Lebor Clann Glas


iconGreat Age of Empires [323-204 BCE]

1

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eight hundred and seventy seven years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (323 BCE),
4Upon news of the death of the great Alexandros (Alexander),
5The city of Athens and the island of Euboea and the Ionian coast rebelled.
6Pyrrhus who was due to return the personal effects of Alexandros (Alexander),
7As well as deliver Roxanna to Olympias,
8The priestess and mother of Alexandros,
9Was ordered by the holy patros Perdicass to strike at Athens,
10And cut the heart out of the rebellion.
11The Athenians had aligned themselves,
12With a coalition of powerful merchants,
13Under the authority of Demosthenes,
14Who pledged themselves against the rule of Eliada,
15And against the destruction of their moneylending (banking) trade.
16Thousands of mercenaries had been purchased,
17That the forces against Pyrrhus were overwhelming.
18Upon Pyrrhus viewing the mercenary army of the Athenians,
19And facing almost certain defeat and death,
20Pyrrhus also known as Antipater did devise a plan,
21Whereby he adorned the armor of Alexandros (Alexander),
22And rode out with his cavalry in front of his forces.
23When the mercenaries and Athenians saw the image of Alexandros (Alexander),
24They immediately surrendered and opened the gates,
25That Pyrrhus appearing as Alexandros (Alexander),
26Accompanied by Roxanna and his forces entered Athens.
27When the Athenian leader Demosthenes saw Roxanna,
28He fell down at her feet claiming the sight of Hestia the goddess herself.
29Demosthenes then pledged the loyalty of Athens and all forces,
30That had rebelled unto Pyrrhus as Alexandros (Alexander),
31By which Pyrrhus did say to Demosthenes and the Athenians,
32On this fateful day heaven bestows Athena a great gift,
33Of the goddess Hestia personified as Athena,
34And the most beautiful virgin of the world.
35She shall be your queen,
36And upon the self sacrifice of Demosthenes,
37As all shall only make sacrifice to the goddess Athena,
38She shall protect you and lead you,
39And give birth to a savior for all mankind.
40Upon these words Demosthenes grabbed a knife,
41And plunged it into his chest,
42Falling down dead before the other leaders.
43Thus Athens pledged itself to Roxanna now the goddess Athena,
44And Pyrrhus still pretending as Alexandros (Alexander),
45Did depart and return some days later without armor,
46As Pyrrhus and servant of the goddess Athena.
47Upon news that Alexandros (Alexander) had risen from the dead,
48And descended from heaven with the goddess Hestia,
49Installing her at Athens,
50The Island of Euboea as well as the Ionian cities,
51Also pledged their loyalty and service.

2

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eight hundred and seventy eight years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (322 BCE),
4Lysimachus (Ptolemy) continued to oversee,
5The greatest construction force,
6Since the time of Holly Hyksos,
7Of two hundred thousand workers building Heliopolis.
8Lysimachus (Ptolemy) appealed to Perdiccas,
9To resolve the Cult of Alexandros (Alexander),
10Born from the actions at Athena,
11As the stories had affected the entire west of Eliada.
12Holy Father (Patros) Perdiccas refused at first,
13The entreats of Lysimachus (Ptolemy),
14And instead ordered Eumenes of Sparta from the south,
15Cassander from the north,
16And Craterus from the south east,
17To crush the rebellion and new cult.
18Yet Perdiccas had greatly underestimated,
19The power of the story of the death and resurrection,
20Of Alexandros (Alexander) as the Son of God,
21And the virgin goddess Athena (Roxanna),
22Who now claimed to be immaculately conceived,
23With the child of the spirit of Alexandros (Alexander).
24King Eumenes of Sparta with all his might,
25Was unable to break through from the south.
26Craterus from the south-east could not breach,
27The defences of Athens,
28And the forces of Cassander continued to be outflanked,
29By reinforcements from both Epirus and Ionia.
30Even with further reinforcements,
31The forces of Pyrrhus grew stronger,
32As they were inspired to fight to the death,
33Believing this to be a Holy War.
34In the Great Age of the Ram,
35Eight hundred and eighty one years,
36Since the dawn of the Great Age (319 BCE),
37The forces of Cassander finally broke the lines of Athens,
38Forcing Pyrrhus and Roxanna and his son Alexander Aegus,
39To flee east to Phrygia,
40And the care of Philetaerus of Pergamon.
41At Pergamon King Philetaerus welcomed Roxanna,
42Naming her Cybele instead of Athena,
43And naming her son as Attis instead of Aegus,
44Pledging his undying loyalty,
45To the Queen of Heaven and her infant messiah.
46Pyrrhus as a man was not unaware,
47Of the extreme beauty of Roxanna,
48Thus he had already established the doctrine of devotees,
49Sacrificing their genitals to become eunuchs,
50Lest any devotee succumb to the power of the goddess.
51Pyrrhus then offered King Philetaerus,
52To be the first high priest of Cybele,
53To which the king gladly agreed,
54And upon the same day marked as the birthday of Mithra,
55Being the 14 Nisan (14 March),
56He led a procession of devotees to the temple,
57Where they sacrificed several first born children,
58And then participated in a gross orgy,
59In the manner of Dionysus,
60And the rituals of cannibalism,
61Before hacking off their genitals,
62To become celibate priests,
63Of the Queen of Heaven.

3

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eight hundred and eighty two years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (318 BCE),
4Holy Father (Patros) Perdiccas ordered,
5That the remains of Alexandros (Alexander),
6Be removed from his mausoleum,
7And that they be displayed at major cities,
8Firmly within control of the empire,
9On their route and final resting place,
10In Egypt and first to Memphis,
11Until Heliopolis (Alexandria) was finished.
12Great crowds gathered to see the sight,
13Of the body of the great Alexandros (Alexander),
14And Perdiccas had arranged that at each site,
15The Testament of Babylon would be recited,
16That all myth and tales be dismissed.
17Yet a new phenomena arose,
18In place of the worship of supernatural tales,
19In the form of icon devotees,
20Who abandoned their posts and fields,
21In vast numbers,
22To follow the remains of Alexandros (Alexander),
23Even into Egypt.
24In the same year Pyrrhus left Pergamon,
25Accompanied only by his best guard,
26And secretly returned to Epirus,
27And then traveled to Carthage,
28Where he met King Gisco and his son Hamilcar,
29And announced that Roxanna as the Phrygian goddess,
30Be the reincarnation of Queen Tharyelli,
31Also known as Queen Elissa and founder of Carthage.
32That no longer the wars against the Graecians or Spartans,
33Be commercial or political but a Sacred War,
34And that Carthage be called by heaven and their gods,
35To take a stand against those who wish to corrupt,
36The destiny of the world.
37Upon hearing the speech by Pyrrhus,
38All the wealth of Carthage to the Sacred War.
39King Gisco of Carthage did pledge,
40All the wealth of Carthage to the Sacred War.
41Pyrrhus did then return briefly to Pergamon.

4

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eight hundred and eighty three years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (317 BCE),
4Pyrrhus of Epirus also falsely known as Polyperchon,
5Also falsely known as Antipater and Agathocles,
6Did invade Graecia (Sicily) from the east,
7With a great army from Epirus,
8As Hamilcar the son of Gisco of Carthage,
9Did invade Graecia (Sicily) from the south.
10The Graecian cities were overwhelmed,
11By the speed and force of the attack,
12And Pyrrhus achieved a great victory in securing Syracuse,
13With Messina and Rhegium falling to the Carthaginians soon after,
14That within two years of war,
15Pyrrhus had achieved what not even Alexander had done,
16In conquering and uniting Graecia (Sicily).
17In the Great Age of the Ram,
18Eight hundred and eighty six years,
19Since the dawn of the Great Age (314 BCE),
20Pyrrhus declared himself King of Sicily,
21Before returning to Pergamon,
22To the court of King Philataerus,
23Where he retrieved Roxanna as Cybele,
24The Queen of Heaven,
25And Alexander Aegus as Attis.
26Pyrrhus then set sail to Carthage.
27Upon reaching Carthage,
28News of the coming of the living goddess,
29And the arrival of her son,
30Caused excitement amongst the people of Carthage.
31Pyrrhus was welcomed by King Gisco as a hero,
32And Roxanna as Cybele and the personification of Queen Dido,
33And the patron goddess Tanit of Carthage.
34In honor of the visit the people of Carthage,
35Made Pyrrhus and his court all honorary citizens.
36King Gisco then did sign and seal a sacred treaty,
37To recognize the sacred kingdom of Sicily,
38And Pyrrhus and his heirs and successors,
39As rightful kings and perpetual allies.
40Upon news of the treaty between Pyrrhus and Gisco,
41And the threat of such a treaty to the existence of Rome,
42The Roman Senate appointed Quintus Fabius Maximus,
43As Roman Caesar (dictator) at the head of a massive army,
44To destroy Sicily and capture or kill Pyrrhus.
45The claims that Rome was at war with the Etruscans,
46An absurd lie as the Romans themselves were Etruscan.

