Lebor Clann Glas


iconAge of the Gnostics [117-194 CE]

1

1In the year known as 117 CE,
2Thirteen hundred and seventeen years since the dawn of the Great Age,
3Holly High King of Eire (Ireland) Feinlinid Reachmor, also known as Fedlimid Rechtmar,
4The grandson of Emperor Jesus and Mariamne did give up the ghost.
5Upon his passing, the Holly High Crown and head of the Cuilliaéan,
6Did befall to his son named Cúinn (Conn) Cétchathach.
7In the same year, following a brief peace after restoring order,
8Emperor Publius Aelius Hadrianus did wed Claudia Faustina the widow of Emperor Trajan,
9And the only surviving descendant and granddaughter to Emperor Claudius,
10Through her mother Claudia Antonia who wed Faustus Domitius.
11Emperor Hadrian did also adopt the only daughter of Trajan,
12Whose name was Annaea Claudia Faustina as his daughter.
13Later in the same year, elderly King Gaius Cornelius Tacticus of the Franks,
14The adopted son of Emperor Jesus (Yahusiah),
15Did give up the ghost.
16The crown of the Franks did then befall to his son Aulus Cornelius Celsus.
17Upon the death of Tacticus and the rise of his son to leader of the Franks,
18Emperor Hadrian did extend a sign of good faith and peace to the former Germanic legions,
19By attending the great funeral ceremony to honor the gens Cornelia and Tacticus.
20At the funeral ceremony Emperor Hadrian did ask King Aulus Cornelius Celsus,
21Upon what sign of good faith would it require for the Germanic legions and the Cornelia,
22To return to service of Rome and defense against tyranny and madness.
23King Aulus Cornelius Celsus replied that only when Emperors serve not as gods,
24But as protectors and teachers will the spirit of Rome be restored.
25Emperor Hadrian did reply that the great blood lines of the ancient Patricians,
26No longer resided in Rome and unless men of conscience and wisdom forged consensus,
27Then the future of Rome would befall to lesser gens upon his death.
28To which King Aulus Cornelius Celsus did pledge his youngest son Aulus Cornelius Antonius,
29And the Germanic legions to the service of Rome and the Emperor as a sign of good faith,
30Upon Emperor Hadrian restoring the honor of the most ancient gens of Rome.
31In Rome, Emperor Hadrian did announce the treaty of peace and amity with the Franks,
32And the full restoration of the gens Cornelia as honored patricians and protectors of Rome.
33Emperor Hadrian did then proclaim with the blessing of King Aulus Cornelius Celsus,
34The adoption of Aulus Cornelius Antonius the youngest son of King Celsus,
35To be his own son under the name Aelius Hadrianus Cornelius Antonius,
36As his lawful heir and successor.
37To revive the spirit of Rome and placate suspicions against Athens as the new capital,
38Emperor Hadrian did commission a new Forum to be created and for a new Pantheon to be built,
39As a symbol of unity among all the gods as well as the gods of Rome and Athens in peace.
40In the same year, King Jacob (James) of Cruithri (Scotland) the son of Emperor Jesus,
41Did fall gravelly ill and so summonsed the Celtic leaders to Hollyrood,
42And his eldest son Cyllin (Cullen/Collin) was named heir and Emperor of the Celts.

