Lebor Clann Glas


iconGreat Age of Rome [204-39 BCE]

1

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Nine hundred and ninety six years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (204 BCE),
4The lands of the great Po valley,
5Which had supported Hannibal,
6Were finally brought to account,
7As a new Province known as Gallia Citerior,
8Later known as Gallia Cisalpine,
9Commanded by Lucius Scribonius Libo.
10With the wars against Hannibal and his brothers,
11Finally coming to an end,
12Rome faced the terrible cost,
13And the demands of peace,
14As mercenary soldiers of the Marsi and Samnites,
15From Sparta to Ionia and Africa,
16As well as Celts from Britanni and Germanica,
17Sought compensation for their service.
18The Samnites (Samaritans) did still control,
19The minting of money through their city of Naples,
20As they had done well before the wars with Hannibal,
21And now dominated all trade and supplies.
22Yet the Senate of Rome still commanded the law,
23And by law only a Citizen of Rome could hold land.
24The Roman Senate then did appoint Quintus Caecilius Metellus,
25As Caesar (Dictator) with a commission of ten Senators,
26To negotiate with King Mara of the Marmatines (Mamertines),
27And King Pontius of Samnia and King Antonius of Syracuse.
28Upon his appointment Caesar Quintus Caecilius Metellus,
29Did consult with the Pontifex Maximus Elkaniah,
30The Great Prophet of Yeb in Rome.
31The Supreme Pontiff of the Divine Creator did warn Caesar,
32That the law does not permit two types of Citizens,
33That if even one man be above the law,
34Then the Golden Rule be dishonored,
35And there be no Rule of Law.
36Thus Caesar Quintus Caecilius Metellus,
37Failed to resolve the crisis.

2

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Nine hundred and ninety seven years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (203 BCE),
4As the threat of open rebellion grew,
5Amongst the veterans of the great wars,
6Who had settled in the Po and Arno valleys,
7To the northern province,
8And across Campania and Sicily,
9To the southern provinces.
10The Senate then appointed Publius Sulpicius Galba as Caesar.
11Caesar Publius Sulpicius Galba then issued,
12The historic proclamation making all veterans,
13Of the wars against the Carthaginians as Plebian Citizens,
14As second class Citizens but with the right of land,
15On condition of their sacred pledge,
16Of loyalty and allegiance to Rome.
17As a symbol to the Marmatines (Mamertines),
18Caesar Publius Sulpicius Galba appointed the son of King Mara,
19Who was also known as Mara,
20As his Magister Equitum (Master of the Horse).
21Upon such illustrious appointment,
22The son of King Mara did adopt a Roman Name,
23Callling himself Gaius Marius Servilius,
24As a loyal and obedient servant to the glory of Rome,
25And pledged upon his ancestors and his blood,
26That he and all his descendants be bound,
27To protect the honor of Rome,
28And the laws of Rome.
29As a symbol to the Samnites (Samaritans),
30Of Campania and Naples,
31Caesar Publius Sulpicius Galba appointed the son of King Pontius,
32Who was also known as Pompus,
33As his Quastor (Master of mint and finance).
34Upon such illustrious appointment,
35The son of King Pontius did adopt a Roman Name,
36Callling himself Gnaeus Pompeius Sterno.
37As celebration King Pontius of the Samnites (Samaritans),
38Ordered his mint at Naples forge a new coin,
39Made of seven grams of gold,
40Called the Aureus and equal to 25 denarii.
41King Pontius then sent a thousand coins to each Senator,
42As a sign of the good will of the Samnites (Samaritans).
43As a symbol to the Graecians of Sicily and Syracuse,
44Caesar Publius Sulpicius Galba appointed the son of King Antonius,
45Who was also known as Sempronius,
46As his Tribune of the Plebs (Supreme Justice).
47The son of King Antonius did adopt a Roman Name,
48Calling himself Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus.
49Thus upon the first formation of the Plebian class,
50In the history of Rome,
51The connection was forged in the mind,
52Of the pirates and mercenaries,
53To honor the equis (horse),
54As the laws of equity instead of equality,
55As law had become the weapon,
56For power and privilege at all cost.

3

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Nine hundred and ninety seven years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (203 BCE),
4Upon Rome securing an uneasy peace,
5With Pirate King Mara (Magas) of Marmarica (Cyrene),
6And King Antonius of Syracuse and Sicily,
7With Egypt and the regent of Epiphanes the Ptolemy,
8And King Pontius of Samnia (Campania),
9King Philip of Illyria and Macedonia,
10Secured an alliance with Holy Patros Antiochus the Great.
11King Philip did invade Crete and seized it,
12As Antiochus seized Cyprus.
13Yet King Philip of Illyria met fierce resistance at Rhodes,
14And his fleet was destroyed.
15To protect his kingdom,
16King Attalis of Pergamon,
17Did conclude a peace treaty with Rome.
18Thus the ancient alliances since the time of Alexander,
19Were finally broken,
20And no more did the Empire of conscience,
21Exist in the hearts of men,
22Or the halls of kings.

4

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2One thousand and three years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (197 BCE),
4The Great Temple known as the Vaticanus,
5Atop Mount Vaticanus was completed,
6As the new home for the Ark of the Covenant,
7And the first Pontifex Maximus,
8The Great Prophet Elkaniah of Yahu.
9The catacombs did support a giant structure,
10Above the virgin earth of more than two hundred feet in length,
11Nor had such earth been desecrated as a place of burial,
12Until the time of Gaius Marius who called himself Julius Caesar,
13And the worship of Cybele and Mithra and sacrifice.
14Upon the completion of the most sacred Temple of all Rome,
15The Senate instituted two most sacred rituals,
16United together as the representation,
17Of death and resurrection,
18With the first being ceremony of Quadragesima (Lent),
19During the month of late February and March,
20As forty days of fasting and austerity, prayer and charity,
21Where Romans prayed to their ancestors and household gods,
22Consuming only unleavened bread and unfermented wine,
23Until the celebration of the new festival called Megalesia,
24Led by the Pontifex Maximus Elkaniah,
25At the beginning of April and celebrating rebirth and new life,
26At which for fourteen days Romans could celebrate their providence,
27And thanks to the one Divine Creator.
28Thus was born the sacred liturgy of Essenoi,
29Meaning those who seek to be enlightened through,
30Purity of spirit and honesty of character.

5

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2One thousand and four years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (196 BCE),
4King Attalis the Lion of Pergamon,
5Did give up the ghost.
6The crown did then befall,
7To his son named Eumenes.
8In the same year,
9The Roman Senate did divide the lands of Hispania (Spain),
10Conquered from Carthage,
11Into two provinces,
12The first being the Ebro Valley and called Hispania Citerior,
13And the second being the Iberian peninsula called Hispania Ulterior.
14Yet within two years the people of both provinces rebelled,
15And Rome was forced to accept the services of a mercenary army,
16Led by plebian Marcus Porcius Cato to put down the rebellion.
17Within a year the mercenary army had destroyed all opposition,
18And as an offering to Rome and the Senate,
19Marcus Porcius Cato returned to Rome with a huge bounty,
20Of gold and silver and precious gifts,
21That were then distributed amongst the Senators and officials,
22In honor of plebian service to Rome.

6

1Since the edict of Publius Sulpicius Galba,
2In the creation of all Plebs as equal,
3Land had been allocated to the former mercenaries,
4And soldiers as free men,
5For slavery remained a capital crime under Roman Law,
6And no man be bound to serve except by their own consent,
7As surety for their valid debts.
8Yet Pirate King Mara (Magas) of Marmarica and Crete,
9Did secretly dishonor these laws,
10By importing slaves to Sicily and Calabria and Campania,
11To work the larger estates owned by the more powerful.
12Thus slowly the price of agriculture continued to remain low,
13As larger farms with slave labor,
14Could charge less than free men,
15And more and more freemen became indebted and impoverished.
16Rather than enforcing the strictness of the law,
17Senators of Rome increasingly turned a blind eye,
18As King Mara through his son Gaius Marius Servilius,
19Gifted to key senators the most beautiful girls,
20And young boys as personal slaves and attendants.
21Nor did the Plebs themselves rise up,
22As Gnaeus Pompeius Sterno of the Samnites,
23Gradually built the largest network of brothels,
24And drug dens and taverns full of enslaved girls and boys,
25In the history of the known world.
26Never before had such depravity been at so large a commercial scale,
27As such vices were the stories of conquest and pillage.
28Yet mercenaries and Plebs could afford to indulge themselves,
29In opiates and sexual pleasures and alcohol cheaply.
30In the Great Age of the Ram,
31One thousand and eight years,
32Since the dawn of the Great Age (192 BCE),
33Holy Patros Antiochus the Great,
34Did end his war with Ptolemy of Egypt,
35For Syria and Sinai and his army attacked Pergamon,
36Aided by King Philip of Illyria and Macedonia.
37King Eumenes of Pergamon did appeal to Rome,
38Who then sent Lucius Cornelius Scipio,
39And a Samnite mercenary army to his aid.
40In the Great Age of the Ram,
41One thousand and ten years,
42Since the dawn of the Great Age (190 BCE),
43Holy Patros (Father) Antiochus the Great,
44Was soundly defeated upon the plains of Lydia (Anatolia).
45Lucius Cornelius Scipio then annexed Anatolia,
46From the Empire of Eliada and renamed it Pontus,
47Appointing Lucius Pompeius Pharnaces as governor,
48With Amisos the capital of the new Roman province.
49Lucius Cornelius Scipio then formed a peace treaty,
50With King Prusias of Bithynia to the west,
51And King Artaxis of the Armenians to the east.
52In the Great Age of the Ram,
53One thousand and thirteen years,
54Since the dawn of the Great Age (187 BCE),
55Holy Father (Patros) Antiochus the Great,
56Did give up the ghost.
57The position of holy father (Patros),
58Did befall to his son named Epiphanes.
59Upon the death of Antiochus the Great,
60Lucius Pompeius Pharnaces extended the lands of Pontus,
61By capturing the Crimea (Peninsula),
62Establishing Pontius to the east,
63And Taurica (Yalta) to the south,
64And Heraclea (Sevastapol) to the south east.

