysus the Younger to withdraw.
44The strategy of Alexandros (Alexander) worked,
45And the rebellions of Illryia, Thrace and Thessaly,
46Were fiercely put down.
47Yet instead of executing the rebellious military,
48Alexandros (Alexander) ordered the nobility executed,
49And that the tenth most untrustworthy of the population,
50Be condemned and executed in public,
51With one tenth of the best men of character to join his army,
52Under the newly formed idea of legions.
53As to Thebes (Athena) the generals of Alexandros (Alexander),
54Pleaded that all men be executed,
55For no good men of character and virtue,
56Could be found within the walls of Thebes (Athena).
57Alexandros (Alexander) declined executing the people.
58Instead her ordered that they be bound to servitude,
59As funerary attendants and baggage handlers,
60For seven generations,
61And that the name Thebes be forbidden.
62Upon news that Alexandros (Alexander) had arrived to Graecia,
63The people of Syracuse rebelled against Dionysus the Younger,
64Killing him and his court and his generals,
65Then the city immediately surrendered.
66Lucius Aemilius Mamercinus then defeated the rebellious tribes,
67And followed the honor set down by Alexandros (Alexander),
68And offered the tribes to serve as legionnaires,
69In the greater army of Rome,
70And in service to the military of Eliada and Persia.
71Thus the great ethos of the Legions were born,
72Throughout the greater empire of Eliada.

23

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eight hundred and sixty six years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (334 BCE),
4King Alexandros (Alexander) of Eliada,
5Also known as the Great Prophet Adiah,
6Did cross the Hellespont,
7With the largest army ever seen,
8Since the time of his ancestor Xerxes (Zeus).
9Upon stepping onto Phrygian soil,
10Alexandros (Alexander) did seize a flag of his standard bearers,
11And thrust it into the soil with the words,
12That from the moment forward,
13Let the Divine Creator and all spirits of heaven,
14Guide this sacred army to reclaim the Ark (of the Covenant),
15To rid the world of the evil of ignorance and falsity,
16And bring Rule of Law to all peoples,
17Respect amongst all true faiths,
18And democracy to the whole world.
19Soon after crossing into Asia,
20A combined army of the satraps of Darius,
21Supported by Graecian (Greek) mercenaries,
22Did attack the forces of Alexandros (Alexander),
23And the army of Darius was cut to pieces.
24Alexandros (Alexander) refused to accept the plea of terms,
25That the satraps could escape along with their nobles.
26Instead Alexandros (Alexander) ordered,
27That all the Graecian (Greek) mercenaries be executed,
28As they be men who fight for money and are without honor.
29He then ordered the satraps and nobles be taken to Sardis
30And one tenth of the defeated forces of Darius be executed,
31With the bravest and most honorable soldiers the choice to join,
32His great army of Heaven and Earth.
33At Sardis Alexandros (Alexander) and two other generals,
34Presided over a trial of the satraps,
35Declaring them culpable for crimes against the law,
36And handed them to the people to be executed.
37King Alexandros as Adiah then declared,
38That upon this day,
39No man may be judged a capital crime,
40If he not be judged by three tribunes,
41Who pledge their austerity, obedience and humility,
42To heaven as true and sacred witnesses.
43That all are equal under the law.
44That no man be a slave to another.
45That all are deserving of justice,
46Even the most wicked.