5

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eight hundred and eighty seven years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (313 BCE),
4Roman Caesar Quintus Fabius Maximus,
5Applied his maximum forces against Messina,
6And the Carthaginians soon falted.
7Quintus Fabius Maximus then captured Rhegium,
8And then Catania with Hamilcar killed.
9Confident of the defenses of Syracuse,
10King Pyrrhus split his forces into two,
11And sought to cut off Quintus Fabius Maximus,
12As he entreated his sacred ally King Gisco,
13To send reinforcements as the body of Hamilcar,
14Was returned under military honors to Carthage.
15Upon seeing the body of his only son,
16Gisco fell into a deep melancholy,
17And did not respond to the requests of his generals,
18To support Pyrrhus against the Romans.
19Without the expected support from Carthage,
20Pyrrhus could only disrupt the Romans,
21And after two years (310 BCE) Syracuse did briefly fall,
22As some of the men of Quintus Fabius Maximus,
23Breached the defenses of the royal quarters,
24Killing both Roxanna and Alexander Aegus.
25Upon the murder of Roxanna and Alexander Aegus,
26The troops of Pyrrhus and the king,
27Became like madmen and the Romans,
28Were forced to retreat to Messina,
29On account of the ferocity of the forces of Pyrrhus.
30Upon witnessing the body of his beloved Roxanna,
31And his son Alexander Aegus,
32King Pyrrhus did utter a high curse,
33That with every fibre of his being,
34And through every descendant he would spawn,
35He would dedicate every waking moment,
36To the complete and utter destruction of Rome.
37In the Great Age of the Ram,
38Eight hundred and eighty eight years,
39Since the dawn of the Great Age (312 BCE),
40Holy Father (Patros) Perdiccas,
41Did give up the ghost.
42The position of holy father (Patros) of the world,
43And the Universal Ecclesia did befall to Seleucus.
44Upon news of the death of Perdiccas,
45Aeschines briefly tried to lead a rebellion in Athens,
46And the forces of King Eumenes of Sparta,
47Quickly captured the rebels and executed them.
48In the same year,
49The great lighthouse of Heliopolis (Alexandria),
50Also known as the Phaoros,
51Was completed at over 450 ft in height.
52So bright the light and so tall the lighthouse,
53That it could be seen for many miles at sea.

6

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eight hundred and ninety years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (310 BCE),
4Pyrrhus quit Syracuse and eastern Sicily to the Romans,
5And arrived with his army to Carthage,
6Where the population began a month of mourning,
7Upon the arrival of the body of Roxanna as Cybele,
8And Alexander Aegus as Attis.
9King Gisco who had remained in hiding,
10And who had failed to provide reinforcements,
11Was arrested with his court and brought before Pyrrhus,
12Whereby Pyrrhus held a public trial,
13Of Gisco before the people of Carthage.
14Gisco demanded that Pyrrhus and his generals,
15Be arrested and killed as invaders,
16Yet the Carthaginian generals reminded Gisco,
17That Pyrrhus be a citizen and sacred ally,
18Whereupon Pyrrhus spoke to the city saying,
19If any man love freedom and heaven,
20If any man love his children and the world,
21Then he must choose either to take up arms,
22And rid the world of Rome,
23Or be an agent for such evil.
24For any man or general or king,
25That ignores such evil approves of such evil.
26Upon the speech by Pyrrhus,
27The people demanded that Gisco,
28And all the nobles who supported him,
29Be put to death,
30And Pyrrhus was made the new king of Carthage,
31With the support of the united forces.
32In the Great Age of the Ram,
33Eight hundred and ninety one years,
34Since the dawn of the Great Age (309 BCE),
35King Eumenes of Sparta,
36Did give up the ghost.
37The crown did then befall his son,
38Whose name was Areus.

7

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eight hundred and ninety two years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (308 BCE),
4The Mausoleum of Alexander,
5And the Great Serapheum of Heliopolis (Alexandria),
6Were finally completed.
7The body of Alexander was then brought up from Memphis,
8And placed in state within the Mausoleum.
9The Ark of the Covenant,
10Being the ancient Ark of Pharaoh Akhenaten,
11Itself was brought to pride of place within the Serapheum.
12Within one year the Great Museum of Heliopolis (Alexandria),
13In which the famed Library was located,
14Was also completed.
15Lysimachus (Ptolemy) then appointed the scholar Euclid,
16As the first Master of the Museum,
17And to celebrate the text known as Elements by Euclid,
18Was promulgated to all corners of the empire.
19In the same year,
20King Pyrrhus of Carthage,
21Did wed Alcia the daughter of deposed King Gisco.
22In later years they did have two sons,
23The first was named Alexander,
24Also known as Hamilcar Barakas,
25And the other known as Heracles (Herocles),
26Also known as Hasdrubal.
27In the Great Age of the Ram,
28Eight hundred and ninety three years,
29Since the dawn of the Great Age (307 BCE),
30King Pyrrhus of Carthage,
31Sought friendly relations with Ophelas of Cyrene,
32That they might form a sacred alliance.
33To seal the union King Ophelas of Cyrene,
34Gave his daughter Berenice to Pyrrhus in matrimony.
35It was their son known as Mara (Magas) of Cyrene,
36Who became king twenty years later.
37In the Great Age of the Ram,
38Eight hundred and ninety four years,
39Since the dawn of the Great Age (306 BCE),
40King Pyrrhus of Carthage,
41Sought friendly relations with Bardylis of Illyria,
42That they might form a sacred alliance.
43To seal the union King Bardylis of Illyria,
44Gave his daughter Bircenna to Pyrrhus in matrimony.
45It was their son known as Heracles,
46Also known as Mytilus of Illyria,
47Who became king twenty five years later.
48King Pyrrhus of Carthage,
49Also wed with Lanassa of Athena.
50It was their son known as Alexander of Epirus,
51That dominated Epirus and Macedonia.
52In the Great Age of the Ram,
53Eight hundred and ninety five years,
54Since the dawn of the Great Age (305 BCE),
55King Pyrrhus of Carthage,
56Sought friendly relations with Gala of Numidia,
57That they might form a sacred alliance.
58To seal the union King Gala of Numidia,
59Gave his daughter to Pyrrhus in matrimony.
60It was their son known as Masinissa,
61Also known as Massena of Numidia,
62Who became king thirty years later.
63Thus within five years from the death,
64Of Roxanna and Alexander Aegus,
65King Pyrrhus did seal five sacred treaties,
66Through five matrimonial unions,
67To sow the seeds,
68To try and end Rome.
69The Carthaginians had begun to worship,
70Pyrrhus as their new living god,
71As Ba'al Moloch,
72To which children were burnt as offering.

8

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Nine hundred and two years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (298 BCE),
4Holly High King Eochaid Buadach mac Lugaid,
5The king of all priests and prophets,
6And blood descendant of the priests of Ebla,
7And blood descendant of the priests of Ur,
8And blood descendant of the priest-kings of the Hyksos,
9And blood descendant of the priests of Ugarit,
10And the founding bloodlines of the prophets of Yeb,
11And the only true blood descendants of King Da’vid,
12Did give up the ghost.
13The throne of Amen-Ra did then befall to his son,
14Whose name was Ugaine Mor.
15By the same year,
16King Pyrrhus of Carthage,
17Since the dawn of the Great Age (297 BCE),
18Had concluded friendly trade treaties,
19With the Amorican tribes of Brittany for tin,
20And the Iberian tribes (south-east Spain),
21Also for tin, lead, copper and silver,
22Establishing the colonies of New Carthage,
23And Malaca and Gades.
24Carthage also established strategic colonies,
25Within the lands of Numidia,
26Such as Cartenna and Iol and Rusaddir,
27And the colony of Tingis and Lixus,
28In the ancient lands of the Mani (Morocco).
29In the Great Age of the Ram,
30Nine hundred and three years,
31Since the dawn of the Great Age (297 BCE),
32Cassander the guardian of Macedon and Thessaly,
33Did give up the ghost.
34The position of guardian of Macedon and Thessaly,
35Did then befall general Demetrius.
36With support from Pyrrhus,
37And King Philataerus of Pergamon,
38Two rebel leaders did emerge,
39The first being named Peisis,
40Who proclaimed himself King of all Thebes,
41And the second being Dromichaetes,
42Who proclaimed himself King of Getae (Thrace).
43With Lysimachus (Ptolemy) facing danger,
44From King Ophelas of Cyrene,
45Cassander the guardian of Macedon and Thessaly,
46Called on King Areus of Sparta,
47And aid from holy father (patros) Seleucis.
48The war to the north the center and south,
49Raged for seven years until,
50Cassander captured Athens,
51And executed Peisis,
52As the great walls of Athens,
53Were finally demolished,
54That no more rebellions could be raised.
55It would then be ten more years,
56Before King Dromichaetes of Getae (Thrace),
57Was finally defeated and executed.