7

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2One thousand and eighteen years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (182 BCE),
4King Phriapites of Parthia,
5Formerly known as Machiah,
6Did give up the ghost.
7His crown did then fall to his son,
8Phrates who then changed his name to Mithradiah,
9And proclaimed himself the true and only savior,
10And high priest of Mithraism.
11Mithradiah then proclaimed blood heritage,
12Directly through to the Great Prophet Enochiah,
13Through a mysterious and absurd genealogy,
14Beginning with Methuseliah who he now claimed,
15Did live for hundreds of years,
16Then his claimed son Lameciah,
17Who he also claimed lived for hundreds of years,
18And then Noiah (Noah) who lived for hundreds of years,
19Before Shem (Shemiah) then Menassiah then Machiah.
20In the Great Age of the Ram,
21One thousand and nineteen years,
22Since the dawn of the Great Age (181 BCE),
23Holly High King Meilge Molbthach mac Cobthach,
24The Cuilliaéan king of all the Celts,
25Did give up the ghost.
26The throne of Amen-Ra did then befall to his son,
27Whose name was Irereo Fathach mac Meilge.
28Since the tin and silver and gold mines of the Holly High Kings,
29They had become increasingly wealthy,
30Along with the Constantine (Custenynn),
31The stewards of the Drumnonii.
32In the Great Age of the Ram,
33One thousand and twenty one years,
34Since the dawn of the Great Age (179 BCE),
35King Philip of Illyria and Macedonia,
36The Grandson of the Great Pyrrhus,
37Did give up the ghost.
38The crown then did befall to his son,
39Whose name was Perseus.

8

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2One thousand and thirty three years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (167 BCE),
4Roman Consul Lucius Aemilius Paullus,
5Defeated the army of King Perseus of Illyria and Macedon,
6At the battle for Pydna in Macedon.
7King Perseus of Illyria,
8The great grandson of the King Pyrrhus,
9Was captured and killed,
10Thus the bloodline of Pyrrhus ended in Illyria and Eliada.
11The Province of Illyricum was then declared for Rome and the Senate.
12Upon the death of King Perseus,
13The Cypriots and Syrians and Palestinians revolted,
14Under the leadership of Priest King Mattathiah of Tarsus,
15Who proclaimed himself to be the one true high priest,
16In opposition to Mithradiah of Parthia.
17Holy Patros Epiphanes the Antiochus,
18Did restore order to Cyprus,
19Yet Priest King Mattathiah and his sons,
20Did cripple and delay the superior forces,
21Of Epiphanes the Antiochus.
22In the Great Age of the Ram,
23One thousand and thirty five years,
24Since the dawn of the Great Age (165 BCE),
25The city of Tarsus was destroyed by Epiphanes the Antiochus,
26And Priest King Mattathiah and several of his sons,
27Were killed in defending the city.
28Iudiah the son of Mattathiah,
29Did flee south to the lands of Rabelas,
30The warlord of the Nabatean Arabic tribes,
31Who agreed to enter a trade treaty,
32To control the spice and incense trade,
33Against the Seleucid traders.
34The army of Epiphanes the Antiochus,
35Was overwhelmed by the Arabic horsemen,
36And upon the great victory,
37Iudiah declared himself King of Asmonea (Hasmonea),
38With Jerusalem as his capital.
39In the Great Age of the Ram,
40One thousand and thirty nine years,
41Since the dawn of the Great Age (161 BCE),
42King Iudiah of Asmonea (Hasmonea),
43Was killed at the Battle of Elasa,
44By General Bacchides who served,
45King Demetrius the Antiochus.
46The crown of Asmonea (Hasmonea) did then befall,
47Yehoniah the youngest son of Mattathiah,
48And brother of Iudiah.
49In the same year,
50Pirate King Mara (Magas) of Marmarica and Crete,
51Did give up the ghost.
52Control of the Marmatine Pirate Empire,
53Of Libya and Calabria and Crete,
54Did befall to his son,
55Gaius Marius Servilius,
56Who chose not to be named as a king,
57But who still ruled as a king,
58As Roman law forbid Romans claiming to be king.

9

1By the time of the death,
2Of Pirate King Mara (Magas) of Marmarica and Crete,
3The fabric of Rome and the model of law,
4Was itself under attack.
5The explosion of cheap drugs and alcohol,
6Of gambling and prostitution,
7Promoted by the pirates and the Samnites,
8Had kept the Plebs satisfied,
9And the Senate distracted,
10Even if the rate of wars had decreased,
11And the price of agriculture continued to fall.
12Yet the trust between men and woman,
13And the institution of matrimony and household,
14Were diminished by the changes in mind,
15As women were turned to objects and property.
16Neighbours no longer trusted neighbour,
17Friends no longer trusted friends,
18And merchants fought to cheat one another.
19Thus as trust within communities diminished,
20So the power of the moneylenders and the private mints,
21Increased in power,
22As people abandoned the capital of goodwill,
23For the capital of money.
24The dependency upon the mints of Naples and Rheggio,
25Grew to the highest levels as money began to control,
26All aspects of the lives of Romans,
27Whereas a century earlier their ancestors had no need of such coin.
28People had become addicted to pleasure,
29And respect for moral values continued to decline.
30Whereas Rome was once like Sparta,
31It had become a place devoid of honor and Rule of Law.
32In the Great Age of the Ram,
33One thousand and forty one years,
34Since the dawn of the Great Age (159 BCE),
35King Eumenes of Pergamon,
36Did give up the ghost.
37The crown of Pergamon did then befall,
38To his son named Euergertes the Attalus.
39In the Great Age of the Ram,
40One thousand and forty two years,
41Since the dawn of the Great Age (158 BCE),
42Elkaniah the twenty seventh great prophet of Yeb,
43The son of Eleziah and the grandson of Oniah,
44Did give up the ghost.
45The position then befell,
46To his son whose name was Zadokiah,
47As the twenty eight Great Prophet of the Yahudi,
48And Pontifex Maximus (Supreme Pontiff) of the Divine Creator.

10

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2One thousand and forty three years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (157 BCE),
4Holly High King Irereo Fathach mac Meilge,
5The living foundation stone of the Divine,
6Of the most ancient Cuilliaéan,
7And blood descendant of the priests of Ebla,
8And blood descendant of the priests of Ur,
9And blood descendant of the priest-kings of the Hyksos,
10And blood descendant of the priests of Ugarit,
11And the only true blood descendants of King Da’vid,
12And the Messiah Kings of Yahuda.
13Did give up the ghost.
14The throne of Amen-Ra did then befall to his son,
15Whose name was Connla Caem mac Irereo.
16In the same year,
17Pontifex Maximus Zadokiah,
18The Great Prophet of the Divine Creator,
19Did issue from the Vaticanus,
20A terrible rebuke against the people of Rome,
21For accepting the bribery and corruption of money,
22For turning a blind eye to the return of slavery,
23For removing the Rule of Law,
24And allowing the destruction of trust.
25The Senate did respond by closing the Vaticanus,
26And refusing Pontifex Maximus Zadokiah,
27From attending to the Ark of the Covenant,
28To which the Great Prophet replied,
29The Ark be only a symbol of no more spiritual power,
30Than the smallest flower.
31As both are born and both shall return to dust,
32But those that live with the spirit of Divine,
33Can never die.
34The Senate relented in their protest,
35And begged the Pontifex Maximus for forgiveness,
36Saying that they were powerless against the forces of commerce,
37And the wealth of the Samnites and Marmatines and Sicilians.
38Pontifex Maximus Zadokiah did then prophecy,
39The house shall be empty of spirit,
40No taste shall satisfy nor drink shall quench thirst,
41Nor wealth or conquest or power.
42For the spirit of the Divine shall leave this city,
43And the evil of ignorance and superstition,
44Shall dwell as a false shadow in its place,
45Until the return of one like the son of man,
46Upon the dawn of a new Great Age.
47The Senate was still greatly troubled,
48And asked by what signs such events will come,
49Whereupon Zadokiah added to the beliefs of Essenoi,
50There shall be signs in all forms,
51Of the coming destruction of the present world,
52By the Divine Creator of all things.
53The earth shall shake and the mountains roar;
54The animals shall stop giving birth and the crops wither;
55Men shall tear the flesh from other men,
56And pray for death;
57The city shall be destroyed three times;
58Before the Kingdom of Heaven returns.
59The Divine Creator shall call to judgment,
60All who corrupted Divine Law and Rule of Law,
61Upon the arrival of a great Messiah,
62Who will cleanse the world of its transgressions,
63And restore the Rule of Law and Justice,
64And that those who choose to be of the world,
65Shall be doomed by their own iniquity,
66Yet those who repent and cleanse themselves,
67Of the vices of this world,
68Shall have eternal life.
69In the Great Age of the Ram,
70One thousand and forty four years,
71Since the dawn of the Great Age (156 BCE),
72Pontifex Maximus Zadokiah,
73The twenty eight Great Prophet of the Yahudi,
74Did depart Rome with all the Yahudi priests,
75Leaving the Ark of the Covenant behind,
76And the great Vaticanus empty of Holly Spirit,
77To establish a new temple at Leontopolis (Cairo) in Egypt,
78With the permission of Philometor the Ptolemy.
79At the city of the lion (Leontopolis),
80Pontifex Maximus Zadokiah dedicated the new temple,
81Naming it Chi Rho (Cairo),
82As the site of a Christ yet to come.

11

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2One thousand and forty five years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (155 BCE),
4Upon the departure of the Great Prophet Zadokiah,
5And the Holly Priests of Yeb from Rome,
6The Senate called out to all citizens and colonies,
7That the wisest and skilled priests or philosophers,
8Come to Rome that a Supreme Pontiff,
9Without the fire and controversy of Zadokiah,
10Be selected as custodian over the Ark of the Covenant.
11Soon all manner of mystic, false messiah and false prophet,
12Did descend upon Rome until the Senate selected three,
13The first being Carneades of Cyrene,
14The second being Diogenes of Tarsus,
15And the third being Critolaus of Pergamon.
16The Roman Senate then interviewed each man,
17Especially upon the prophecies of Zadokiah.
18Carneades of Cyrene who perpetuated the philosophy of Nihilism,
19And false skepticism of Pyrrhus,
20Did declare that all dogma and law is subject to change,
21For even justice must be considered relative and not absolute.
22Carneades of Cyrene then challenged even the reason of the Senators,
23For the law is whatever the Senate believes it to be,
24That the might of the sword is right,
25And the only truth can be measured by probability,
26For no one can prove Divine law with certainty.
27Upon such a speech the Senate was terrified,
28And forbid the teachings of Carneades in Rome.
29Thus Carneades became glorified by the pirates,
30And the moneylenders who believed in nothing.
31Next Critolaus of Pergamon,
32Declared that none of what Zadokiah said could be proven,
33Thus none of it could be true,
34For only facts gathered through induction,
35May be argued as true,
36And all other sayings be mere conjecture.
37Critolaus of Pergamon then showed the power of logic,
38And the artful use of dialectics whereby the same subject,
39May be proven as true or false,
40Or that a man may be found innocent or guilty,
41Through the skilled use of argument and mere words.
42The Senate was indignant that truth be so technical,
43As the art of word assembly without strength of rhetoric,
44And forbid the teachings of Critolaus to be used in law.
45Yet the skills of word play and dialectics soon became,
46The secret art of orators and lawyers of the Republic.
47Next Diogenes of Tarsus,
48Refuted the prophecies of Zadokiah,
49That the battle is not external,
50But internal as men are prone to good or evil,
51That the enemy is emotion and desire of pleasure.
52To overcome a man must yield to absolute self control,
53And perfect reason with nature and logic.
54The Senators were disturbed by such challenge,
55Yet permitted Diogenes to open a school,
56As such self discipline remained a Spartan tradition,
57Of the founding of Rome.
58Upon the failure to find the wisest philosopher,
59To replace the Great Prophet Zadokiah as Pontiff,
60The Senate called for the most honorable and pious men.
61Yet after four years of searching,
62The Senate could find no more honorable or honest,
63Or loyal or pious gens (house) than Cornelia.
64In the Great Age of the Ram,
65One thousand and fifty years,
66Since the dawn of the Great Age (150 BCE),
67The Senate appointed Publius Cornelius Scipio,
68Pontifex Maximus (Supreme Pontiff),
69And the first Nasci (Nazi) or Knight,
70And Protector of the honor of Rome.
71Thus for all its faults,
72The Senate of Rome through an act of inspiration,
73Deemed one good and humble and honorable man,
74To be more deserving than the wisest philosopher.