24

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eight hundred and sixty six years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (334 BCE),
4Upon the Edict of Sardis,
5And the abolition of satraps of Phrygia and Ionia,
6King Alexandros as Adiah then introduced,
7The new democratic form of government by Archons,
8Each representing the people of cities and provinces as nomos (name),
9Then collectively making a body politic called a synodos (synod),
10Of a country known then as an eparch.
11Alexandros (Alexander) then marched on Karia,
12And at Halicarnassus quickly forced Memnon of Rhodes,
13And the Darian satrap to flee for their lives.
14The satraps of Cappadocia and Cilicia quickly followed,
15Until King Alexandros (Alexander) finally met in battle,
16The full army of King Darius,
17Near the mouth of the Pinarus River.
18Despite Darius possessing superior numbers,
19He fled in fear upon the advance of Alexandros (Alexander),
20And his army collapsed in defeat.
21Once safely returned to Babylon,
22Darius sent offer of a treaty to Alexandros (Alexander),
23And the payment of a ransom for the return of his royal household.
24Instead Alexandros (Alexander) ordered the safe return,
25Of the royal household to Darius,
26As well as the treasures.
27Such was the historic gesture,
28That news of it spread across the known world.
29Alexandros (Alexander) then did bring his army south,
30Capturing all of Syria,
31And laying waste to the cities of Tyre and Gaza,
32Until he entered Jerusalem.
33At Jerusalem he did not find the Ark (of the Covenant),
34But was greeted by the old false prophet,
35And high priest of Mithra known as Zephaniah.
36High Priest Zephaniah did tell Alexandros as Adiah,
37That even if he succeeded in reclaiming the Ark,
38From his son Malachiah at Babylon,
39He would still fail to win the peace,
40For ambitious men have always found a way to corrupt,
41And weak minded people have always believed half truths,
42And fanciful tales over truth and their own conscience.
43King Alexandros (Alexander) as the Great Prophet Adiah,
44Did reply that no matter how many treacherous scribes,
45Sought to corrupt knowledge and wisdom,
46Truth and character always outlasts a hundred generations,
47Whereas hate, revenge and even the ignorance of evil,
48Burns itself out within a few generations.
49In the Great Age of the Ram,
50Eight hundred and sixty eight years,
51Since the dawn of the Great Age (332 BCE),
52The false prophet known as Zephaniah,
53Of the false Yahudi of Babylon,
54Also known as the High Priest of Mithra,
55And son of Habakiah,
56Did give up the ghost.
57The title of High Priest of Mithra,
58Did then befall to his son,
59Whose name was Malachiah,
60Upon the return of the body of his father,
61With an honor guard sent by Alexandros (Alexander) to Babylon.

25

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eight hundred and sixty eight years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (332 BCE),
4King Alexandros (Alexander) and his army,
5Travelled south and then west to Egypt and as far as Libya.
6Alexandros as the Great Prophet Adiah,
7Of the ancient Great Seers and Prophets of Yeb,
8Did then travel up the Nile to Karnak,
9And then to the ruins of the Temple of Yahu,
10Upon the Island of Yeb (Elephantine).
11At Yeb he met the famed Oracle of Amun,
12Who remained as a solitary witness,
13To the sanctity of the most holy of places.
14Upon seeing Alexandros (Alexander) the oracle proclaimed,
15Verily Amun-Ra has returned to life,
16As the son of Zeus (Xerxes).
17Truly he be the Son of Man and Pharaoh,
18For no man be honorable,
19Unless he comes with good faith and clean hands.
20And no man be great,
21Unless he humbles himself before the law for all.
22And no man be divine,
23Unless he pledges himself to the service of heaven.
24Alexandros (Alexander) did then ask the Oracle,
25Three questions as to the immediate fate,
26The fate in years and the future against evil and ignorance.
27To which the Oracle replied,
28Even the greatest of men die,
29And the mightiest of cities decay,
30But the brilliant illumination,
31Of a divine idea outlasts all.
32To the first you shall be granted your mission,
33But at fateful cost.
34To the second the lesser nature of men,
35Shall claim and hide your light.
36To the third a day shall come,
37When one like the Son of Man,
38Of the Holly blood,
39Whose name means truth,
40As witness to your mission,
41Shall cause the end of the war in heaven.
42Upon the meeting and prophecy of the oracle,
43Alexandros (Alexander) returned north,
44To the western delta of the Nile on the coast of the sea,
45At the site of the city of Rhacotis,
46Where he did declare,
47Upon this site a great city for all people shall be built,
48Where the Ark of the Covenant shall come to rest,
49Where all true knowledge shall be united,
50And representatives (diplomats) of all nations shall come,
51That all disputes shall be resolved peacefully.
52Alexandros (Alexander) did then announce,
53The creation of a universal currency,
54To end the practice of fractioning by moneychangers (bankers),
55When they rubbed or clipped shavings of coins,
56And to end the practice of the same moneychangers (bankers),
57In controlling all trade between markets and cities and regions.
58The base unit was then called the drachme of silver,
59Minted as either 2.16 grams of silver called a didrachm,
60Or 4.32 grams of silver called a tetradrachm.
61Tetradrachm were minted according to the ancient principles,
62Of the Celtic smiths whereby the coin had three sides,
63Being an obverse a reverse and a lined edge.
64Thus if a moneylender (banker) sought to ply their trade,
65The coin would clearly be damaged and replaced.
661 Drachme was then equivalent to six oboloi,
67Being small sticks of iron,
68Or eight chalkoi being sticks of copper.
6924 drachma or 6 tetradrachm or 12 didrachm,
70Were then equivalent to one gold stater,
71Of 8.64 grams of gold and also fashioned with three sides.
72For no coins were permitted to be minted,
73Except by an official treasury,
74And no coins were permitted to be circulated,
75That did not have three sides and a clear serrated edge.
76Only those kingdoms and places controlled by bankers,
77Continued the practice of two sides coins,
78With uneven edges that could then be clipped,
79And fractionalized by the moneychangers (bankers).
80Alexandros (Alexander) then ordered the arrest of all moneylenders,
81And moneychangers (bankers) and the forbiddance of their trade,
82As the actions of a banker be an abomination,
83Before the divine creator and all heaven.
84That all men may trade freely amongst each other,
85That none be forced to exchange currency,
86That no man be charged compound interest upon a debt.
87In the same year,
88Holly High King Lugaid Laigdech mac Ailella,
89Of the most ancient Cuilliaéan,
90Did give up the ghost.
91The throne of Amen-Ra did then befall to his son,
92Whose name was Eochaid Buadach mac Lugaid.