9

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Nine hundred and three years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (297 BCE),
4Upon the chaos of rebellion in the east,
5Of the Inland (Mediterranean) Sea,
6To the west King Pyrrhus,
7Reinforced his colonies of Iberia,
8Seizing the Islands of Ibiza and the Balearic,
9Before invading and seizing Massila (Marseilles),
10And then invading and seizing Aleria,
11Upon the Island of Corsica,
12And the city of Caralis,
13Upon the Island of Sardinia.
14King Pyrrhus now firmly controlled,
15All the trade of the west of the Inland (Mediterranean) Sea.
16Thus Rome found herself,
17Completely cut off from supplies,
18And allies able to help defend it.
19The Roman Senate under the leadership,
20Of Appius Claudius Caecus and Quintus Fabius Maximus,
21Did commission the master merchant,
22Whose name was Pytheas of Massalia (Marsailles),
23To pass through the blockade of Carthage,
24At the Straits of Gibraltar,
25And urgently seek friendly sources,
26With which Rome could treaty,
27For urgent metals and supplies.
28Pytheas of Massalia (Marseilles),
29Did sail the same sea ships of the Celts,
30Which permitted them to sail of sea,
31Not like the Carthaginian and Roman ships,
32Which could only sail in calm waters near shore.
33Pytheas of Massalia (Marsailles) succeeded in passing,
34Upon a windy night past the blockade of Carthage,
35First unto the Island of Britannia (Britain),
36And then as far north to the lands of Batavi (Netherlands),
37Then around the Island of Britannia,
38To the lands of the Dumnoni,
39And the west of Britannia (Britain).
40There Pytheas of Massalia (Marseilles),
41Did establish a treaty with the custodians of the lands,
42The Cuilliaéan tribe known as the Custenin (Constantines),
43Who served the ancient and sacred owner of the lands,
44Being the Cuilliaéan High Kings and Ugaine Mor.
45Pytheas of Massalia (Marsailles),
46Did leave with metals and some men of the Dumnoni,
47Back to Rome,
48With news of his journey.

10

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Nine hundred and five years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (295 BCE),
4Upon the return of Pytheas of Massalia (Marsailles),
5The Roman Senate did appoint,
6Not one but two Caesars (dictators),
7Whose names were Appius Claudius Caecus,
8And Lucius Aemilius Barbula.
9Caesar Appius Claudius Caecus,
10Was charged with preparing the armies of Rome,
11That could be raised and trained in time,
12Against the expected attacks of Pyrrhus.
13Caesar Lucius Aemilius Barbula,
14Was ordered to accompany Pytheas of Massalia (Marsailles),
15On a mission for the survival of Rome,
16Past the blockage of Carthage upon the Gibraltar Straits,
17To the Sacred Isle to obtain an audience,
18With Cuilliaéan High King Ugaine Mor,
19And help secure a supply of much needed tin and copper,
20As well as a supply of trained and armed men,
21Capable of reinforcing the legions of Rome.
22Upon reaching the most sacred isle,
23Caesar Lucius Aemilius Barbula,
24Was granted an audience with High King Ugaine Mor,
25Who spoke first as was custom,
26And enquired not of the immediate mission,
27But the deeper intentions of Rome,
28To which Lucius Aemilius Barbula replied,
29First to protect our honor our home,
30Second to provide for our people and all who love freedom,
31Third to serve heaven and defend the world against evil.
32Upon hearing these words and the knowledge and respect,
33Of Lucius Aemilius Barbula to the wisdom of Jeremiah,
34And the sacred laws of Tara,
35Cuilliaéan High King Ugaine Mor did issue a decree,
36Henceforth let it be known to all men,
37Who honor the Rule of Law,
38Who honor Justice and the Divine,
39That Romans be welcomed as brothers,
40Not confronted as enemies,
41And that any man who serve the cause of Rome,
42So long as the spirit of Rome exists,
43Serves the same source of law as Tara.
44Upon hearing these words,
45Lucius Aemilius Barbula did declare,
46Let it be known to all people,
47As it will be written in the sacred scrolls of Rome,
48And honored by its Senators and Consuls,
49As I hold this baton of authority,
50I now give it to you most high holly king,
51That you and your descendants forever more,
52Shall be welcomed as sons of Rome,
53As honored tribunes and priests of Rome,
54And as long as Rome survives,
55I pledge for Rome that your lands shall be protected,
56And Rome shall never permit,
57Any force to rise against you.
58With the sacred pact witnessed and sealed,
59Cuilliaéan High King Ugaine Mor,
60Granted the Romans the right to mine,
61In the lands of the Dumnonii to the south west,
62And the lands of the Demetae and Silurae,
63And the Ordovici and Cornovi of the west.
64The Romans set about expanding the mines,
65And the building of new metalworks,
66And new port towns at Glevum and Isca,
67And the training and building of the first legions,
68Raised beyond the shores of Italy.

11

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Nine hundred and eleven years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (289 BCE),
4King Pyrrhus did launch three simultaneous attacks,
5The first against Macedon,
6The second against Messina and Syracuse,
7And the third against Gortyn and Knossos on Crete.
8Against Macedon Pyrrhus did attack from the west,
9As King Philetaerus of Pergamon did attack from the East.
10The forces of Demetrius the Guardian of Macedon,
11Were no match for such an invasion,
12And even with support from King Areus of Sparta,
13Pyrrhus captured Macedonia and Thessaly,
14Placing General Sosthenes as regent,
15For the son of Pyrrhus by Lanassa of Athens,
16Whose name was Alexander.
17As to Messina and Syracuse,
18The Romans were ill prepared with this new warfare,
19Of ferocity and destruction,
20And the whole of Sicily soon fell again to Pyrrhus.
21Crete also quickly fell to the forces of Pyrrhus,
22And for a moment,
23Pyrrhus controlled the fate of the world in his hands.
24Holy Patros (Father) Seleucus of Eliada,
25Did send relief armies to Macedon and Thessaly,
26And for ten years the forces of Carthage and Eliada,
27Fought for control of the lands and islands,
28At terrible cost and waste,
29In the Great Age of the Ram,
30Nine hundred and eighteen years,
31Since the dawn of the Great Age (282 BCE),
32A great battle was fought between the forces,
33King Philetaerus of Pergamon,
34And Demetrius and Seleucus of Eliada.
35So fierce and bloody the battle,
36That tens of thousands of men died,
37And the death of Sosthenes and Alexander,
38And even King Philetaerus of Pergamon,
39And Demetrius were killed in the battle.
40The crown of Pergamon did then befall,
41To his son named Atlas (Attalis),
42Who abandoned the support of Pyrrhus,
43And instead sought terms with Antagonus,
44The son of Demetrius.
45Upon the truce,
46Antigonus became King of Macedon,
47And Pergamon an unlikely ally against Pyrrhus.
48In the same year,
49Lysimachus (Ptolemy) the Guardian of Heliopolis,
50Did give up the ghost.
51His position did then befall to his son,
52Whose name was Philadelphos,
53And the Peter (Ptah and Ptolemy).