12

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2One thousand and forty eight years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (152 BCE),
4As more and more Plebians were losing land,
5And turning to banditry,
6Or being forced into becoming debt slaves,
7Gaius Marius Aquillius,
8Lord of Marmarica and Calabria,
9Sought permission from the Roman Senate,
10To confront the Carthaginians for compensation,
11As a means of employing the rebellious mercenaries.
12Yet the Senate remained unwilling to rekindle war with Carthage.
13Instead Gaius Marius Aquillius commissioned,
14Polybius the Liar and infamous creator of fiction,
15To create a vile history of Carthage and its depravities,
16That through such leaders as Marcus Porcius Cato,
17The propaganda might sway the mind of the Senate.
18In the Great Age of the Ram,
19One thousand and fifty one years,
20Since the dawn of the Great Age (149 BCE),
21Before Marcus Porcius Cato gave up the ghost,
22The fictions of Polybius the Liar,
23Succeeded in fermenting war,
24And Gaius Marius Aquillius was granted permission,
25To confront Carthage with a sizeable mercenary army.
26The Carthaginians led by the priests of Baal Hamon,
27Agreed for payment in slaves and gold,
28Yet Gaius Marius Aquillius demanded more.
29So when the Carthaginians refused,
30Gaius Marius Aquillius attacked and lay siege to the city,
31Causing the death of tens of thousands,
32Before the city surrendered within three years.
33In the Great Age of the Ram,
34One thousand and fifty four years,
35Since the dawn of the Great Age (146 BCE),
36Following defeat of Carthage,
37Gaius Marius Aquillius took more than fifty thousand,
38As slaves back to Marmarica,
39Before selling tens of thousands as slaves,
40To the Gracchi of Sicily,
41And the Pompeii and Samnites of Campania,
42Openly rebuking the laws of Rome,
43Against direct slavery.
44Gaius Marius Aquillius then declared,
45The old lands of Carthage,
46The Roman province of Africa.
47The head priest of Baal Hamon,
48Whose name was Sabaoth,
49Did flee the destruction of Carthage with his family,
50To the lands of the Nabatea,
51Where King Rabelas granted him sanctuary,
52And Sabaoth anointed him,
53The blessed of Baal,
54And rightful king.
55In the same year,
56Praetor Quintus Caecilius Metellus did defeat,
57Rebel leader whose name was Andriscus of Macedon.
58Rome then established the Province of Macedonia,
59Including Epirus, Thessaly, Paeonia, Thrace and south of Illyria.

13

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2One thousand and fifty nine years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (141 BCE),
4Pontifex Maximus Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasci,
5The Knight and Protector of Rome did give up the ghost.
6The Senate upon the influence of the moneylenders (bankers),
7Led by the corrupt Fulvius Flaccus,
8Did then elect a new Pontifex Maximus,
9Of poor character and leadership,
10Whose name was Pontifex Maximus Publius Mucius Scaevola.
11Publius Mucius Scaevola had no interest in confronting the Gracchi,
12Or Pompeia or Lord pirates of Marmarica,
13And the influx of tens of thousands of Carthaginian slaves,
14As some Senators themselves had come to accept the offer,
15Of strong slaves for their own estates.
16Yet the Plebian farmers continued to become indebted,
17And financial slaves to the wealthy families,
18And even the mercenaries had become endebted and slaves,
19For the lack of wars and cost of vices.
20In the Great Age of the Ram,
21One thousand and sixty five years,
22Since the dawn of the Great Age (135 BCE),
23A group of Plebians who had become debt slaves,
24To a wealthy merchant did rebel and kill the lord,
25Seizing the Natural fortress city Enna,
26At the center of Sicily.
27News quickly spread of the uprising,
28And within only a few weeks,
29The Gracchi and the wealthy land barons,
30Faced the loss of much of Sicily to rebellion.
31The leader of the rebellion called Eunus,
32Did declare himself a savior and that no man,
33Has the right to enslave another through debt.
34The tyrant Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus,
35Appealed for assistance from pirate Lord Gaius Marius Aquillius,
36Who declined on account of the rebellion spreading to Calabria.
37Nor did the Samnites of Campania assist.
38Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus in turn appealed to his brother,
39Gaius Sempronius Gracchus in Sardinia,
40Who advised him to urgently seek a settlement else,
41All would be lost.
42Thus tyrant Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus,
43Did declare that all Plebians that pledge allegiance to him,
44Would have their debts forgiven and lands restored,
45Yet those who continued to rebel would be offered no quarter.
46Upon news of the offer of Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus,
47The rebel army of Eunus split apart.
48A new army led by Publius Rupilius then declared loyalty to Gracchus.
49After two bitter and gruesome years of fighting,
50The rebel army of Eunus was defeated,
51And so Publius Rupilius and the loyal mercenaries,
52Gathered at Syracuse to have their reward confirmed.
53Yet upon the end of the rebellion,
54The tyrant Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus refused to honor his word,
55Saying that a promise to an infant or an animal,
56Has no importance if broken.
57Upon such perfidy Publius Rupilius and his best soldiers,
58Seized Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus and killed him,
59Parading the body through Syracuse.
60Upon news of the death of Gracchus,
61Gaius Marius Aquillius did launch against Publius Rupilius,
62Defeating him and his army,
63Within two years.
64Yet the pirate lord did not grant the Gracchi control,
65Over Sicily on account of their failed custody,
66And risk to all the plebian lords.
67Instead he appointed Marcus Antonius Orationus,
68As lord over Sicily,
69While granting Gaius Sempronius Gracchus keep,
70The personal estates in Sicily,
71As well as control over Sardinia.
72Gaius Sempronius Gracchus,
73Then proclaimed fealty and service,
74To the pirate lord and his successors.

14

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2One thousand and sixty seven years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (133 BCE),
4King Euergertes the Attalus of Pergamon,
5Did give up the ghost.
6Pirate King Gaius Marius Aquillius,
7Did then seize Pergamon and proclaim it a donation,
8To himself and the province of Asia.
9Yet Aristonicus the brother of Euergertes,
10Revolted against the pirate lord,
11And for five more years there was conflict,
12Until no more men were left willing to stand against evil.
13In the Great Age of the Ram,
14One thousand and eighteen years,
15Since the dawn of the Great Age (127 BCE),
16King Mithradiah of Parthia,
17Also known as Phraates,
18Did give up the ghost.
19His crown did then fall to his son,
20Epiphanes who then changed his name to Mithradiah II.
21Seizing upon the prophecies and condemnations of Zadokiah,
22Epiphanes declared that men have a good spirit and bad spirit,
23And that the wicked world will be destroyed,
24And the only salvation be through blood,
25And only those who purge themselves,
26And believe in him,
27Are free from a cycle of servitude and misery.
28Upon the message of a wrathful and jealous god,
29That demands blood sacrifice and atonement,
30The revival of the religion of Mithra under Mithradiah,
31Grew in followers and influence,
32Even to the west.

15

1Since the end of the rebellion in Sicily,
2The condition of the poor and landless plebians,
3Had only grown worse.
4Second generation bandits in Sicily,
5And Calabria and even northern Italy threatened travellers.
6Rome itself had become so awash with unemployed plebians,
7That even the most corrupt of Senators,
8Prayed for a leader with sufficient strength and character,
9Bemoaning that Rome had become the prisoner of a marauding mob,
10And it is they (plebians) not the Senate,
11That did control the destiny of Rome.
12In the Great Age of the Ram,
13One thousand and eighty six years,
14Since the dawn of the Great Age (114 BCE),
15Pontifex Maximus Publius Mucius Scaevola,
16The Nasci (Knight) and Protector of Rome,
17Did give up the ghost.
18The Senate then did overwhelmingly agree,
19To the appointment of Lucius Cornelius Sulla,
20The son of Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasci,
21As Pontifex Maximus and Nasci,
22As the Protector of Rome.
23Upon his appointment,
24Pontifex Maximus Lucius Cornelius Sulla,
25Implored the Senate to consider the root cause,
26For a people that surrender their currency,
27Surrender their energy,
28And willingly accept being slaves of moneylenders (bankers).
29That a nation divided where some citizens have all protection,
30Yet none of the burdens of obligations,
31Is a nation of law that cannot stand.
32For Rome permitted a parasite to rest in its heart,
33For the sake of survival of what was believed a dream,
34A dream that died the day the Senate agreed,
35To make mercenaries and moneylenders who have no loyalty,
36Or honor to Rome as citizens.
37Thus unless Rome cleanse its spirit of such corruption,
38And belief in nothing but pleasure and greed,
39Then not even the bravest of citizens can save the city.
40Upon the speech of Pontifex Maximus Lucius Cornelius Sulla,
41The Senate implored that he visit their traditional allies,
42Such as the Celt tribes of Germanica, Gaul, Batavi and Britannia,
43That they would support the Senate in what may become,
44A Civil War for the soul of Rome.
45Lucius Cornelius Sulla agreed and soon departed,
46Even with such knowledge already in the hands,
47Of the pirate lord and the moneylenders.
48In the Great Age of the Ram,
49One thousand and eighty six years,
50Since the dawn of the Great Age (114 BCE),
51King Rabelas the Great of the Nabateans,
52Beloved of Baal Hamon,
53Did give up the ghost.
54The crown of the Nabatea did then befall to his son,
55Whose name was Aretas.
56In the Great Age of the Ram,
57One thousand and eighty seven years,
58Since the dawn of the Great Age (113 BCE),
59Within a few months of the return,
60Of Pontifex Maximus Lucius Cornelius Sulla to Rome,
61A mass army of more than three hundred thousand,
62Germanic, Batavi (Dutch) and Scandanavian Celts,
63Did attack and defeat a pirate mercenary army,
64Of pirate lord Gaius Marius Aquillius,
65In the north of Illyricum,
66Forcing the pirates, bandits and moneylenders to flee.
67The mass army then moved westward and seized the Po River valley,
68Again forcing the pirates and merchants,
69To flee for their lives.
70Pirate lord Gaius Marius Aquillius,
71Protested to the Senate demanding such action cease,
72As he claimed it a violation of ancient Senate laws,
73And Rome risked its own annihilation.
74The Senate replied to the pirate lord,
75That no general had been given order to head this army,
76Nor did any Senate authorized General lead it now,
77And that as for Rome then the fiercest army,
78Of fifty thousand trained and decorated men,
79Under the command of Lucius Cornelius Sulla,
80Stood ready to defend the city to the last man.
81Thus the pirates and moneylenders did not attack Rome,
82As the Celts now through a second army,
83Did then invade the pirate controlled lands of Pergamon,
84Eliminating the mercenaries and declaring a new name,
85Called Galatia.