2

1In the year known as 118 CE,
2Thirteen hundred and eighteen years since the dawn of the Great Age,
3King Jacob (James) of Cruithri (Scotland),
4Emperor of the Celts and the youngest son of Jesus (Yahusiah),
5Did give up the ghost.
6The crown of Cruithri and the title of Emperor of the Celts did then befall to his son,
7Whose name was Cyllin (Cullen/Collin).
8Upon news of the passing of the last kin of Jesus (Yahusiah) and Queen Mariamne (Mary),
9The more than three hundred that possessed the blood of Holly King Joseph and his kin,
10Whom had become known as the Diaspora meaning the seeds of the Divine,
11Were summonsed to Holly Rood from more than a dozen lands across the ancient world.
12Emperor Cyllin (Cullen/Collin) did also summons all the kings and priests of the Celt tribes,
13Including the Holly High Kings, the Franks, the Remi and High Priest Heracles of Eliada and Larissa,
14To come not only for the funeral but the first Parlamage (Parliament) in more than thirty years,
15And to bring the symbols of sacred authority being the sacred ax and gold cup, the scepter and mace,
16The long sword and scales, the spear and shield, the scythe and dagger and the chronometer and bow.
17Upon news of the death of Emperor Jacob (James) reaching Aulus Cornelius Antonius at Athens,
18Emperor Hadrian declared there be a month of mourning throughout the Empire in honor of a great king,
19And to honor the heritage of the Great Prophets of Yeb and the Pontifex Maximus who had served Rome.
20The Emperor did announce he would attend the funeral ceremony himself and accompany his son,
21Rather than send an emissary.
22Emperor Hadrian then appointed Quintus Marcius Turbo as Praetorian Prefect and Protector of Rome,
23Before departing to the Island of Britanni and to Holly Rood Din Eidyn (Edinburgh).
24Not since the formation of the Augustus had an Emperor so honored the Cuilliaéan (Holly),
25Nor Rome itself since the great Caesar Lucius Cornelius Sulla one hundred and twenty years earlier.
26Emperor Cyllin (Cullen/Collin) did then order that Ebor (York) be prepared for the Roman Emperor,
27That he be granted lodgings worthy of a great and noble leader.
28Twenty thousand Celts then began work day and night so that the city was prepared to honor Hadrian.
29Yet King Mericadoc of the Britons did protest against the loss of Ebor as an ancient capital,
30And the act of Emperor Cyllin (Cullen/Collin) and pushed his troops toward Din Eidyn (Edinburgh),
31In direct conflict with the sacred vow of all Celts to honor the truce of funerary rights.
32Roman Emperor Hadrian had already sent Roman Prefect Lucius Artorius Castus and two elite legions,
33To Britanni ahead of his visit and to defend Din Eidyn (Edinburgh) against the Britons,
34Emperor Cyllin (Cullen/Collin) did call upon Lucius Artorius Castus for aid.
35Within sight of Holly Rood and before the battlements of Din Eidyn (Edinburgh),
36Lucius Artorius Castus crushed the Britons and captured King Mericadoc.
37But instead of ordering him and his kin to be executed in defiance of ancient Celtic law,
38Emperor Cyllin (Cullen/Collin) ordered that the Briton nobles and warriors be exiled from the island,
39Unto the south of Gaul and never for he or his kin to return.
40For no Briton henceforth could claim land or lodging upon the sacred isles.
41Mericadoc did then land at a place he then named Brittani (Brittany) and then declared,
42That his ancestors would one day avenge the injustice inflicted upon the Britons by the Holly.
43For his courage, Emperor Cyllin (Cullen/Collin) did bless Roman Prefect Lucius Artorius Castus,
44And named him the Pendraic or Dragon and protector of the sacred land,
45And that he and his descendants would have right of recognition and settlement in any of the lands,
46As honored members of the noble Celts.
47When the Roman Emperor finally arrived, Emperor Cyllin (Cullen/Collin) did welcome him,
48And pronounced that forever more, the place called Ebor (York) be a part of Rome,
49And a royal home for future Emperors and that no Celt nor army may lay siege to it,
50Nor harm it as the most sacred of sanctuaries.
51For any army or leader who attacks York in defiance of such a sacred decree,
52Abjures any claim of right to legitimacy or protection of law.
53Upon such a historic act, Emperor Hadrian accepted the city and renamed it,
54Calling it Eboracium Comes Palatinus (York) as a Companion Court and Imperial Court of Rome,
55And the companion Imperial Palace of the Emperor to Palatine Hill in Rome.
56Emperor Hadrian did then pronounce an Imperial Edict to the Senate and all the provinces,
57That it be recorded forever in the most sacred records and law of Rome,
58That Vatican Hill and all its buildings and land be granted to the Cuilliaéan (Holly),
59And for the sanctuary to be known as the Sancta Sedes (Holly See) and part of the earth of Holly Rood,
60As the true priests of priests and true descendants of the Great Prophets of Yeb,
61And that no Praetorian nor Roman may bring arms into such sacred sanctuary,
62Nor may any emperor, or senator or Roman or jurist issue any law against such decree,
63For any and all such decrees be without merit or law,
64And any force claiming such sanctuary against the Holly be an abomination against the gods,
65With all people of the Earth and Sea obligated to defend against such profanity and sacrilege.
66Emperor Hadrian did then yield the title of Pontifex Maximus as supreme pontiff,
67Back to the Cuilliaéan (Holly) saying,
68Verily, from this day forth let it be known to all men forever more,
69That no man may hold the position of Pontifex Maximus,
70Lest he be of the Diaspora and a true prophet of the gods.
71Emperor Cyllin (Cullen/Collin) did then anoint his younger brother Cuibelinus (Cunobelinus),
72As the first Holly Pope of Rome since the time of High King Joseph.
73The Parlamage (Parliament) at Holly Rood did then agree to the changes upon Britanni,
74And the dissolution of the Kingdom of Briton and banishment forever of the Britons.
75Cruithri was renamed as Cuiliadomi (Caledonia) meaning Holly Home,
76And the island of Britannia was renamed Englia meaning behold it is they!
77Thus Rome possessed a piece of Englia and Englia a piece of Rome forever more.
78The former kingdom of Briton was then divided into six smaller kingdoms,
79With the Kingdom of Umbria to the North, with its capital Lundor (Lancaster),
80And the Kingdom of Bernicia to the North East, with its capital at Lindor (Lincoln),
81And the Kingdom of Deiria in the midlands with Ligor(Leicester) as its capital,
82And the Kingdom of Cambria to the east with its capital at Cordor (Colchester),
83And the Kingdom of Cantia to the south and east with its capital at Cantor (Cantebury),
84And the Kingdom of Dumnonia to the south and West with its capital at Glostor (Gloucester).