12

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Nine hundred and eighteen years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (282 BCE),
4Upon news of the death of his son Alexander,
5King Pyrrhus as Moloch was enraged,
6And demanded a great holocaust be offered,
7As the original name of the most sacred ritual,
8Of his cult did name the murder of innocents,
9To the demon gods as atonement.
10Pyrrhus as the living god Moloch did issue a high curse,
11Unto Atlas (Attalis) of Pergamon,
12That his kingdom will crumble into dust,
13And that Atlas (Attalis) shall be cursed to hold the burdens,
14Of the world forever.
15To Antagonus he did issue the high curse that Macedon,
16Shall be laid to waste and ruin,
17And that all the world will forget the truth.
18Pyrrhus did order his scribes to modify his cult,
19That all who dishonor his name and do not worship him,
20Shall be forever tormented by flame and fire in the underworld,
21For he be a jealous god,
22And no followers be permitted to worship any other deity.
23But those who worship ignorance and fanaticism,
24Those who worship without question,
25And sacrifice themselves and their first born,
26Shall have eternal salvation from the flames and torture.
27Pyrrhus did then form a treaty,
28With Priest King Menes of Tarsus,
29Who pledged the tribes of Cilicia,
30And northern Syria to the service of Pyrrhus.
31In the Great Age of the Ram,
32Nine hundred and nineteen years,
33Since the dawn of the Great Age (281 BCE),
34Holy Patros (Father) Seleucus of Eliada,
35Did give up the ghost.
36The position of the third Holy Patros (Father),
37In History did befall to his son,
38Whose name was Antiochus.
39Upon the death of Seleucus,
40Pyrrhus seized the moment to invade Syria,
41Aided by King Shem of Cilicia,
42And soon also captured Palestine,
43Making Damascus the Capital,
44Of the Kingdom of Samaria.
45King Shem then did anoint himself high priest,
46Of the Cult of Mithra,
47Claiming his father to be called Methuseliah,
48And to be his son as Shemiah (Samuel),
49As the last High Priest of Mithra,
50That had been eradicated by Alexander.
51Menes did then call himself Meneshiah,
52And then changed the foundation of Mithra religion,
53To make the supreme deity Ba'al Moloch,
54As the living god Pyrrhus on earth,
55And not the Divine Creator.
56Thus all men who worshipped Mithra,
57No longer worshipped heaven,
58But the gods of the underworld through trickery.

13

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Nine hundred and nineteen years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (281 BCE),
4King Pyrrhus as Moloch,
5Did land a massive mercenary army of eighty thousand,
6Including more than five hundred war elephants,
7At Tarentum in southern Italy,
8And circumventing the massive defenses,
9Built by the Romans to prevent an invasion from Sicily.
10Publius Valerius Laevinus and his army of forty thousand,
11Moved north from Calabria and confronted Pyrrhus,
12At the city of Heraclea.
13Despite the bravery of the Romans,
14They were completely overrun,
15Losing more than twenty thousand of their forces,
16And the death of Publius Valerius Laevinus,
17To the loss of ten thousand by Pyrrhus.
18The army of Pyrrhus then moved north westward,
19To siege the region of Campania,
20And a defensive force of Tiberius Coruncanius.
21Naples quickly fell and Tiberius Coruncanius himself was killed,
22And Pyrrhus then made Naples his new capital,
23Before sending his best diplomat,
24Whose name was Cineas,
25To Rome to negotiate the terms of their surrender.
26At Rome Cineas addressed the Senate and the people,
27Saying that the god Pyrrhus as Ba'al Moloch,
28Did not wish ill upon the city or the people of Rome,
29And that if they surrender peacefully,
30He would spare the city and the people.
31Many of the Senators pleaded with one another,
32That such generous terms be agreed,
33While others sought deferral and delay,
34Upon secret prayers that Lucius Aemilius Barbula,
35May return in haste an army of Holly Celts from Britannia.
36In the Great Age of the Ram,
37Nine hundred and twenty years,
38Since the dawn of the Great Age (280 BCE),
39Word reached Rome that Lucius Aemilius Barbula,
40Had set sail with a mighty force,
41Of five legions and forty five thousand,
42Celt warriors from Britannia and Germanica.
43Upon the return of Cineas to Rome and the Senate,
44He warned the Senators that time had run out,
45To which Caesar Appius Claudius Caecus,
46Did reply that while no man may stop time,
47Every man is the architect of his own fortune.
48Cineas did then return to Pyrrhus,
49And declared that not even a cow,
50Be so stubborn as Rome,
51As to ignore its own fate.
52Before Pyrrhus could move against Rome,
53The fleet of Lucius Aemilius Barbula,
54Successfully passed through the blockade,
55At the straits of Gibraltar,
56And then split into two,
57With one force of some twenty thousand,
58Of the Holly Legions,
59Under the command of Publicus Decius Mus,
60Landing to the east of Pyrrhus,
61At the port town of Bari,
62And was soon joined a second force,
63Of twenty thousand Roman legionnaires,
64Under the command of Publius Sulpicius Saverrio.
65The second larger fleet landed at Eryx,
66In western Sicily under Lucius Aemilius Barbula,
67And began to attack and seize the Carthaginian cities,
68And destroying their supply lines.
69Pyrrhus confronted the combined army,
70Of forty thousand Romans and Celts,
71At Asculum in the Apulia region,
72With a force of forty thousand of his own,
73And secured a decisive victory,
74Killing fifteen thousand Romans and Celts,
75Including Publicus Decius Mus,
76Yet losing seven thousand more men.
77In the Great Age of the Ram,
78Nine hundred and twenty one years,
79Since the dawn of the Great Age (279 BCE),
80A second fleet of Holly Legions,
81Did pass through the blockades,
82Of the Carthaginians,
83And land upon Corsica,
84Seizing the city of Aleria,
85And then onto Sardinia,
86And the city of Caralis.
87Pyrrhus in need of supplies,
88Was forced to move his army,
89Back south to Sicily,
90To confront Lucius Aemilius Barbula.
91Yet by the time Pyrrhus had arrived,
92To confront the Romans,
93Lucius Aemilius Barbula used the Celt ships,
94To move his forces north to Calabria,
95To man the original defenses,
96Of Publius Valerius Laevinus.
97With insufficient men,
98And now with the reinforcements,
99Of the Holly and Germanic Legions,
100Pyrrhus abandoned his plans against Rome.
101Instead he ordered the Syrian and Persian mercenaries,
102To build the defenses of the Campania region,
103And especially the city of Naples.
104And the mercenaries of Libya,
105Of King Mara (Magas),
106Did reinforce the region of Calabria.
107Upon saving Rome,
108Lucius Aemilius Barbula and the generals,
109Of the Holly Legions were awarded,
110The greatest triumph yet seen.

14

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Nine hundred and twenty two years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (278 BCE),
4Upon reinforcing the defenses of Sicily cities,
5Pyrrhus landed a new army of fifty thousand mercenaries,
6Through Campania and Naples and Cumae,
7To then march against Rome.
8Consul Gaius Fabricius Luscinus,
9With a much smaller force met against Pyrrhus,
10At the high ground of Beneventum (Beneveto).
11Pyrrhus chose not to by-pass the army of Gaius Fabricius Luscinus,
12And instead engaged the smaller enemy army,
13Even though the conditions were against him.
14Yet soon what was a smaller force became a bloody siege,
15And rolling battles where month after month the forces fought,
16And more and more men were killed.
17After a year of terrible war,
18More than ten thousand Roman soldiers had died,
19And more than twenty five thousand of the forces of Pyrrhus.
20In the Great Age of the Ram,
21Nine hundred and twenty four years,
22Since the dawn of the Great Age (276 BCE),
23Pyrrhus withdrew his forces back to Campania,
24To focus on building the walls of Naples,
25And defenses of the Campania cities.
26Soon after Pyrrhus returned to Carthage.
27In the Great Age of the Ram,
28Nine hundred and twenty five years,
29Since the dawn of the Great Age (275 BCE),
30King Pyrrhus also known as Moloch,
31Did divide the Carthaginian Empire,
32Between his two sons,
33With the eldest son known as Alexander,
34Also known as Hamilcar Barakas,
35Being granted the crown of Carthage and Hispania,
36And Heracles also known as Hasdrubal,
37Being granted the crown of Sicily.
38King Hasdrubal (Heracles) immediately departed,
39To lead invasion of Corsica and Sardinia,
40To seize back the islands from the Romans,
41And honor the legacy of his father.
42Yet the defense of the islands proved formidable,
43And Hasdrubal was forced to purchase mercenaries,
44To fill his ranks in Sicily,
45And support his war against Sardinia.
46In the same year,
47Pirate King Mara (Magas) of Marmarica (Cyrene),
48Son of Pyrrhus and Queen Berenice of Cyrene,
49Did wed Cybele (Apama) the high priestess,
50And daughter of Priest King Shem of Samaria.
51They did have but one daughter,
52Who they named Berenice.
53In the Great Age of the Ram,
54Nine hundred and thirty years,
55Since the dawn of the Great Age (270 BCE),
56King Pyrrhus also known as Moloch,
57Also known as Pyrro the Philosopher,
58And founder of skepticism against the Divine,
59And inventor and founder of war as industry,
60Also falsely known as Polyperchon,
61Also falsely known as Antipater and Agathocles,
62Did give up the ghost.
63His legacy beyond total war,
64Remained in the flesh of his sons,
65Through King Hamilcar Barakas of Carthage and Hispania,
66King Hasdrubal of Sicily and Sardinia,
67Pirate King Mara (Magas) of Marmarica (Cyrene),
68King Alexander of Epirus,
69King Mytilus of Illyria,
70And King Massena (Masinissa) of Numidia.