16

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2One thousand and ninety years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (110 BCE),
4The High Priest of Baal Hamon,
5The Spirit of the Nabateans,
6Whose name was Sabaoth,
7Did give up the ghost.
8The position of High Priest of Baal Hamon,
9Did befall to his son whose name was Seth.
10Upon becoming the new High Priest,
11The young Seth declared his father,
12To have been granted the position,
13As Lord of the Underworld and Lakes of Fire,
14And Lord of Hosts,
15And that whom who shall sacrifice their first fruits,
16Or worthy sacrifice to Sabaoth,
17Shall in the same manner to Baal be saved.
18Yet because all men are sinful,
19Those who do not repent and seek salvation,
20Shall be doomed to eternal torment,
21In the lakes of Fire of the Underworld.
22Thus was born the most perverse and insane,
23Religious cult in the history of humanity.
24In the Great Age of the Ram,
25One thousand and ninety four years,
26Since the dawn of the Great Age (106 BCE),
27Holly High King Connla Caem mac Irereo,
28Did give up the ghost.
29The throne of Amen-Ra did then befall to his son,
30Whose name was Ailill mac Connla.
31In the Great Age of the Ram,
32One thousand and ninety six years,
33Since the dawn of the Great Age (106 BCE),
34Zadokiah the twenty eighth great prophet of Yeb,
35The son of Elkaniah and the grandson of Eleziah,
36Did give up the ghost.
37The position then befell,
38To his son whose name was Barachiah,
39As the twenty ninth Great Prophet of the Yahudi.
40Thus upon the time that Zadokiah,
41Did give up the ghost,
42The ancient world was now dominated by three religions,
43All claiming that the Divine Creator would destroy the world one day,
44The first being Yahudism offering salvation through water,
45The second being Mithraism offering salvation through blood,
46The third being Baalism through offering salvation through fire (holocaust).

17

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2One thousand and ninety five years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (105 BCE),
4Lord Pirate Gaius Marius Aquillius of the Marmatines,
5Demanded the Senate approve him as consul,
6That he may defeat the Celts in northern Italy,
7And reclaim lands under his control.
8Yet the Senate rejected his demand.
9Gaius Marius Aquillius then demanded that all food,
10From Sicily and Gaul be halted,
11And all minerals from Spain and Sardinia be stopped.
12The Senate then appointed Lucius Cornelius Sulla,
13Caesar (Dictator) as well as Nasci (Knight),
14And Pontifex Maximus (Supreme Pontiff).
15The Gauls did then revolt against the pirates and money lenders,
16And a mass army of Celts did form,
17To move against Massalia (Marsailles),
18Gaius Marius Aquillius did then take control,
19Of his own mercenary army,
20At the battle north of Massalia (Marsailles),
21Yet his mercenaries were completely destroyed by the Gaul legions,
22Killing more than one hundred and twenty thousand,
23Near Arausio and the River Rhone.
24As the lord pirate was distracted in Gaul,
25Lucius Cornelius Sulla issued an edict,
26Henceforth banning all currency struck and minted,
27From any pirate city such as Naples or Rheggio,
28And that Currency shall henceforth be minted only in Rome.
29Furthermore that all valid currency was to be moulded,
30And never again shall pirates be allowed under any form of law,
31To claim control of the currency of any city,
32Or people that honor Rule of Law and Justice.
33Lucius Cornelius Sulla did issue a second edict,
34Abolishing the notion of Plebian citizenship,
35And that henceforth all moneylender and merchant families,
36All pirate and bandit families were forbidden to be known as citizens,
37Now and forever and to never hold any position of office,
38Or role or influence in the affairs of Rome,
39Nor hold any form of property according to Roman Law,
40Reinforcing the prohibition of slavery.
41Instead all cities and towns that declared allegiance to Rome,
42Would be honored as citizens and as municeps,
43Being citizens under the constitution of their city or community.
44Thus all the Celt cities and tribes,
45Were granted and recognized as municept citizens,
46And the pirates and bandits were citizens no more.
47Gnaeus Pompeius Strabo pledged himself and his family,
48To the cause of Rome and ceased any hostility,
49Whereas the pirate lord Gaius Marius Aquillius,
50Fled back to his homeland of Marmarica,
51Of Cyrene and the Pentopolis of pirate ports.
52Caesar Lucius Cornelius Sulla then appointed,
53Gaius Licinius Verres as Governor of Sicily,
54And Quintus Mucius Scaevola as Governor of Sardinia,
55And Decimus Junius Brutus Callaicus for Hispania Lusitania,
56And Publius Licinius Crassus as Governor of Hispania Ulterior.
57Whereupon, with the western provinces secured,
58And Italy and Sicily secured,
59Lucius Cornelius Sulla did resign his position as Caesar.
60In the Great Age of the Ram,
61One thousand and ninety seven years,
62Since the dawn of the Great Age (103 BCE),
63King Yehoniah of Asmonea (Hasmonea),
64The youngest son of Mattathiah,
65Did give up the ghost.
66The crown did then befall to his son,
67Whose name was Alexander,
68And then took the false name of Yanniah,
69In falsely claiming to be a Great Prophet.
70In the same year,
71Lucius Pompeius Philadelphus of Pontus,
72Declared Pontus an independent Samnite kingdom,
73And neutral towards Rome.

18

1Within ten years of restoring the currency to the people,
2And clearing all the lands except Campania of the pirates,
3And bandits and moneylenders (bankers),
4Prosperity had returned to the Roman Republic.
5Yet Gnaeus Pompeius Strabo and the Samnite merchants,
6Remained relentless liars and cowards and tricksters.
7King Philadelphus (Lucius Pompeius) of Pontus,
8Had since seized Cappodocia and Bithnyia into his kingdom,
9Growing in strength year by year.
10The Samnites in Campania had continued in secret treaty,
11With their former colony of Pontus,
12Now a major kingdom in its own right,
13And had hatched a plan,
14To secretly weaken and disrupt trade of Rome.
15Gnaeus Pompeius Strabo then convinced Marcus Livius Drusus,
16To attack the confidence and reliability of the new Roman molded coin,
17By circulating deliberate fake and inconsistent coins,
18Shipped to Campania from Pontus,
19Thus reducing the confidence of eastern and western merchants.
20Yet the plot of the Samnites was exposed,
21And the Senate issued an edict forbidding trade or commerce,
22With a Samnite or a Samaritans as none could be trusted,
23To possess any honor, good character or quality wares.
24In the Great Age of the Ram,
25Eleven hundred and eleven years,
26Since the dawn of the Great Age (89 BCE),
27King Philadelphus (Lucius Pompeius) of Pontus,
28Did invade the province of Asia,
29And then prepared to invade Macedonia.
30The Senate called upon Lucius Cornelius Sulla once more,
31Faced with such a growing threat,
32By appointing him Caesar for a second time.
33Lucius Cornelius Sulla as Caesar wasted no time,
34In amassing a great army and instead launched,
35A siege against Pergamun in the hope,
36That King Philadelphus (Lucius Pompeius) of Pontus,
37Would be forced into changing his plans,
38By which time a second army would arrive,
39And crush the Samnites (Samaritans).
40Yet as Lucius Valerius Flaccus was preparing to embark,
41With the second Roman Army,
42Gnaeus Pompeius Strabo of Campania,
43And his Samnite mercenary army attacked Rome itself,
44Killing the Praetorian Guard and overwhelming the city,
45Murdering every Senator and noble they could find,
46Then placing their heads on pikes,
47Before burning down the ancient Senate buildings,
48Known as the Curia Hospitala and Rostra,
49And all the ancient records and scrolls of laws of Rome.
50Yet the forces of Gnaeus Pompeius Strabo,
51Failed to penetrate the massive walls of the Vaticanus.
52Pirate Lord Gaius Marius Aquillius did also attack,
53Sicily and Calabria seizing the cities in the south,
54Seeking to regain what had been taken from him.
55The population of Rome was in a panic and many did flee east,
56To Anatolia in the hope of being saved by Sulla,
57As the Senate granted Sulla the power of absolute Caesar,
58And the greatest power ever conceived under Roman law.
59Faced with Rome burning and in ruins by the Samnite bandits,
60And the overwhelming forces of King Philadelphus (Lucius Pompeius) of Pontus,
61Sulla ordered Lucius Valerius Flaccus to restore order to Rome,
62At all cost and not to yet pursue Pompeius Strabo.