3

1In the year known as 118 CE,
2Thirteen hundred and eighteen years since the dawn of the Great Age,
3After all the funerary and political arrangements had ceased,
4Emperor Cyllin of the Celts and Emperor Hadrian of the Romans did meet,
5And Emperor Hadrian did inquire as to the deeper nature of the wisdom known to the Holly,
6That caused even Flavius Josephus to renounce his own invention of Iudaism.
7Emperor Cyllin (Cullen/Collin) replied that all men seek their origins even if they deny it.
8For men like civilizations need foundation and even the most powerful tyrant or empire,
9Will fail if it has not a solid foundation upon which to unite the people.
10Emperor Hadrian then asked how one build an empire of good conscience then that could last.
11Emperor Cyllin did reply that his grandfather had given such an answer in Rome 87 years earlier,
12When Jesus (Yahusiah) did say: There is, there was, there has only ever been One Law.
13All law is equal that no one is above it,
14All law is measured that all may learn and know it,
15All law is standard that it may always be applied the same.
16A law is a rule that prohibits or permits certain acts.
17A rule is a norm, bar, maxim, measure or standard.
18A rule may be derived by instruction, discovery, custom or consent.
19The highest law is Divine being a rule given by divine instruction,
20As nothing may contradict such a rule.
21The second highest law be the reason of Mind,
22Being an edict given by a great council of wise elders or jurists,
23As nothing absurd and without good reason may be considered law.
24The third highest law be the law of the people,
25As the consent and will of the people is the source of true authority.
26The weakest rule is that of a tyrant,
27As any rule without authority or right of heaven but merely by force,
28Cannot be sustained and the people shall eventually overcome,
29And render such unjust rule and unjust laws as dust.
30This be the law of all great civilizations from the beginning of time,
31And no king or assembly or city has sustained in ignorance to such foundation.
32These then be the foundations of Rule of Law:
33All law be spoken as it is the spirit of the word that carries the authority.
34Therefore all action under law be by word of mouth,
35And writing be only for memory and trade and never be the law.
36All are equal under the law,
37All are accountable and answerable under the law,
38All are without blemish until proven culpable,
39Where there is a law there must be a cause,
40Where there is a law there must be a penalty,
41Where there is a law there must be a remedy.
42An action in law cannot proceed without first a cause.
43An action is not granted to one who is not injured.
44The action of a valid law can do no harm (injury).
45An action decided in law must reflect cause of such action.
46No injury to the law means no valid cause for action by law.
47No action through law can arise from a fraud before heaven and earth.
48No action through law can arise in bad faith or prejudice.
49An act does not make one culpable unless there be intent to do wrong,
50For no one may suffer punishment by valid law for mere intent.
51No one is punished for the transgression of an ancestor or another.
52No one can derive an advantage in law from his own wrong,
53For what is invalid from the beginning does not become valid over time.
54No one is accused of the same exact cause twice.
55No man be a judge over his own matter,
56Nor a man possess the authority of heaven to be both judge and executioner.
57No penalty may exist without a valid law.
58The immediate cause and not the remote cause be the subject of law.
59These be the foundations of Rule of Law.
60As to justice it be the maxim that Justice never contradicts the rule of law,
61For Justice be the lawful right of use of all that has been defined by law,
62And Justice be the rights to adjudicate the law itself before heaven and earth,
63And Justice be a judge under sacred oath and trust granted such rights,
64As a right being a power or authority or privilege or benefit recognized by law.
65Divine Law is the law that defines the Divine and all creation,
66And demonstrates the spirit and mind and instruction of the Divine,
67And the operation of the will of the Divine Creator through existence.
68Therefore all valid rights and Justice is derived from Divine Law.
69Natural Law is the law that defines the operation of the will of the Divine,
70Through the existence of form and sky and earth and physical rules.
71Thus Natural Law governs the operation of what we can see and name.
72The laws of People are those rules enacted by men having proper authority,
73For the good governance of a society under the Rule of Law.