15

1By the time of the death of Pyrrhus,
2The light of Heliopolis (Alexandria) shone brighter,
3As men and women did make the pilgrimage,
4From the four corners of the world,
5To honor the man known as the Son of God,
6To stand in awe at the marvels of such of the City of God,
7To learn of the wisdoms of the world from its Museum,
8And to pay homage to the most sacred ark of the covenant,
9Within the most holy of temples.
10Not only religion but the power of knowledge,
11And the power of the relics of gods,
12Had captured the imagination of all races of men.
13Other cities sought to aspire if not to such greatness,
14Then at least in imitation to the city of light.
15Pergamon had constructed grand temples,
16And restored its museum after the terrible wars.
17Even King Shemiah (Samuel) of Samaria had established,
18A prosperous colony at Campania called Samnia.
19In celebration of fifty years since the death of Alexander,
20Philadelphos the Peter (Ptah and Ptolemy) of Egypt,
21Did order the name of the great city be changed to Alexandria,
22And that the greatest statue ever conceived,
23Be commissioned to Archimedes,
24The Chief Curator of the Museum of Alexandria,
25And the greatest mind of his day,
26To be constructed upon the island named Rhodes,
27Within the great harbor,
28And over one hundred and fifty feet in height,
29Yet as high as the great lighthouse (450 ft) on account of its base,
30So all would see it upon their arrival.
31The statue known as the Colossus,
32And the Eternal Flame of Liberty,
33Was a mighty image of Alexander in bronze,
34In priestly robes and a star crown,
35Holding aloft a mighty torch with his right hand,
36And holding a great pair of scales by his left hand.
37Holy Patros (Father) Antiochus,
38The patron and guardian of Eliada,
39Did not approve of such worship and change,
40To enlargen the Cult of Alexander,
41Yet his protests were ignored by Philadelphos.
42Instead the Cult of the Alexandrian Divinities,
43As knowledge of supreme power and the mind of God
44Did call the most powerful men of the world,
45To join a fraternity of the enlightened,
46Upon corrupted knowledge,
47Concerning a Great Architect of the Universe,
48And a scientific spherical model of the heavens.

16

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Nine hundred and thirty years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (270 BCE),
4Upon the death of King Pyrrhus,
5King Mara (Magas) of Marmarica (Cyrene),
6And the Pentapolis of Graecian cities of Libya,
7And son of Pyrrhus and Berenice,
8Did declare himself an ally of Rome,
9Pledging his kingdom and colony of Marsi,
10In Calabria and southern Italy,
11To the aid of the Romans.
12King Shemiah (Samuel) of Samaria,
13Did also pledge his kingdom and colony,
14Of Samnia (Campania) in aid of the Romans.
15King Mara (Magas) of Marmarica (Cyrene),
16Did then lead swift invasion of Crete,
17Capturing Gortyn and then island of Malta,
18While all the Carthaginians were slaughtered.
19Neither King Hasdrubal or King Hamilcar Barakas,
20Had the resources or means to attack the Marmatines (Mamertines).
21Even Rome itself was without resources or supplies.
22In the Great Age of the Ram,
23Nine hundred and thirty one years,
24Since the dawn of the Great Age (269 BCE),
25Rome sent Quintus Ogulnius Gallus to Cyrene then Samaria,
26Where he concluded treaties,
27With King Mara (Magas) of Marmarica (Cyrene),
28And then Priest King Shemiah of Samaria.
29That in recognizing the colonies of Samnia (Campania) and Marsi (Calabria),
30The Marmatines and Samaritans would begin supplies,
31And help build Rome a great navy of its own.
32Quintus Ogulnius Gallus returned to Rome,
33And in the same year the first silver and bronze coins of Romans,
34Were minted by the Samnites at Naples and Marsi at Tarantum,
35Bearing the Head of King Mara (Magas),
36The silver Denarius had the same weight of a didrachm (3 grams),
37While the bronze As was three times the weight (of Denarius).
38In the Great Age of the Ram,
39Nine hundred and thirty two years,
40Since the dawn of the Great Age (268 BCE),
41General Crino of the Marmatines (Mamertines),
42Did attack and capture Rhegium and Messina from Carthage,
43Further weakening the defenses of Carthage.
44As King Hasdrubal (Heracles) of Sicily,
45Sought aid from his brother King Hamilcar Barakas of Carthage.
46As Carthage was in retreat in the east of Sicily,
47The Graecians of Syracuse led by Hiero,
48Then rebelled against the Carthage garrison,
49And seized the city with Hiero as King,
50And Syracuse now an ally of Rome.
51In the Great Age of the Ram,
52Nine hundred and thirty three years,
53Since the dawn of the Great Age (267 BCE),
54King Hasdrubal (Heracles) of Sicily,
55Did attack Rhegium and crush the Marmatines (Mamertines),
56Before moving to attack Messina.
57King Mara (Magas) then did appeal to his ally Rome.
58Yet the Senate of Rome were at first hesitant,
59Upon the great loss of life inflicted,
60Through the wars against Pyrrhus.
61Upon the hesitation by the Romans and Samnites,
62King Hasdrubal (Heracles) of Sicily,
63Moved against the Marsi of Tarantum and Locri,
64Destroying both cities,
65And taking more than thirty thousand prisoners.
66Within the year they did appoint Appius Claudius Caudex,
67To command an army to support the Marmatines (Mamertines),
68By which stage Messina had already fallen.
69In the Great Age of the Ram,
70Nine hundred and thirty four years,
71Since the dawn of the Great Age (266 BCE),
72The mercenary army of Appius Claudius Caudex,
73Did confront the forces of King Hasdrubal (Heracles) at Rhegium,
74Destroying the Carthaginians,
75Before driving them out of Marsi (Calabria),
76And taking Messina at great cost.
77King Mara (Magas) of Marmacia (Cyrene),
78Then ordered the rebuilding of Tarantum and Locri,
79With even stronger defenses.

17

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Nine hundred and thirty five years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (265 BCE),
4King Areus of Sparta,
5Did give up the ghost.
6The crown did then befall his son,
7Whose name was Eudamidas.
8In Athens the leader Chremonides,
9Sought to incite war between Sparta and Macedon,
10By dressing up his troops as Spartans,
11And seeking to attack the forces of Antagonus of Macedonia.
12Yet King Eudamidas and King Antagonus,
13Discovered the plans of the Athenians,
14And had Chremonides executed,
15With all responsible for the trickery.
16In the Great Age of the Ram,
17Nine hundred and thirty nine years,
18Since the dawn of the Great Age (261 BCE),
19Holy Patros (Father) Antiochus,
20The patron and guardian of Eliada,
21Did give up the ghost.
22The position of Holy Father did then befall to his son,
23Whose name was Theos and also Antiochus.
24In the same year,
25King Hamilcar Barakas of Carthage,
26Did land a force of fifty thousand in Sicily,
27To aid his brother Hasdrubal,
28In the recapture of the eastern cities.
29A fierce battle then ensued between Rome and Carthage,
30At the southern city of Sicily of Agrigentum,
31Where the fifty thousand from Carthage fought,
32Against forty thousand from Rome,
33And victory went to Rome at terrible cost.
34In the same year,
35Guardian Philadelphos Ptolemy of Alexandria,
36And Holy Patros (Father) Theos Antiochus,
37Defeated Priest King Meneshiah from Palestine,
38And southern Syria.
39King Meneshiah was forced to return to his stronghold,
40Of Tarsus in Cilicia.