19

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eleven hundred and twelve years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (88 BCE),
4As Lucius Valerius Flaccus now held Rome secure,
5Caesar Lucius Cornelius Sulla positioned his army,
6Of forty thousand at Pessimus (Pessinus),
7On the upper reaches of the Sakarya River,
8As King Philadelphus (Lucius Pompeius) of Pontus,
9And King Mithradiah II of Parthia,
10Approached with their mercenary army of two hundred thousand.
11Yet the position and height of the city and its buildings,
12And the discipline of the men of Sulla,
13Overcame the forces of King Philadelphus,
14And King Mithradiah of Parthia,
15And by the end of a bloody battle,
16More than one hundred and fifty thousand mercenaries were killed,
17With few deaths to the men of Sulla.
18Caesar Lucius Cornelius Sulla then executed both kings,
19Abolishing Pontus and reconstituting the province of Asia,
20But permitting the son of King Mithradiah II,
21Whose name was Orodes and Mithradiah III,
22To continue as monarch of Parthia and vassal of Rome.
23Sulla and most of his army then departed and invaded Libya,
24Where every one of the pirate port cities was utterly destroyed,
25Especially the pirate capital of Cyrene.
26In the Great Age of the Ram,
27Eleven hundred and thirteen years,
28Since the dawn of the Great Age (87 BCE),
29Upon his return to Italy,
30And with the fiercest army of Romans,
31Ever conceived in history,
32Every major city of the Samnites of Campania,
33Was destroyed to its foundations,
34Including the city of Naples.
35Gnaeus Pompeius Strabo,
36The leader of the Samnites,
37Did give up the ghost.
38The leadership of the Samnites,
39Did befall to his son named Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus,
40Also known as Pompey the Great,
41Who escaped capture by fleeing to Spain.
42In the Great Age of the Ram,
43Eleven hundred and fourteen years,
44Since the dawn of the Great Age (86 BCE),
45Pirate Lord Gaius Marius Aquillius,
46Was finally cornered and defeated and killed.
47The defacto King of the Marmatines,
48Also known as the Marsi,
49Also known as the Men from Mars,
50Being the ancient Libyan pirates,
51Did befall to his son named,
52Gaius Marius Julius,
53Also known by the fraudulent title Julius the Caesar,
54Who ran away from capture,
55Also to Spain.

20

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eleven hundred and fifteen years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (85 BCE),
4Caesar Lucius Cornelius Sulla,
5Began the rebuilding of Rome,
6Destroyed by the Samnites and Pompeius Strabo,
7With the creation of the Comitium as a new Place of Assembly.
8The Pontifex Maximus Lucius Cornelius Sulla,
9Also commissioned the finest scholars to commence,
10A new Constitution for Rome,
11Where the rights of all men were to be enshrined,
12To never again permit the scourge of slavery,
13Or the immorality of the Samnites,
14Through their pornography and prostitution,
15Of all music and culture.
16From the Constitution the Caesar did order,
17That all law be codified,
18That the Senate may only pass laws that add to the body,
19Not to annex or deprive the body for the favor of a few.
20Thus all law was to enshrine the Rule of Law,
21And Golden Rule that none are above the law,
22Through Code and Statute.
23The highest law of Rome was to be,
24Known as Ius Divinum as the law of the Divine,
25And the highest of all law.
26The second highest law was to become,
27Known as Ius Curia as the power and authority of the Senate,
28To make laws under Divine Law.
29The third highest law was to become,
30Known as Ius Gentium as the law of all peoples,
31To guide the manner in which all people did act.
32The fourth highest law was to become,
33Known as Ius Civile as the law of all citizens.
34Thus under the Constitution of Rome,
35No rights (Ius) could be claimed,
36Unless such rights conformed to Law,
37And the Rule of Law else they be false.
38Pontifex Maximus Lucius Cornelius Sulla did also reform,
39The administration of provinces in the creation of new titles,
40Rector being the new governor of a province,
41And Censor being an official visitor and overseer of the Senate.
42In the same year,
43Holly High King Ailill mac Connla,
44The king of all priests and prophets,
45The king of all the Celts,
46Did give up the ghost.
47The throne of Amen-Ra did then befall to his son,
48Whose name was Labraid Lorc mac Ailill,
49Also known as Eterscel Mor and Cú-Las,
50Meaning the light of the Cuilliaéan.

21

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eleven hundred and sixteen years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (84 BCE),
4Caesar Lucius Cornelius Sulla,
5As Supreme Pontiff (Pontifex Maximus),
6And Nasci (Knight) and Protector of Rome,
7Did order his son Publius Cornelius Spartacus,
8To take the Ark of the Covenant,
9And return it to Leontopolis (Cairo) in Egypt,
10And for a permanent company of Praetorian,
11To thereafter guard the Great Prophet of Yeb,
12As the one true and only Pontifex Maximus of Rome,
13Whereupon Caesar Lucius Cornelius Sulla did decree,
14That never again shall the Senate as a secular body,
15Have the power to decree the will of heaven,
16In the appointment of the Supreme Pontiff,
17That such high office be the realm of the Great Prophet of Yeb,
18And their true successors and no other.
19Upon Barachiah receiving the great honor from Caesar,
20And the return of the Ark of Akhenaten,
21He did declare that the light of the Divine,
22Had returned to Rome,
23And that all who profess the beliefs of Essenoi (Essenes),
24Must likewise respect that the Divine did speak through Caesar,
25And all men and women must be considered equal under the law.
26In the Great Age of the Ram,
27Eleven hundred and twenty years,
28Since the dawn of the Great Age (80 BCE),
29Upon the dedication and opening of the Comitium,
30As a place of Assembly for the Senate of Rome,
31As a symbol of the equality of all men,
32Caesar Lucius Cornelius Sulla did resign his post,
33And did give the title of Nasci (Knight) and Protector of Rome,
34To his son Publius Cornelius Spartacus.
35Whereupon the greatest soldier and servant of Rome,
36Did spend his last moments of life in peace.
37In the Great Age of the Ram,
38Eleven hundred and twenty one years,
39Since the dawn of the Great Age (79 BCE),
40Lucius Cornelius Sulla did give up the ghost.

22

1Since the great purges of Sulla,
2Marcus Licinius Crassus the son of Publius Licinius Crassus,
3Had become the undisputed king of all Hispania (Spain),
4Ruling as the worst of tyrants through a massive mercenary army.
5Through the enslavement of the whole population,
6And the ravaging of all the lands for profit,
7Marcus Licinius Crassus had become one of the wealthiest men in the world,
8Rivaled only by the Holly Kings of Ireland and Kings of the Celts,
9Through their mines and trade.
10Both Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus and Gaius Marius Julius (the Caesar),
11Had received great patronage from Marcus Licinius Crassus,
12And in turn both had started to restore their family fortunes,
13With Gaius Marius Julius (the Caesar) rebuilding the pirate port of Cyrene,
14And Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus securing trade into Anatolia,
15And treaty with King Tigranes of the Armenian Empire.
16In the Great Age of the Ram,
17Eleven hundred and twenty seven years,
18Since the dawn of the Great Age (73 BCE),
19A mercenary army of thirty thousand,
20Funded by Marcus Licinius Crassus,
21And led by Gaius Claudius Glaber,
22Did land and invade the territory of Capua in Campania.
23The Senate did then hastily appoint Publius Cornelius Spartacus,
24Both Caesar in addition to being Nasci (Knight),
25And Protector of Rome.
26Sensing further forces and invasion, Caesar Publius Cornelius Spartacus,
27Dispatched a much smaller force,
28Under his cousin Publius Cornelius Varinius,
29To engage the mercenaries from Hispania.
30While the Romans sought to engage the Spanish mercenaries,
31A second invasion force of mercenaries then did land in Sicily,
32Led by Gaius Lucinius Verro,
33That quickly captured and conquered Sicily for the pirate merchants.
34A third invasion force did then attack and conquer Calabria,
35Under Quintus Marcius Rufus for the ancient Marmatines.
36Upon such overwhelming attack,
37Caesar Publius Cornelius Spartacus called to all Roman Citizens,
38To come to the aid of Rome against the pirate merchants,
39And corrupt moneylenders (bankers) funding such war.
40In the same year,
41A mercenary force of Marcus Licinius Lucullus,
42Did attack and invade and conquer,
43Crete and then the province of Macedonia for the pirate merchants.

23

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eleven hundred and twenty eight years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (72 BCE),
4King Crixus of the Allobrogi of southern Gaul did land at Ostia,
5And help reinforce the defense of Rome itself.
6To the north King Oenomaus (Orgetorix) of the Helvetii,
7Did cross the alps and into the Po River Valley,
8As a further mercenary invasion force under Gaius Cassius Longinus,
9Did land at the port city of Piso,
10And engage the Roman legions of the Helvetii,
11Killing King Oenomaus (Orgetorix) in battle.
12The remaining Helvetii legions did then head south,
13To help further reinforce the defense of Rome.
14Facing the inevitable encirclement of Rome,
15Caesar Publius Cornelius Spartacus ordered,
16The evacuation of the Senate and records,
17As well as young women and children,
18To be transported to sanctuary and safety,
19By the Allobrogi and Holly Celt ships,
20To Alexandria under Philadelphos the Ptolemy.
21In the Great Age of the Ram,
22Eleven hundred and twenty nine years,
23Since the dawn of the Great Age (71 BCE),
24Marcus Licinius Crassus accompanied by Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus,
25Did land with another force of mercenary pirates and bandits,
26Near the port of Ostia to complete the siege of Rome,
27And personally command its capture.
28Gaius Marius Julius also falsely known as Caesar,
29Did not accompany his allies,
30But remained in command of Hispania,
31As his true skill never existed in war,
32But the administration of banking and slaves.
33Caesar Publius Cornelius Spartacus,
34And the remaining Praetorian Guard,
35With the Allobrogi and Helvetii and surviving legions,
36Had prepared their defenses as best they could,
37As Marcus Licinius Crassus unleashed wave after wave,
38Of African mercenaries to their death.
39In the Great Age of the Ram,
40Eleven hundred and thirty years,
41Since the dawn of the Great Age (70 BCE),
42After wave after wave,
43Of mercenary bandits had fallen to their swords,
44After the numbers of brave defenders of Rome,
45Had fallen to less than twelve thousand,
46Caesar Publius Cornelius Spartacus,
47Called out one last time,
48To the surviving Praetorian and Patrician,
49To the bloodied Celt and Roman heroes,
50That a fate worse than death be,
51In the hands of the pirate merchants and moneylenders (bankers),
52Who thrive upon the misery and enslavement of others.
53Better then to die an honorable death,
54For all good men be immortal,
55And to live another life than to suffer the tortures,
56Of deranged men who believe in nothing.
57Thus upon the next wave of attack,
58The defenders cut down as many of the enemy,
59Before taking their own lives,
60And depriving Marcus Licinius Crassus,
61Of a single living prisoner,
62And claiming any honor in victory.
63Marcus Licinius Crassus then ordered,
64The burning and destruction of the Comitium,
65The burning of all records,
66And the looting of all temples.
67Before long Rome was in flames.
68Pirate king Marcus Licinius Crassus then ordered,
69His bandit army to hang the bodies of the defenders,
70Upon crosses from Rome to Capua,
71As a perverse and absurdly gruesome curse,
72Against the courage and strength of the defenders.
73Satisfied with his evil,
74Marcus Licinius Crassus then returned to Hispania (Spain),
75After placing Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus in command,
76Of the ruins of Rome and its ghosts.