74The laws of People are always inherited from Natural Law.
75A law of People cannot abrogate or usurp a Natural Law,
76Nor is it possible for a Natural Law to usurp Divine Law.
77These then be the foundations of Justice:
78All possess the Right to be heard even if such speech be controversial,
79All possess the Right of free will to choose our actions and destiny,
80All possess the Right of reason that distinguishes them from lesser animals,
81All possess the Right to informed consent or withdraw consent,
82All possess the Right over their body that none may claim our flesh,
83All possess the Right of our divine self that none may claim our soul.
84Thus no man can make a blood oath on their flesh or vow on their soul,
85Nor may any man claim servitude or obligation under such an abomination,
86For such Rights are granted solely by heaven to all people,
87And no man or body of jurists have the authority to usurp heaven or the gods.
88Verily all true authority and power to rule is inherited from heaven,
89And to only those men in good faith and good character and good conscience,
90Who then make a sacred oath in trust and form an office,
91Into which such Divine Rights are conveyed for only so long,
92As they honor their oath and obligations to serve the people.
93For whenever a man who makes an oath to form a sacred trust of office,
94Then breaks such an oath through prejudice or unclean hands or bad faith,
95Then all such authority and power ceases from them,
96As the cord between heaven and earth is severed and the trust dissolved.
97Verily no man may serve the people unless under sacred oath,
98Nor may any man serve heaven unless under solemn vow.
99Therefore guard your behavior and actions of office,
100That though the heavens appear to fall, let justice always be done.
101These be the foundations of Justice.
102As to the administration of Justice these be the foundations of Due Process:
103No valid action in law proceeds without first a valid cause,
104And no valid cause exists until such claim is first tested.
105Thus the birth of all action in law must begin with the claim.
106If a claim be not proven as a valid cause then the accused has nothing to answer.
107Yet if the claim be proved to have merit as a cause,
108Then all valid causes in law must be resolved.
109Thus, he who first brings the claim must first prove its merit,
110As the burden of the proof lies upon him who accuses not he who denies.
111A heavy obligation then on one who first brings the controversy.
112For one who brings false accusation is the gravest of transgressors,
113That it injures not one law, but all heaven and all law.
114Thus a valid claim in part is one in which an accuser makes a complaint,
115Bringing two witnesses as proof and petitions a forum of law for remedy.
116If merit of a cause be proved, the one accused must appear to answer.
117The one accused and any witnesses appear by summons.
118When anyone be summonsed, he must immediately appear without hesitation.
119If a man summonsed does not appear or refuses to appear to answer,
120Then let him be seized by force to come and attend.
121When anyone who has been summonsed seeks to evade, or attempts to flee,
122Let the one who summons lay hands on them to prevent their escape.
123One who flees fair judgment confesses his culpability.
124The accused cannot be judged until after the accusations be spoken,
125And then after the accused exercise or decline their three rights to defense,
126The first being Prolocution and the right to speak as a matter of law,
127And why the complaint and investigation should not continue,
128The second being Collocution as to why the complaint and accusation is false,
129And upon such proof why the burden should now be placed on the accuser,
130And the third being Adlocution being a final speech in defense,
131Against a complaint or accusation having been heard.
132If illness or old age hinder the appearance of the one summonsed,
133Let the one who made the summons provide a basic means of transport.
134When men wish to settle their dispute among themselves,
135Then they shall have the right to make peace.
136If a dispute cannot be settled before seeking a judge,
137Then both the accused and the accuser must be granted equal hearing.
138An accused cannot be found culpable unless three pieces of evidence may be attributed.
139Judges are bound to explain the reason of their judgment.
140The setting of the sun shall be the extreme limit of time within,
141Which a judge must render his decision.
142These be the foundations of Due Process.
143These be the foundations of Rule of Law and Justice.
144Any law that is against such truth, cannot be law.