26

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eight hundred and sixty nine years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (331 BCE),
4Alexandros (Alexander) departed Egypt,
5And traveled north into Syria,
6And then east into Mesopotamia,
7Crossing first the Euphrates and then Tigris,
8Before heading south west towards Arbela.
9There Darius had assembled a massive army,
10Of several hundred thousand,
11And even practiced upon the battlefield,
12To give himself the greatest advantage.
13The combined forces of Alexander did not yield,
14And the army of Darius was greatly slaughtered,
15Before once again Darius fled eastward,
16This time to Persepolis to avoid capture.
17Alexandros (Alexander) chose not to pursue him,
18But instead moved quickly to take Babylon,
19And secure the Ark of the Covenant.
20Upon reaching Babylon the people celebrated his arrival,
21As the true king and liberator.
22But when he entered the main temple,
23He discovered that Malachiah,
24The high priest of Mithra,
25Had escaped with the Ark of the Covenant,
26And the treasures of Moses (Akhenaten),
27To Persepolis and the protection of Darius.
28In frustration Alexandros (Alexander) ordered,
29That every priest and follower of Mithra,
30Be publicly executed as heretics against heaven,
31And henceforth that to worship Mithra,
32Forever be a capital crime and transgression,
33Against the divine creator.
34Alexandros (Alexander) and his forces departed eastward,
35First to Susa and then across the Zagros Mountains,
36To siege Persepolis.
37Upon the arrival of Alexandros (Alexander),
38The guard of Darius rebelled and the city fell.
39In the Great Age of the Ram,
40Eight hundred and seventy years,
41Since the dawn of the Great Age (330 BCE),
42The false King named Darius,
43Of the House of Ochos,
44Who claimed to be king of Persia,
45Did give up the ghost,
46Thus ending the line of the false claimants.
47Yet when Alexandros (Alexander) entered the city,
48He found that High Priest Malachiah,
49Had once again fled with the Ark,
50North to the mountains on the edge of the Caspian Sea,
51In the ancient homeland of the Hyrcanians,
52And the city of Ray.