24

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eleven hundred and thirty one years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (69 BCE),
4Marcus Licinius Crassus extended his empire,
5Into Anatolia and northern Syria,
6When King Tigranes of Armenia was defeated,
7By a mercenary army led by Lucius Licinius Lucullus.
8In the same year,
9Gaius Marius Julius the false Caesar,
10Failed to capture the south of Gaul,
11With his mercenary army of bandits and thieves,
12Against a superior army of Roman legions,
13Led by King Ariovistus of the Suebi,
14United with Averni and Sequani.
15So frustrated was Gaius Marius Julius,
16At the lack of discipline of the bandits,
17That he ordered all but one in ten,
18To be spared from brutal execution,
19To then form a new disciplined army.
20In the Great Age of the Ram,
21Eleven hundred and thirty two years,
22Since the dawn of the Great Age (68 BCE),
23At sixteen years of age,
24Cú-Roi(n) the son of Holly King Labraid Lorc mac Ailill,
25Did request the permission of his father,
26To leave the sacred isle,
27And to travel to Egypt and Alexandria.
28King Holly King Labraid Lorc mac Ailill,
29Also known as Cú-Las (Light of the Cuilliaéan),
30Did declined his request,
31For no King nor crown prince of the Holly,
32Had left the sacred Isle,
33For hundreds of years.
34In the Great Age of the Ram,
35Eleven hundred and thirty three years,
36Since the dawn of the Great Age (67 BCE),
37Cú-Roi(n) again requested the permission of his father,
38To leave the sacred isle.
39King Cú-Las initially declined again,
40Saying his son had not yet married,
41Nor did he have an heir,
42But relented allowing the young prince,
43To travel to the west territory,
44Of the Dumnonii and Durotriges,
45To see the mines and property of the Holly.
46There Cú-Roi(n) did spend one year,
47And then returned to the Old King.
48In the same year,
49Queen Salome of Asmonea (Hasmonea),
50The last of the undisputed Hasmonean,
51Did give up the ghost.
52A supremely evil and wicked dynasty had they been,
53For countless people sacrificed and burned,
54In demonic rituals to ancient gods,
55With orgies of wine and depravity.
56At her death Civil War did erupt in Asmonea (Hasmonea),
57As Hyrcanus sought support,
58From Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus,
59And his brother Aristobulus,
60Sought the support of the Nabatea.
61In the same year,
62King Mithradiah III of Parthia,
63Also known as Orodes,
64Did give up the ghost.
65His crown did then fall to his son,
66Sanatruces who then changed his name to Mithradiah IV.

25

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eleven hundred and thirty four years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (66 BCE),
4King Aretas of the Nabatea,
5Beloved of Baal Hanan,
6Did give up the ghost.
7The crown of the Nabatea did then befall to his son,
8Whose name was Herodas,
9Also known as Herod the Great.
10In the same year,
11Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus witnessed the first fruits,
12Of his commission to Marcus Tullius Cicero,
13To present a new set of laws for Rome,
14Through the completely fraudulent works,
15Known as De Re Publica on the Republic,
16And De Legibus on the law.
17The the scribe of lies known as Cicero,
18Paid so handsomely for his fraud,
19That he became one of the wealthiest men,
20Did weave even a new form of mythos,
21As to the kingship of Rome,
22That no longer the role of king,
23Be an abomination to the laws of Rome,
24But that Rex Romanum be the highest law.
25Thus Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus declared himself,
26Rex Romanum and King of Rome,
27And all citizens be subject to his rule.
28In the same year,
29Holly High Prince and Priest,
30Whose name was Cú-Roi(n),
31Also known as Conaire Mor,
32Did again request the permission of his father,
33The Holly High King of Ireland and King of al Celts,
34That he be granted leave to travel to Egypt,
35And to the ancient lands of their bloodlines.
36But the old King Cú-Las refused again.
37Whereupon Cú-Roi(n) pledged,
38That if he did marry and leave an heir,
39He be permitted to travel as his heart so yearned.
40Upon such pledge the King agreed,
41And Cú-Roi(n) did soon marry,
42And before the end of a year he did have an heir.
43But before leaving on his journey,
44The Holly High King Cú-Las,
45Did call upon his son to swear a Sacred High Oath,
46To return within four years to sacred soil,
47And no more speak of travel.
48Upon giving such sacred oath,
49Cú-Roi(n) did then leave Ireland,
50As Ha Rama Theo (High Divine Highness),
51A Messiah prince of the House of Yahudah.
52In Alexandria Cú-Roi(n) was introduced to the great wonders,
53And the museum and library of Alexandria,
54By the respected philosopher Eudorus,
55The senior student of the head librarian,
56Whose name was Andronicus the great.
57Cú-Roi(n) spent many weeks at the library and the city,
58Meeting travelers from around the world,
59Including the exiled senators and leaders of Rome,
60Who petitioned him to call upon his father,
61To rally a mighty Celtic army and end the reign of evil.
62Next Cú-Roi(n) travelled south unto Leontopolis (Cairo),
63Where he was welcomed by Barachiah and the other priests,
64Including the strong willed and opinionated Zachariah,
65And where he saw for the first time,
66The Ark of his blood ancestor Pharaoh Akhenaten.
67Weeks turned into months as Cú-Roi(n) shared his knowledge,
68And listened to the Great Prophet Barachiah,
69Who himself was humbled by the extraordinary knowledge,
70And skill possessed by Cú-Roi(n) and for which he was unaffected,
71As priests such as Zachariah became more and more jealous,
72Of the time that Barachiah bestowed to their visitor.
73Within two years of coming to Leontopolis,
74The Holly High King of Ireland sent word to his son,
75That his grandson and the son of Cú-Roi(n) had died,
76And that stricken with grief and woe,
77His wife had ended her own life.
78Yet Cú-Roi(n) did not leave Egypt and instead travelled south,
79To the most ancient temples of Thebes and Karnak,
80Where he was received and welcomed not only as a great prophet,
81But a true pharaoh in blood and knowledge of hieroglyph.
82Upon his return to Leontopolis (Cairo),
83Cú-Roi(n) did wed the granddaughter of Zadokiah,
84Whose name was Esa,
85But honored as Luacháil,
86Whereupon Barachiah did challenge Cú-Roi(n),
87To consider his own prophetic abilities,
88And what he consider to be his purpose,
89For the ultimate destiny of the Cuilliaéan,
90May rest less in blood than the actions,
91Of one good priest who cares for the world,
92And be willing to fulfil their intended Divine Commission.

26

1Upon news of Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus,
2Declaring himself Rex Romanum,
3And king of all Romans
4Marcus Licinius Crassus was enraged.
5Yet under the fraudulent writings of Marcus Tullius Cicero,
6And the reforms of merchant slavery,
7Men had begun flocking to Italy,
8On promises of free land and a new world order,
9Of pleasure and liberty and an end to old morality,
10Of a new age of free science and thought,
11Where men could create their own history and own stories.
12Thus Rome under Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus,
13Had become the new Athens and a centre of new thought,
14Which abandoned the old and sought to form its own truths,
15Yet still based upon the philosophy of pirate merchants,
16That everything has a price and the law is whatever is convenient.
17Marcus Licinius Crassus was forced then to prepare carefully,
18With his best legions from northern Spain,
19On a course of action to confront Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus.
20In the Great Age of the Ram,
21Eleven hundred and thirty six years,
22Since the dawn of the Great Age (64 BCE),
23Before embarking with his legions,
24Marcus Licinius Crassus made known across his empire,
25That Gaius Marius Julius,
26Also falsely known as Caesar Gaius Julius,
27Was to be his sole lawful heir and successor.
28Yet such an act did nothing to distract Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus.
29Instead upon the news of the coming invasion of Marcus Licinius Crassus,
30He sent word that all men who stand for liberty and equality,
31All men who seek justice and happiness,
32Shall be forgiven their debts and granted promised land,
33If they rebel against the yoke of the tyrant Crassus.
34Thus upon landing in Italy Crassus faced an immediate revolt,
35Of his own generals and army and was seized and killed,
36With his head presented to Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus.
37True to his word the King of Rome,
38Did forgive the debts and grant land,
39On condition that the commanders seize control,
40Of the former lands of Crassus to the east.
41The powerful governor of Sicily,
42Whose name was Gaius Lucinius Verro,
43Was seized and arrested and brought to Rome,
44Where Cicero chose to conduct the prosecution.
45In the Great Age of the Ram,
46Eleven hundred and thirty seven years,
47Since the dawn of the Great Age (63 BCE),
48The new legions of Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus,
49Did seize Macedonia and Crete from Marcus Licinius Lucullus,
50Before capturing Anatolia from Lucius Licinius Lucullus,
51And renaming it again the province of Pontus,
52With Macedonia and Crete and Pontus granted,
53To the control of Gnaeus Pompeius Iunior,
54The eldest son of the King of Rome.
55The forces of Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus,
56Then moved south and defeated Hyrcanus of Asmonea (Hasmonea),
57As Aristobulos and his court,
58Did then escape to the South of Arabia,
59And conquer the key cities of the Sabeans,
60Forming the Kingdom of the Himyarite.
61Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus then did form a treaty,
62With King Herodas of the Nabateans,
63Also known as Herod the Great,
64To control all the trade from east Africa and Arabia,
65By granting him control of Palestine,
66And the gulf of Aden,
67While Syria and Lebanon was renamed,
68The great province of Samaria,
69Under the control of the youngest son of Pompey,
70Whose name was Sextus Pompeius Magnus.