18

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Nine hundred and forty four years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (256 BCE),
4And after the great victory of Rome,
5To the south and west of Sicily,
6King Hamilcar Barakas of Carthage,
7Sought a new force to invade Sicily,
8As the Romans had commissioned the largest fleet,
9Yet seen in the Inland Sea (Mediterranean),
10Of more than two hundred coastal oared ships,
11From King Mara (Magas) of Marmarica (Cyrene).
12As King Hamilcar Barakas prepared an invasion force,
13Of more than sixty thousand,
14The Romans under Marcus Atilius Regulus,
15And Lucius Manlius Vulso Longus,
16Prepared the launch of their invasion force of fifty thousand,
17Whereupon both fleets encountered each other,
18Off the southern coast of Sicily near Cape Eknomus.
19The Carthaginians were overwhelmed,
20And lost more than a third of their ships,
21Before retreating back to Africa.
22The Romans continued with their invasion,
23With Marcus Atilius Regulus and the army,
24Landing at Tunis and defeating the Carthage resistance.
25Yet Marcus Atilius Regulus did not march on Carthage,
26And set in camp while peace was negotiated.
27This gave time to King Hamilcar Barakas,
28To call for aid from King Masnissa of Numidia.
29King Masnissa of Numidia did then move east,
30As King Hamilcar Barakas moved from the south,
31Trapping and surrounding Marcus Atilius Regulus.
32With King Masnissa of Numidia honored by Carthage,
33As the most precious jewel,
34Also known as the Xanthiplus,
35Destroying the Roman army and capturing Marcus Atilius Regulus.
36King Hasdrubal did then seize Agrigentum in Sicily,
37Totally destroying the city to its foundations.
38While Rome had suffered a terrible defeat,
39Its new alliance with the Marmatines (Mamertines),
40Enabled the creation of auxiliary legions,
41Of paid mercenaries for hire,
42As the Holly legions of Britannia,
43Could give no further aid.
44In the Great Age of the Ram,
45Nine hundred and forty six years,
46Since the dawn of the Great Age (254 BCE),
47The Romans attacked the Carthage cities of Sicily,
48Capturing Therma then Panorma then Drapna.
49The Roman fleet and mercenary Legions,
50Also helped secure Sardinia and Corsica for Rome,
51As Carthage continued to find,
52Such waste of life and materials,
53Impossible to be sustained.
54In the Great Age of the Ram,
55Nine hundred and forty nine years,
56Since the dawn of the Great Age (251 BCE),
57Ahead of a planned invasion fleet,
58King Hamilcar Barakas did release,
59The prisoner general Marcus Atilius Regulus,
60On his oath and the lives of his remaining men,
61That he would argue for peace,
62And if he did fail that he would return,
63To meet his fate at Carthage.
64Marcus Atilius Regulus pledged a sacred oath,
65That if the last of his men be freed,
66Then as a man of honor he would agree.
67Thus Marcus Atilius Regulus,
68And five hundred Roman officers were freed,
69And returned to Rome,
70Where Marcus Atilius Regulus warned the Senate,
71To believe nothing honorable could come from Carthage,
72That a vile and wicked serpent it be,
73And that if given the chance it would strike again.
74The Senate implored Marcus Atilius Regulus to remain,
75That an oath to men without law or honor be void.
76Yet the general reminded the Senate,
77That upon the day Rome chooses which laws of the Divine,
78It wishes to keep and which ones it chooses to break,
79Rome shall cease to be.
80Whereupon Marcus Atilius Regulus returned to Carthage,
81And told King Hamilcar Barakas,
82That every last Roman would rather die,
83Defending their honor and rule of law,
84Than make peace with such vipers.
85Marcus Atilius Regulus was then tortured to death,
86As the Roman Senate mourned his death,
87And honored his memory,
88As one of the greatest of heroes.

19

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Nine hundred and fifty one years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (249 BCE),
4Oniah the twenty fifth great prophet of Yeb,
5The son of Adiah and the grandson of Oananiah,
6Did give up the ghost.
7The position then befell,
8To his son whose name was Eleziah,
9As the twenty sixth Great Prophet of the Yahudi,
10At the great Temple of Alexandria.
11In the Great Age of the Ram,
12Nine hundred and fifty two years,
13Since the dawn of the Great Age (248 BCE),
14Holly High King Ugaine Mor mac Eochaid,
15The king of all priests and prophets,
16The king of all the Celts,
17Did give up the ghost.
18The throne of Amen-Ra did then befall to his son,
19Whose name was Cobthach Coel Breg.

20

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Nine hundred and fifty four years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (246 BCE),
4Guardian Philadelphos Ptolemy of Alexandria,
5Did give up the ghost.
6His position as guardian and protector of Alexandria,
7Did then befall to his son,
8Whose name was Eurgetes,
9Also known as Ptolemy III.
10In the same year,
11Holy Patros (Father) Antiochus II Theos,
12Did give up the ghost.
13The position of Holy Father and Guardian,
14For the known world did then befall to his son,
15Whose name was Seleucus II Callinicus.
16Upon the death of the Peter (Ptah) of Egypt,
17And the Holy Father (Patros) so soon,
18Caused great uncertainty across Eliada.
19Diodotus the Governor of Bactria,
20Did seize the opportunity to declare himself King,
21And rebel against imperial forces,
22While Andragoras the Governor of Parthia,
23Also proclaimed himself king,
24Of an independent state.
25As Seleucus II Callinicus sought to quell rebellion,
26Shemiah (Samuel) of Tarsus attacked imperial forces in Syria,
27Declaring once again the Kingdom of Samaria,
28And himself as the High Priest of Mithra.
29Eurgetes the Ptolemy then did invade Palestine,
30And then defeat and kill Shemiah (Samuel),
31Forcing his family and son named Menassiah,
32To seek protection under Andragoras of Parthia.
33Yet Seleucus II Callinicus was weak as a general,
34And failed to bring Parthia or Bactria to submission.
35Eurgetes the Ptolemy then refused to return,
36The lands of Palestine and Syria to the stewardship,
37Of Seleucus II Callinicus and for the first time,
38The Seleucus and the Ptolemy were at enmity.
39In the Great Age of the Ram,
40Nine hundred and fifty five years,
41Since the dawn of the Great Age (245 BCE),
42King Eudamidas of Sparta,
43Did give up the ghost.
44The crown did then befall his son,
45Whose name was Agis.
46Upon the death of Eudamidas of Sparta,
47Alexander of Epirus sought to attack Macedon,
48Using Cyrenian and Ionian Mercenaries.
49Yet Antagonus of Macedon did crush the forces of Alexander of Epirus,
50And he was killed,
51Thus ending the bloodline of Pyrrhus in Epirus.
52Upon the death of Priest King Shemiah of Samaria,
53The colony of Samnia (Campania),
54Did elect a leader named Pontius as their King.

21

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Nine hundred and fifty eight years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (242 BCE),
4A great drying began to grip the north of Africa,
5As well as the lands of Europe and Asia.
6The Celts of north and eastern tribes,
7Sought more fertile lands to the south,
8And people moved closer to the coastline.
9In the Great Age of the Ram,
10Nine hundred and fifty nine years,
11Since the dawn of the Great Age (241 BCE),
12King Agis of Sparta,
13Did give up the ghost.
14The crown did then befall his son,
15Whose name was Eucleidas.
16In the Great Age of the Ram,
17Nine hundred and sixty years,
18Since the dawn of the Great Age (240 BCE),
19The great drying of North Africa and Europe and Asia,
20Became a most terrible drought.
21The kingdom of Egypt under Eurgetes the Ptolemy,
22Grew even more powerful as many nations sought food.
23Even Rome sought stronger treaties with Egypt,
24For the valuable supply of grain.
25In the lands of Cyrene and Carthage and Numidia,
26Crops turned to dust and animals died of thirst.
27The Marmatines (Mamertines) moves tens of thousands,
28To Crete and Syracuse and Campania,
29Yet the drought did not relent.
30Finally Mara (Magas) of Marmarica (Cyrene),
31Turned his massive mercenary army of over one hundred thousand,
32Westward towards Carthage,
33In the hope of better conditions,
34And a weakened former ally.
35At first King Hamilcar Barakas was overwhelmed,
36By the forces of Mara (Magas) and his cavalry.
37Yet upon calling for aid from King Masnissa of Numidia,
38The Numidia horsemen under Micipsa (Naravas),
39Did help defeat and destroy the Marmatines (Mamertines),
40And Mara (Magas) of Marmarica (Cyrene) was killed,
41But at great cost to both sides.
42Upon news of the death of King Mara (Magas),
43Queen Cybele (Apama) in mortal grief,
44Did throw herself to the royal lions,
45And was torn to pieces before her guard.
46The crown of Marmarica (Cyrene),
47Did then befall to Berenice,
48The only daughter of Mara (Magas),
49Who travelled east to Alexandria,
50And the court of Eurgetes the Ptolemy,
51Where she offered herself in marriage,
52And union of Peace with Egypt,
53Eurgetes the Ptolemy agreed,
54On account of her strength and intellect,
55And they produced five offspring,
56The eldest being a daughter,
57Who they named Arsinoe,
58The second being a son named Alexander,
59Also known as Philopater,
60The second daughter known as Berenice,
61The second son known as Maras (Magas),
62And the youngest daughter known as Apama (Cybele).
63In his honor and treaty with the pirate cities,
64Of Marmarica (Cyrene),
65Eurgetes the Ptolemy,
66Did change the name of the port of Derna to Philopatos,
67And the name of the port of Susa to Marsa,
68And the name of the port of Tauchira to Arsinoe,
69And the name of the port of Bayda to Berenice,
70And the name of the port of Boreas to Apama,
71In honor of the names of his children,
72And their right to autonomy through Cyrene.