27

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eight hundred and seventy years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (330 BCE),
4Alexandros (Alexander) as the Great Prophet Adiah,
5Reached the city of Ray that immediately surrendered.
6Yet when Alexandros (Alexander) entered the population attacked,
7And Alexandros (Alexander) was badly wounded.
8Upon such treachery of the city and home of the false kings,
9Alexandros (Alexander) order every living thing to be killed,
10And every building to be destroyed,
11That Ray become dust,
12And no longer offend heaven.
13After a brief recovery Alexandros (Alexander),
14Continued his pursuit of High Priest Malachiah,
15Into Parthia and then Aria and Drangiana.
16At each city the king and Great Prophet,
17Became less tolerant of the people and nobles,
18Who gave aid to Malachiah and the Mithraic guard.
19Finally Alexandros (Alexander) crossed the Hindu Kush,
20To Kabul then Taxila and finally to the Kingdom of Paurava,
21Where Malachiah had pledged an unholy oath,
22That the descendants of the King Porus,
23And the tribes of Mongols,
24Would one day rule the world,
25Through treachery and deception and bloodshed,
26In honor of the true nature of the god of Mithra.
27King Porus then did summons a great army,
28To challenge Alexandros (Alexander).
29Yet upon the sight of a living god,
30The Mongols and Pauravanians fled,
31And King Porus and Malachiah,
32As well as the Ark of the Covenant,
33Were finally captured.
34In the Great Age of the Ram,
35Eight hundred and seventy four years,
36Since the dawn of the Great Age (326 BCE),
37The false prophet known as Malachiah,
38Of the false Yahudi of Babylon,
39Also known as the High Priest of Mithra,
40And son of Zephaniah,
41Did give up the ghost,
42Upon being executed,
43Along with King Porus and his household,
44Except his daughter Roxanna,
45Who all agreed possessed such beauty,
46That to destroy such light would be a sacrilege.
47The title of High Priest of Mithra,
48Was then abolished and none ever held it again.
49As the false religion they followed.
50Exhausted and exulted King Alexandros (Alexander),
51Travelled south along the Indus River to Pattala,
52Where a fleet under Nearchus did take him west,
53Into the Persian Gulf and then back to Babylon,
54Where the Ark of the Covenant was returned.

28

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eight hundred and seventy six years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (324 BCE),
4Alexandros (Alexander) as the Great Prophet Adiah,
5Called for Oniah his cousin and great grandson of Oananiah.
6At Babylon Alexandros (Alexander) as Adiah,
7Adopted Oniah as his son and successor,
8As the twenty fifth great prophet of the Yahuda.
9Alexandros (Alexander) as Adiah then entrusted,
10The Ark of the Covenant and the sacred treasure of Akhenaten,
11To Oniah and the priests of the Yahudi.
12Alexandros (Alexander) then entrusted his general Lysimachus (Ptolemy),
13As Guardian of Heliopolis (Alexandria),
14And the Lands of Oniah,
15That he protect the city the ark and the priests,
16Whereupon they did depart Babylon.
17In the Great Age of the Ram,
18Eight hundred and seventy seven years,
19Since the dawn of the Great Age (323 BCE),
20Upon ill health of Alexandros (Alexander),
21The great king summonsed his generals,
22And court and priests to bear witness,
23Whereby he bestowed his signet ring to Perdiccas,
24Declaring that Perdiccas be the patros (father),
25Of all men as protector and guardian of the law,
26Never to be known as king or emperor,
27For only men elected by their peers may claim,
28The right to rule according to justice.
29Alexandros (Alexander) then summonsed Craterus,
30Who he appointed his executor,
31And reader of his Testament,
32In whom he did entrust for perpetual memory,
33The great trust of all the civilized world,
34All the true knowledge of wisdom and spirit,
35All the rights and claims of sacred office,
36According to such sacred instrument.
37That none may claim to be his heir.
38That none may claim to be a messiah.
39That all men may be equal before the law forever.
40Alexandros (Alexander) then summonsed Pyrrhus of Epirus,
41To take his armor and personal effects back to Philipi,
42Along with Roxanna and his attendants safely.
43In the Great Age of the Ram,
44Eight hundred and seventy seven years,
45Since the dawn of the Great Age (323 BCE),
46King Alexandros of Persia,
47Also known as the King of Kings,
48Also known as the great prophet Adiah,
49Also known as the Son of God,
50Also known as the Savior of the Divine,
51Also known as the Yahudi tribe of Menes,
52Also known as the ancient Yahudi of Reuben,
53Did give up the ghost,
54As the last of the Wise Kings of Persia.
55Upon his death Craterus did read his Testament,
56Which did become known as the Testament of Babylon,
57And the trust for the whole world,
58By which all men are created equal,
59That no one is above the law,
60That no one may be condemned a slave,
61Or any man worshiped as a god alone,
62That all have the right to choose their government,
63Under the rule of democracy and free will,
64That never again shall false teachers and scriptures,
65Be permitted to stand in defiance of true history,
66Nor moneylenders (bankers) interpose themselves,
67For only one currency exists in truth for the world,
68And if the world faces evil and danger,
69It be the duty of the holy father (patros),
70To defend the laws of heaven,
71And for men of honor to stand against tyranny,
72For any law that does not agree cannot be law.