27

1Upon news of Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus
2Declaring himself Rex Romanum,
3And the death of Marcus Licinius Crassus,
4Gaius Marius Julius falsely known as Caesar,
5Did face great rebellion in Hispania.
6It was this moment more than any other,
7That transformed the administrator into a leader,
8As Gaius Marius Julius chose to execute his generals,
9And permit the men to elect leaders they trusted,
10And honor the legions with better pay,
11Than the brutality that had existed under Crassus.
12Thus the legions of Hispania came to pledge,
13Absolute allegiance to Gaius Marius Julius,
14And rule was restored.
15In the Great Age of the Ram,
16Eleven hundred and thirty nine years,
17Since the dawn of the Great Age (61 BCE),
18Pontifex Maximus Barachiah,
19The Great Prophet of Yeb,
20Did summons all the priests of Leontopolis,
21Where he did call upon Prince Cú-Roi(n),
22Also known as Conaire Mor,
23The Ha Rama Theo (His Divine Highness) of the Holly,
24To come forward.
25There in Egypt the Great Prophet Barachiah,
26Did officially adopt Cú-Roi(n) as his only son,
27And heir and successor as Pontifex Maximus,
28And the next Great Prophet of Yeb,
29Naming him Adoniah meaning the Lord and Savior,
30And the Messiah of all the World.
31There was great celebration except for Zachariah,
32Who protested that he and not Cú-Roi(n),
33Deserved to be named the next Great Prophet.
34In the Great Age of the Ram,
35Eleven hundred and forty one years,
36Since the dawn of the Great Age (59 BCE),
37Barachiah the twenty ninth great prophet of Yeb,
38The son of Zadokiah and the grandson of Elkaniah,
39Did give up the ghost.
40The position then befell,
41To his adopted son whose name was Adoniah,
42Also known as Cú-Roi(n),
43And the Holly crown priest-prince of Ireland,
44As the thirtieth Great Prophet of the Yahudi.
45Enraged at Adoniah becoming the new Great Prophet,
46Zachariah did leave for Jerusalem,
47And seek an audience with Seth,
48The High Priest of Baal Hamon and then to Herodas at Aqaba,
49Where he promised to deliver the Ark of the Covenant to Jerusalem,
50If both the priests of Baal Hamon,
51And the Nabateans recognize him alone,
52As the true Great Prophet of Yeb.
53The priests of Baal and the Nabateans agreed,
54And soon after Zachariah and his rebel priests,
55Departed Leontopolis with the Ark of the Covenant,
56To be greeted by a force of Nabateans,
57Who then escorted the Ark back to Jerusalem.
58Adoniah declined the request for his elite Praetorian,
59To recover the Ark and punish Zachariah,
60Saying that the Divine Creator has chosen its return,
61To its ancient resting place after more than a thousand years,
62For some greater purpose yet to be revealed.
63At Jerusalem Herodas then declared he would build,
64The Greatest Temple in all the World,
65To the greater glory of Baal Hamon as Moloch,
66And to honor the presence of the Ark.
67Herodas envisioned a mighty temple more than 110 ft high,
68And 1600 ft wide and 900 ft wide.
69Yet it was not to be.
70After 46 years the project was finished,
71Just eight years before his death (12 BCE).
72For Zachariah a new community and settlement was constructed,
73At a site called Qumran near the Dead Sea,
74Protected by Nabatean guard,
75Yet close enough to walk to Jerusalem.

28

1Upon news of the Ark of the Covenant returning to Jerusalem,
2The younger son of the King of Rome,
3Whose name was Sextus Pompeius did demand that Herodas,
4Bring the Ark to him at Damascus for his pleasure.
5Yet the Nabateans and priests of Baal refused,
6Reminding the son of Pompey,
7That it had been bestowed to Jerusalem as its home.
8Sextus Pompeius Magnus then ordered his legions,
9To seize the Ark and bring it to Damascus,
10And for all the priests of Baal to be executed,
11And their temples destroyed.
12Immediately there was revolt throughout Syria,
13Upon the desecration of the ancient temples,
14As more than two hundred thousand Nabatean warriors,
15Faced against the legions of Sextus Pompeius,
16Until Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus called for truce,
17And an uneasy peace was restored to Samaria (Syria).
18Gaius Marius Julius falsely known as Caesar,
19Did hear of the desecration of the most ancient temples,
20And the murdering of priests,
21And so did send a secret emissary to Palestine,
22Where he did pledge allegiance to the priests of Baal,
23If they would aid him in times to come,
24Against the nihilism of the Samnite moneylenders (bankers).
25Gaius Marius Julius did then reconstitute the pledges,
26Of his legions to Baal and Mithra,
27Replacing their standards with the standard of the bull,
28That no longer was his army an army of mercenaries,
29But a religious army embarking upon a crusade,
30To rid the world of the immorality and false worship.
31In the Great Age of the Ram,
32Eleven hundred and forty two years,
33Since the dawn of the Great Age (58 BCE),
34Gaius Marius Julius,
35Also falsely known as Caesar Gaius Julius,
36And his armies marching for Baal and Mithra,
37Did defeat the Allobrogi of southern Gaul,
38Before defeating a mass army,
39Of the Suebi near the Rhine.
40Yet instead of permitting the killing of prisoners,
41Or the looting of lands or raping of women,
42Gaius Marius Julius offered to appoint the senior officers,
43Of the former enemy to the ranks of his generals,
44If they pledge allegiance and discipline,
45In the religious war.
46Thus tens of thousands of Celts did join with Gaius Marius Julius,
47And soon Gaul was almost within his control.
48In the same year,
49Pontifex Maximus Adoniah,
50Also known as Cú-Roi(n),
51The Ha Rama Theo (Divine Highness) of Ireland,
52Did return to the sacred isles with his elite Praetorian Guard,
53To the land of the Dumnonii,
54Where the Constantine (Custenin),
55As Chief Steward over the lands for the Holly,
56Did agree to help build him a new fortress,
57And sacred temple at Glastonbury,
58As the Praetorian prepared the Holly legions,
59For defense against the pirates and moneylenders.
60There the Great Prophet did reside,
61For upon breaking his word to the Holly High King,
62He could not yet return to Tara.

29

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eleven hundred and forty four years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (56 BCE),
4Holly High King Labraid Lorc mac Ailill,
5Also known as Cú-Las (Light of the Cuilliaéan),
6The king of all priests and prophets,
7And blood descendant of the priests of Ebla,
8And blood descendant of the priests of Ur,
9And blood descendant of the priest-kings of the Hyksos,
10And blood descendant of the priests of Ugarit,
11And the founding bloodlines of the prophets of Yeb,
12And the only true blood descendant of King Da’vid,
13Did give up the ghost.
14The throne of Amen-Ra did then befall to his son,
15Whose name was Eterscel Mor,
16Also known as Cú-Roi(n),
17Also known as Adoniah the Pontifex Maximus,
18And the Thirtieth Great Prophet of Yeb.
19Cú-Roi(n) did then finally return to Tara,
20With his company of elite Praetorian,
21To be crowned the Holly High King,
22And King of kings of all the Celts.
23In the same year,
24Upon Gaius Marius Julius completing his conquest,
25And alliances of the whole of Gaul,
26Gaius Marius Julius did come to Tara,
27In the winter months,
28Under the flag of hospita and truce,
29To meet the great Druid High King,
30And Great Prophet and Pontifex Maximus Adoniah.
31Into the Great Hall of Tara,
32Gaius Marius Julius (later the Caesar) did go,
33Unto Cú-Roi(n) seated upon the most ancient throne,
34Of Amen-Ra and the Hyksos kings.
35Cú-Roi(n) as Adoniah did speak first as was custom,
36To ask of the purpose of such a strange visit,
37Gaius Marius Julius did reply that as Adoniah had become,
38The most famous of all priests and kings in the world,
39As not only the Holly High King but the Great Prophet of Yeb,
40He did come to seek counsel and seek amicable terms,
41To prevent any further war between the Men from Mars,
42And the honorable tribes of the Celts.
43Adoniah replied that history did teach,
44No house founded on evil did last beyond five generations,
45Before becoming consumed by its own madness.
46Thus all men must be afforded the presumption of virtue and character,
47Even the descendants of Pyrrhus,
48And so he did grant the general a prophetic reading.
49Gaius Marius Julius did declare,
50That it be his solemn and sacred mission,
51To end the nihilism of the Pompey,
52And those that discard the lessons of history,
53To indulge themselves in their own pleasures and intellect.
54Gaius Marius Julius did then implore,
55To gain the trust of all Roman citizens,
56He must be seen as more than a general,
57And a priest of good character.
58Adoniah then replied that it was not for himself to grant,
59Gaius Marius Julius the title of Pontifex Maximus,
60But the surviving senate residing in exile in Alexandria.
61Gaius Marius Julius did then warn the Holly High King,
62To consider carefully his choices for if Britannia was taken,
63Such titles may also fall with Tara,
64To which Adoniah did bid Gaius Marius Julius safe journey,
65And that if he travel to the sacred valley of the Boyne,
66There he shall receive the greatest of all revelations,
67From the most revered seer of the Holly,
68Her name being Bandraoi,
69Which simply means the witch.
70Gaius Marius Julius and his guard,
71Did then travel to the sacred valley of the Boyne,
72Where he did meet the Bandraoi,
73Who did then speak as was custom in prophetic riddle,
74That unto you (Gaius Marius Julius) a treasure come,
75Flesh and sword Unite. Glory be your destiny,
76Not King but God, Upon the mide of Mars.
77Gaius Marius Julius then departed the sacred Isle,
78Unto Gaul where he cursed the stubbornness of the the Cuilliaéan,
79Where he ordered Marcus Antonius to make haste to Alexandria,
80And seek if terms be made with the Senate,
81While invasion plans be prepared first for Britannia (Britain).
82In the Great Age of the Ram,
83Eleven hundred and forty six years,
84Since the dawn of the Great Age (54 BCE),
85The first invasion of Gaius Marius Julius (later the Caesar),
86Into Britanni was a terrible failure,
87With high cost and little gained.
88An attempt for the second year was equally as pyrrhic,
89Even with five legions of Gaius Marius Julius seeking to hold,
90Just south and east Britain.
91In the same year,
92After much costs and pain,
93Gaius Marius Julius (later the Caesar),
94Did withdraw every last Roman Soldier,
95From Britain to Gaul.
96In the Great Age of the Ram,
97Eleven hundred and forty eight years,
98Since the dawn of the Great Age (52 BCE),
99The High Priest of Baal Hamon,
100And his Lord of Hosts named Sabaoth,
101The Spirit of the Nabateans,
102Whose name was Seth,
103Did give up the ghost.
104The position of High Priest of Baal Hamon,
105Did befall to his son whose name was Anath,
106Later written as Annas the elder,
107And even Ananias.