22

1In the great city of Alexandria,
2Its arrogance continued to grow,
3As the city itself began to be worshipped,
4As the Kingdom of Heaven on Earth.
5Not only the worship of knowledge,
6Much now corrupted to claim greater importance,
7But the worship of money itself,
8That men did come and offer to pay huge sums,
9That may be permitted to learn the secrets of the universe.
10Thus began several secret societies and cults,
11Throughout the sacred city,
12As variations of the perversions of Pythagorus,
13And Orpheus and then the worship of Alexander,
14As to the death and rebirth of mind,
15And the worship and creation of messiahs,
16Emerged to claim unique possession,
17Of secret knowledge and illumination.
18Two such corruptions was the birth of complete fable,
19And the world of Hades (Hell) and the Ferry-man,
20Where the love of money and the perversion of false knowledge,
21Spawned an afterlife even more corrupt,
22And insane than the physical world.
23The second being the corruption of the wisdom of the Hyksos,
24In the form of Kabalah and magic charms,
25In the belief that secret charms and spells,
26And secret symbols and signs,
27Granted the initiate immense power.
28Thus was born a madness of the academic mind,
29And an elitism worship to false knowledge.

23

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Nine hundred and sixty two years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (238 BCE),
4The world did seem to be in upheaval,
5As the positions of the heavens (constellations),
6Changed by a full degree (Small Pole Shift),
7And the lands of Europe and the Inland Sea (Meditteranean),
8Became noticeably warmer.
9The ancient priests throughout the world,
10Did speak and prophecy as to the will of the gods,
11In the changes of Heaven,
12As many began to question if the gods,
13Were punishing men who had been unfaithful.
14The great drought had brought such misery,
15To the lands of Carthage,
16That King Hamilcar Barakas ordered his whole court,
17And army of over three hundred thousand people,
18Depart from Carthage westward to their new homeland,
19And the city of New Carthage (Cartagena) in Hispania.
20Yet the ancient priests of Baal Hammon,
21Did refuse to leave and spoke that such signs in the heavens,
22Were a portent to the punishment of the gods against men.
23And thus did become the priest kings to a city of ghosts.
24The Numidians to the west,
25Had also suffered through the great drought,
26So that King Masnissa of Numidia,
27Refused safe passage for such a large force.
28King Hamilcar Barakas was then forced to fight,
29Whereupon the Numidians were defeated,
30And King Masnissa of Numidia and his sons were killed,
31Ending the dynasty of Pyrrhus in Numidia.
32Yet Hamilcar Barakas did not remain in Numidia,
33And instead crossed the Straits of Gibraltar,
34And into Hispania.
35In the same year,
36Upon the great signs (from 24 degree to 23.5 degree angle),
37Menassiah the son of Shemiah (Samuel),
38Did succeed in causing the army and people of Parthia,
39To rise up against King Andragorus,
40Saying the gods demanded men return to blood sacrifice,
41And fearing the gods,
42And that only he as High Priest could save the people.
43In the great city of Alexandria,
44Eurgetes the Ptolemy demanded that Archimedes,
45Conceive a new religion,
46Whereby Eurgetes the Ptolemy be savior of the world,
47And that all men must pay homage to him,
48Or be denied eternal life,
49And be condemned to eternal torment.
50Archimedes refused such demands saying,
51Better a tyrant who despises the law,
52Than a priest who defiles the will of heaven,
53Whereupon Archimedes departed back to Syracuse,
54And to the services of King Hiero of Syracuse.

24

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Nine hundred and sixty nine years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (231 BCE),
4Mytilus of Illyria did give up the ghost,
5With the crown going to his son named Philip.
6In the Great Age of the Ram,
7Nine hundred and seventy two years,
8Since the dawn of the Great Age (228 BCE),
9King Hamilcar Barakas of Carthage and Hispania,
10Did give up the ghost.
11His brother the former king of Sicily,
12Whose name was Hasdrubal,
13Did then become King of New Carthage.
14In the Great Age of the Ram,
15Nine hundred and seventy five years,
16Since the dawn of the Great Age (225 BCE),
17Holy Patros (Father) Seleucus II Callinicus,
18Did give up the ghost.
19The position of Holy Father and Guardian,
20For the known world did then befall to his son,
21Whose name was Antiochus III the Great.
22In the Great Age of the Ram,
23Nine hundred and seventy eight years,
24Since the dawn of the Great Age (222 BCE),
25Guardian Ptolemy III Euergetes of Alexandria,
26Did give up the ghost.
27His position as guardian and protector of Alexandria,
28Did then befall to his son,
29Whose name was Philopator,
30Also known as Peter and the Rock,
31Also known as Ptolemy.
32Philopator the Ptolemy was a weak and immoral leader,
33Controlled by Chief Minister Sosibius,
34Who upon seizing such position convinced Philopator,
35That his mother was plotting to overthrow him,
36And install his younger brother Mara (Magas) as King.
37Mara (Magas) was warned by his mother of the danger,
38And fled into exile and sanctuary,
39To the Marmatine (Mamertine) colony of Rheggio.
40Upon news of the escape of his brother,
41Philopator the Ptolemy was enraged,
42And had his mother Berenice executed.
43Soon after he fell into brief mourning,
44Ordering that a temple be formed in her honor.
45Philopator then took his sister Arsinoe,
46As his reluctant queen.
47For ten years she lived in terror,
48And resisted his advances,
49Until she relinquished,
50And gave birth to Epiphanes.

25

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Nine hundred and seventy nine years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (221 BCE),
4King Hasdrubal of New Carthage,
5Did give up the ghost.
6The crown of New Carthage did then befall to Hannibal,
7Also known as Hannibal the Great.
8In the Great Age of the Ram,
9Nine hundred and eighty two years,
10Since the dawn of the Great Age (218 BCE),
11The Romans did invade Hispania and Massalia.
12With the Roman legions first attacking Emporion,
13Led by Gnaeus Cornelius Scipio,
14And his brother Publius Cornelius Scipio,
15Capturing Massalia (Marsailles) within the year.
16The Carthaginians and Romans met in Hispania,
17At Cissa near Tarraco,
18With the first Carthaginian Army led by Hasdrubal Gisco,
19The brother of Hannibal.
20When the army of Hannibal then arrived,
21The forces of Gnaeus Cornelius Scipio were crushed,
22And Gnaeus Cornelius Scipio was killed.
23Yet without any respite,
24The Roman Army of Publius Cornelius Scipio,
25Did then arrive and continue to attack.
26King Hannibal then conceive of a plan,
27That if the invasion plans of Rome,
28Could be delayed or halted,
29Then the refugees of Carthage,
30Could complete their integration and new cities,
31Along the Guada River to the south,
32And the city of Cordoba,
33And along the Ebro River to the north,
34And the city of Zaragoza.
35Hannibal then left the defenses,
36And future of New Carthage,
37In the hands of his brother Hasdrubal Gisco,
38And then travelled along the coast,
39Into the lands of the Gaul and around Massalia (Marsailles),
40Then onto the Alps and into North Italy.
41Upon the arrival of Hannibal and his army,
42Of over forty thousand and three hundred elephants,
43The Roman army of General Tiberius Sempronius Longus,
44Of over fifty thousand did attack Hannibal,
45Near the Trebbia River.
46The army of Hannibal succeeded in destroying the army,
47Of Tiberius Sempronius Longus,
48With more than thirty thousand legionnaires losing their lives,
49For light casualties for Hannibal.
50Philip of Illyria did offer fresh troops,
51In seeking an alliance with Hannibal against Rome,
52That replaced the men that Hannibal had lost.
53This gave Hannibal and his army time to rest and regain strength,
54That within the year a second massive army,
55Of more than sixty thousand Roman legionnaries,
56Led by Gnaeus Servilius Geminus and Gaius Flaminius Nepos,
57Did attack Hannibal near Lake Trasimene.
58Yet once again Hannibal succeeded,
59And this time more than twenty five thousand Romans,
60Were slaughtered by the forces of Hannibal,
61As well as Gnaeus Servilius Geminus.
62So great now was the legend of Hannibal and his immortals,
63That no army stood in his way.
64Yet Hannibal refrained from attacking Rome,
65Even though momentum was in his favor.
66In the Great Age of the Ram,
67Nine hundred and eighty four years,
68Since the dawn of the Great Age (216 BCE),
69Hannibal and his army did gain valuable rest,
70Yet without reinforcements,
71The army of Hannibal was now thirty thousand,
72And few elephants still alive.
73The Roman Senate resolved to defeat Hannibal,
74In one massive strike and commissioned the largest army,
75Yet seen in Italy of over one hundred thousand mercenaries,
76Under the command of Gaius Terentius Varro,
77And Lucius Aemilius Paullus.
78The Romans and Hannibal met at Cannae,
79Where Hannibal let the generals believe,
80They had broken his lines,
81Yet the forces of Hannibal enveloped the Romans,
82And in one day the army of Hannibal,
83Slaughtered more than seventy thousand Romans,
84Including Lucius Aemilius Paullus,
85And more than a third of the senate of Rome,
86Who led units as officers.
87The army of Hannibal was now down to a strength,
88Of Just twenty five thousand men.
89Yet over the next three years did still defeat,
90Three more formidable armies.
91In the Great Age of the Ram,
92Nine hundred and eighty five years,
93Since the dawn of the Great Age (215 BCE),
94King Hiero of Syracuse,
95Did give up the ghost.
96Upon his death his son named Gelo,
97Did declare himself an ally of Hannibal.
98Damarata the daughter of Hiero,
99Did then appeal to Mara (Magas),
100And aided by Antonius the husband of Damarata,
101Succeeded in King Gelo,
102Before the Carthaginians,
103Could take the city.
104Upon news of the actions of his brother,
105Philopater declared himself an ally of Hannibal,
106And promptly launched a sea attack,
107As Hannibal sought to conquest by land.
108Yet the great Archimedes,
109In the service of Syracuse,
110Had anticipated such events,
111And had invented the most powerful and deadly,
112Of machines against the invaders.
113The Egyptian ships were smashed to pieces,
114And Hannibal lost more men than in any other battle.
115After two years of failed attempts,
116All that Philopater of Egypt succeeded,
117Was the assassination of Archimedes,
118By a lone attacker.
119Upon the failure to take Syracuse,
120Hannibal escaped back to Africa,
121With the remainder of his army,
122As one final stand.
123The Senate recalled Publius Cornelius Scipio,
124And his army from Hispania,
125To go to Africa and defeat Hannibal.
126Yet Hannibal had failed to find men willing,
127To make such a final stand.
128At Zama near Carthage,
129Outnumbered twenty to one,
130The forces of Hannibal were finally defeated,
131By Publius Cornelius Scipio,
132And Hannibal and his surviving army,
133Committed suicide rather than surrender.
134Ashamed of the terrible dishonor,
135Of how Rome dispatched such a great general,
136Many a historian falsely claimed he lived on.
137Many a great city now in ruins,
138And two million lives and four empires lost,
139Such be the waste and futility of war,
140That no one profits from war,
141Except those that enable such evil.
142For while Pyrrhus had failed to do in battle,
143His descendants would soon achieve through money,
144In the corruption of the spirit of Rome.

26

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Nine hundred and eighty three years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (217 BCE),
4Holly High King Cobthach Coel Breg mac Ugaine,
5The king of all priests and prophets,
6The king of all the Celts,
7Did give up the ghost.
8The throne of Amen-Ra did then befall to his brother,
9Whose name was Loegaire Lorc mac Ugaine.
10In the Great Age of the Ram,
11Nine hundred and ninety two years,
12Since the dawn of the Great Age (208 BCE),
13A terrible sign appeared in the heavens,
14Upon the approach of the comet Encke.
15As tradition since ancient times,
16A comet signaled bad omens.
17So Encke did bring hardship,
18To many cultures yet spared others.
19The meteorite swarm did come,
20Yet not as destructive to all mankind,
21As in ancient times.
22Some hundreds fell across the Levant,
23And cultures of the Mediterranean,
24Bringing a halt to the campaigns of Antiochus the Great.
25Many more did smash into the lands of the Celts,
26Of Northern and Central Europe.
27Upon such signs from heaven,
28Rational men abandoned their reason,
29And superstitions arose again.
30In the lands of the Romans,
31Spared from any destruction,
32Their good fortune was heralded as a sign,
33They be chosen by heaven to lead the world,
34And rid the world of ignorance and evil.

27

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Nine hundred and ninety one years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (209 BCE),
4King Menassiah of Parthia,
5Did give up the ghost.
6The crown did then befall to his son,
7Whose name was called Machiah.
8Upon the death of Menassiah,
9Holy Patros (Father) Antiochus the Great,
10Did attack Parthia and defeat Machiah,
11Who he then let live on the pledge of loyalty,
12And renunciation of claims of priesthood.
13Machiah then changed his name,
14Machiah then changed his name,
15As vassal to the Eliada Empire.
16In the same year,
17Holy Patros (Father) Antiochus the Great,
18Did defeat King Euthydemus of Bactria,
19And return it to control.
20Upon the securing of the Kingdom,
21Antiochus continued in the building of his new capital,
22At Heliopolis upon the Orontes River,
23Falsely claimed by the name of Antioch,
24To hide its provenance.
25Holy Patros (Father) Antiochus the Great,
26Also secured peace with the Nabateans,
27The wealthy merchants and kings of north Arabia,
28And their leader King Rabelas.
29In the Great Age of the Ram,
30Nine hundred and ninety three years,
31Since the dawn of the Great Age (207 BCE),
32As Philopator the Ptolemy resumed fighting,
33Against Antiochus the Great in Palestine,
34He halted shipment of grain to Rome.
35So important was the grain shipments from Egypt,
36That the Senate sent a delegation of two Consuls,
37Whose names were Marcus Livius Salinator,
38And Gaius Claudius Nero,
39Yet Philopator the Ptolemy refused to reason.
40The Great Prophet Eleziah then confronted Philopator,
41Against his wickedness that Alexandria,
42Had become a place of vice and madness against heaven.
43In response Philopator the Ptolemy ordered Eleziah,
44To be executed and declared himself the great prophet.

28

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Nine hundred and ninety four years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (206 BCE),
4Eleziah the twenty sixth great prophet of Yeb,
5The son of Adiah and the grandson of Oniah,
6Did give up the ghost.
7The position then befell,
8To his son whose name was Elkaniah,
9As the twenty seventh Great Prophet of the Yahudi.
10The Roman Senate appointed Marcus Livius Salinator,
11As Caesar (dictator) at the head of an army to seize Philopator,
12To restore the grain supply to Rome,
13And rescue Elkaniah and the holly priests.
14The people of Alexandria who hated the excesses of Philopator,
15Helped the Romans enter the city without conflict,
16And Philopator the Ptolemy was captured and executed,
17With Marcus Livius Salinator,
18Installing a garrison of Roman Soldiers,
19Within the city to protect against rebellion,
20As Epiphanes the young son of Philopator,
21Was made the new Peter (Ptah) and Ptolemy.
22Marcus Livius Salinator then returned to Rome,
23With the Ark of the Covenant,
24The sacred treasures of Moses (Akhenaten),
25And the most ancient holly priests of Yeb.
26Thus for the first time in history,
27The Ark of Akhenaten (Covenant),
28Did come to Rome.

29

1The arrival of the Ark of the Covenant,
2And the Holly priests of Yeb,
3Was a moment of great history for Rome,
4Hidden by falsely claiming it be merely the arrival,
5Of a black rock of Cybele,
6By snakes and assassins of history.
7For there was no celebration in blood,
8No worship yet of Magna Mater as Queen of Heaven,
9No worship of self mutilation and celibacy,
10No celebration of human sacrifice and black magic.
11Yet what is not in dispute,
12Is that such a momentous occasion called for Rome,
13To build its greatest temple.
14The Roman Senate did fear the power of the Ark,
15And that all who had possessed it had fallen,
16Thus they commissioned a separate city and temple,
17Be constructed upon Mount Vaticanus,
18Using a structure of catacombs to level the hill,
19And support such a grand edifice.
20Within ten years the great temple was completed,
21And Elkaniah honored as the first Pontifex Maximus,
22Meaning the Head Prophet and Seer,
23As Supreme Pontiff of Yahu,
24Being the Divine Creator of all existence,
25And the God of all gods.
26Supreme Pontiff Elkaniah did then usher,
27A most prophetic prayer,
28That though the heavens may fall,
29Let justice be done,
30For men are known to forget,
31Yet nothing is lost to the Divine Creator,
32Thus let the light of Rome,
33Shine forever as a beacon of the Rule of Law,
34That none are above the law,
35And every man must give account,
36For none be damned but by their own ignorance.