30

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eleven hundred and fifty years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (50 BCE),
4Gaius Marius Julius summonsed Marcus Antonius,
5To return from Alexandria and give word,
6If the Senate had agreed to his demands,
7To be made both Caesar and Pontifex Maximus,
8Before his invasion of Italy.
9Marcus Antonius protested that had used all his skill,
10To force the Roman senate in exile to grant such demands,
11Yet had fallen under the spell of Queen Cleopatra.
12In the Great Age of the Ram,
13Eleven hundred and fifty one years,
14Since the dawn of the Great Age (49 BCE),
15Gaius Marius Julius chose to proclaim himself Caesar,
16And proceeded to invade Italy from the north,
17Warning in advance that any soldier who did not pledge allegiance,
18To the greater glory of Rome under Mithra,
19Would be brutally executed including their family.
20Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus remained supremely confident,
21That with more than twenty legions of mercenaries,
22He could defend against any attack from Gaius Marius Julius.
23Yet upon word of the claim that Gaius Marius Julius,
24Had been made Caesar and the ferocity of his troops,
25Many of the mercenaries were unwilling to fight,
26So that the defense of Italy quickly crumbled,
27And within just twenty eight days,
28Gaius Marius Julius was upon the outskirts of Rome.
29In panic Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus and his court escaped,
30To Macedonia and the court of his eldest son,
31Whose name was Gnaeus Pompeius Iunior.
32Upon entering Rome Gaius Marius Julius ordered,
33That the lives of Catallus and Cicero and his students be spared.
34He then summonsed the greatest writers and flatterers,
35From the previous court of the Pompey,
36And presented them a new commission,
37That their lives be spared if they re-write the history of Rome,
38That the Men of Mars be of noble Patrician blood,
39And that Cicero make Gaius Marius Julius,
40The greatest of heroes and messiahs.
41Cicero and the scribes set about building the mythos,
42Of Gaius Marius Julius the false Caesar,
43Declaring the day of his birth on December 25th,
44The Christmas as a sacred celebration of the savior,
45And liberator of Rome.
46Cicero declared in his work known as Evangelium Marci,
47Known as the Gospel of Mark,
48That Gaius Marius Julius was born of the virgin goddess Venus,
49And that the gods granted him the power to forgive transgressions,
50And that a great comet heralded his birth.
51In the Great Age of the Ram,
52Eleven hundred and fifty two years,
53Since the dawn of the Great Age (48 BCE),
54Having secured Rome and Italy,
55And having granted permission for Marcus Antonius,
56To return to Alexandria and call upon the Senate to return to Rome,
57Gaius Marius Julius invaded Macedonia,
58To confront the mercenary forces of Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus.
59At Pharsalos in southern Thessaly the two armies met,
60With the forces of Gaius Marius Julius less than twenty thousand,
61And the mercenary forces of the Pompey more than eighty thousand.
62Yet despite the numerical superiority it was Gaius Marius Julius,
63Who was victorious and the army of Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus,
64Was utterly destroyed with tens of thousands killed.
65Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus once again deserted his men,
66And did travel to Alexandria to the court of Queen Cleopatra,
67Unbeknownst of the relation between Cleopatra and Mark Antony,
68To seek sanctuary and offer his vast fortune,
69Against Gaius Marius Julius.
70Cleopatra called upon Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus to bring the treasure,
71To Alexandria to be held safely at the great temples for safe keeping,
72Which Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus agreed.
73Yet once the treasure had arrived,
74Queen Cleopatra handed Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus,
75To her lover and new husband Mark Antony,
76Who then executed Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus,
77And sent the head of his former enemy,
78And a small part of the fortune to Gaius Marius Julius.
79In the Great Age of the Ram,
80Eleven hundred and fifty three years,
81Since the dawn of the Great Age (47 BCE),
82The legions of Gaius Marius Julius,
83Led by Marcus Junius Brutus and Gaius Cassius Longinus,
84Did defeat Gnaeus Pompeius Iunior of Pontus,
85Thus reclaiming Anatolia as the Province of Asia.
86Upon news of the death of his brother,
87Sextus Pompeius Magnus escaped from Samaria,
88With his army and took Syracuse and central Sicily.
89Gaius Marius Julius then did go to Baalbek,
90And the most ancient Temple of Solomon,
91Where the High Priest of Baal Hamon,
92Whose name was Anath,
93Also known as Ananias did proclaim him Rex Sacrorum,
94And the living personification of Mithra,
95As Savior for the world.
96In Palestine Gaius Marius Julius did renew his treaty,
97With Herodas and the Nabatean warriors.
98Gaius Marius Julius who falsely claimed himself as Caesar,
99Then demanded that Marcus Antonius execute the Senate in exile,
100For their refusal to pledge allegiance.

31

1In the Great Age of the Ram,
2Eleven hundred and fifty three years,
3Since the dawn of the Great Age (47 BCE),
4The Senate in exile led by Lucius Cornelius Balbus did declare,
5Marcus Antonius as the true Caesar and Nasci (Knight).
6Enraged at the slight Gaius Marius Julius did attack Alexandria,
7As Herodas did attack from the west and south.
8Yet the city held and the fleet of Gaius Marius Julius was destroyed.
9In retribution Gaius Marius Julius ordered a fire attack,
10Against the city and to destroy it completely,
11As the most barbaric act of piracy yet seen against Alexandria.
12Part of the Great Library was lost to the madmen of Mars.
13Yet Gaius Marius Julius was forced to abandon his siege,
14Upon growing illness and poor health,
15And did return to Rome,
16Where he proclaimed the old Senate invalid,
17And proceeded to appoint his most loyal generals and followers,
18As a new Senate to meet at the Vulcanal Temple to Vulcan,
19Led by Marcus Junius Brutus and Gaius Cassius Longinus,
20And Marcus Aemilius Lepidus from Leptis Major of Africa.
21In the Great Age of the Ram,
22Eleven hundred and fifty six years,
23Since the dawn of the Great Age (44 BCE),
24As Gaius Marius Julius was now gravely ill,
25He summonsed his two consuls,
26Being Marcus Junius Brutus and Gaius Cassius Longinus,
27And demanded that they swear no one claim themselves Caesar,
28And to hunt down and kill Marcus Antonius,
29For never again shall anyone be permitted to proclaim themselves,
30King or Caesar of Rome after his death.
31Gaius Marius Julius then demanded his most loyal generals,
32Prepare a symbolic sacrifice upon the Ides of March (Mars),
33And the Day of Blood as the birthday of Mithra,
34Whereby Gaius Marius Julius would sacrifice his blood to Rome,
35To become its Holy Ghost and perpetual protector as a god,
36To watch over the Senate and the people of Rome.
37Thus upon March the 14th and the Ides of March,
38Gaius Marius Julius was given a strong sedative,
39Before his loyal and devoted followers as the false Senate,
40Did stab Gaius Marius Julius to death,
41Except Marcus Junius Brutus who could not bring himself,
42To strike at the false Caesar even as he implored him.
43Thus was born the mythos of the Messiah of Rome,
44And the fraud of Gaius Marius Julius the Caesar.

32

1Following the elaborate suicide of Gaius Marius Julius,
2Marcus Antonius and the true Senate,
3Sought a truce and alliance with the warlord of Leptis Magna,
4Named Marcus Aemilius Lepidus,
5And Marcus Junius Brutus and Gaius Cassius Longinus.
6Yet no sooner had the funeral ceremony of Gaius Marius Julius,
7Finished when Marcus Tullius Cicero declare himself,
8Executor of the testament and wishes of Julius the false Caesar,
9And falsely proclaimed the warlord of Calabria whose name was Octavius,
10To have been adopted by Julius before his death,
11And thus possessed the Imperator of Julius Caesar,
12And the persona of Emperor.
13Marcus Junius Brutus and Gaius Cassius Longinus did then seize,
14Marcus Tullius Cicero and have him brutally executed,
15As an enemy of the state before securing a solemn oath from Octavius,
16That he repudiate the claims of the dead Cicero.
17Marcus Junius Brutus then moved to Macedonia and Asia,
18To confront Marcus Antonius.
19In the Great Age of the Ram,
20Eleven hundred and fifty seven years,
21Since the dawn of the Great Age (43 BCE),
22As Gaius Cassius Longinus was engaged with Marcus Aemilius Lepidus,
23Against Sextus Pompeius Magnus in Sicily,
24Assassins for Gaius Marius Octavius did kill Gaius Cassius Longinus,
25Before Marcus Aemilius Lepidus pledged loyalty to Octavius.
26Sextus Pompeius Magnus did then escape to Ionia,
27Where he was killed by the forces of Marcus Junius Brutus.
28In the Great Age of the Ram,
29Eleven hundred and fifty eight years,
30Since the dawn of the Great Age (42 BCE),
31Gaius Marius Octavius and Marcus Aemilius Lepidus,
32Did face against Marcus Junius Brutus,
33Who was defeated and committed suicide.
34As the forces of the deceased Gaius Marcus Julius,
35Continued to fight themselves,
36Marcus Antonius successfully invaded Palestine and Syria,
37Forcing Herodas to briefly retreat to Arabia.
38The disciples of the dead Cicero,
39Supported by Quintus Horatius Flaccus and Publius Vergilius Maro,
40Did petition Octavius and the ancient pirate families,
41That a new world order be formed known as the Ordo sacrorum arcana,
42Into which the powerful and wealthy be invited,
43As well as the most intelligent and talented of society,
44To break the endless cycle of blood and war,
45Where merchant families and moneylenders (bankers) are destroyed.
46For history did reveal that men would fight to the death,
47To free themselves from the bonds of slavery,
48Yet given the right for personal wealth,
49Even the oldest of races would sign themselves into servitude.
50Thus Octavius and the merchant elite agreed to form a new world,
51Where men would be given the appearance of freedom,
52Where money would become the new god and religion,
53And ancient ties of trust and good faith be broken,
54For the worship of power and fame and wealth,
55Yet forever guided by the illusion of liberty,
56In the hands of the best and brightest,
57To forever protect the interests of the merchants,
58As a new class as the men of the horse (equestrians).
59At the same time Marcus Antonius,
60Chose a fateful and failed attempt to invade Parthia,
61That he did lose much of the land he had captured.
62In the Great Age of the Ram,
63Eleven hundred and sixty nine years,
64Since the dawn of the Great Age (31 BCE),
65The forces of Gaius Marius Octavius did invade Egypt,
66And overwhelmed its defenses whereupon Antonius committed suicide.
67Cleopatra also committed suicide some time later,
68Before she could be taken back to Rome to Octavius.
69Gaius Marius Octavius then declared himself Imperator (Emperor),
70And possessed by the Holy Spirit (Julius the false Caesar).
71Octavius then reformed the Senate,
72And began to restrict the minting of coin,
73And the exchange of coin (banking),
74While declaring that men who pledge themselves to Rome,
75And be a loyal citizen may own their own land.
76In the Great Age of the Ram,
77Eleven hundred and seventy three years,
78Since the dawn of the Great Age (27 BCE),
79At Baalbek Gaius Marius Octavius was crowned,
80Rex Sacrorum and Divine Son of God,
81By Anath also known as Annias.
82The age of the Roman Empire,
83Under the absolute power of merchants and moneylenders,
84And the worship of money as god had begun.