4

1Upon hearing the wisdom and truth of Jesus from his grandson Emperor Cyllin (Cullen/Collin),
2The Roman Emperor Hadrian did declare that henceforth no law be law unless it be in accord,
3With the Golden Rule of Law and Justice and Due Process as proclaimed by Jesus in Rome.
4He then did summons all the greatest scholars and jurists to Eboracium Comes Palatinus (York),
5That it be the most sacred site and Imperial Court at which the new law would be formed,
6That united all peoples of the world whether they be under Roman or Celt or Parthian rule.
7Thus it was that the greatest scholars and jurists did come to the new Imperial Court,
8And did discuss and debate how best to ensure that the laws of the world,
9Be united under the Golden Rule of Law and Justice and Due Process,
10As the first and true law between people and between kingdoms and between empires.
11Yet the scholars and jurists could not agree on even the simplest of rules,
12For they debated endlessly of the exceptions and exclusions upon every word,
13That a whole year was wasted and still no new form of law had been started.
14Frustrated at such delay, Emperor Hadrian did summons Valentinus and Heracles of Larissa,
15To come to Eboracium (York) and provide a resolution to such impasse.
16Upon their arrival High Priest Heracles of Larissa and Eliada,
17Did praise his childhood friend for the deep peace and unity,
18He so wisely had demonstrated between Rome and Eboracium,
19And between the sanctuaries of the Holly Rood and the Holly See of the Vatican.
20Yet High Priest Heracles of Larissa did remind Emperor Hadrian,
21Of the lessons concerning the history of the Great Prophets of Yeb,
22And the foundation of Athens itself by Xerxes as Zeus,
23That the first steps of unity rest not just in words but action,
24For people follow false teachers not just because they cannot discern what they hear,
25But that they have no vision to see a better future.
26In the year known as 119 CE,
27Thirteen hundred and nineteen years since the dawn of the Great Age,
28Emperor Hadrian dismissed the scholars and jurists to return to their duties.
29The Emperor did then announce the engagement of Aelius Hadrianus Cornelius Antonius,
30As his adopted son and heir to Annaea Claudia Faustina as his adopted daughter.
31With the consent of King Aulus Cornelius Celsus of the Franks,
32Emperor Hadrian did proclaim that henceforth the city of Coelogis (Cologne),
33Be known as Colone (Cologne or Colony) meaning those who truly protect, serve and honor,
34And that the Praetorian be selected from the finest Germanic and Frank legions,
35With their camp forever to be known as Colone Praetoria as sacred land of the Franks.
36Emperor Hadrian did also proclaim the rebuilding of the Stadium on the Fields of Mars in Rome,
37And for the completion of the Stadion Olympeion below and to the south-east of the Parthenon,
38And in four years (124 CE) for the resurrection of the first Olympic Games in more than 250 years,
39And the very first Olympic Games open to the whole ancient world.
40Emperor Hadrian then set personally to work with Emperor Cyllin and the Holly,
41In the formation of a new Rule of Law for all peoples and all nations of the world.

5

1In the year known as 120 CE,
2Thirteen hundred and twenty years since the dawn of the Great Age,
3Marcus Calpernius Piso also known as Marcion of Pontus and Sinope,
4Was captured at Genola and executed.
5Yet his son did escape, whose name was Arrius Calpenius Piso.
6Upon the death of his father, Arrius Calpenius Piso secretly declared himself as Papias,
7Also known as Polycarp and that he would dedicate himself to destroying the Holly,
8By writing them out of history and forming the most perverse and wicked doctrines,
9That generations into the future would become like ignorant horned cattle.
10A few months after the death of his father, Arrius Calpenius Piso as Polycarp,
11Did have a son who he named Marcus Calpernius Piso,
12And who came to be known in years to come by the names Ignatius and Irenaeus.
13In the same year, Publius Septimus Geta the patriarch of the Septimus clan,
14Did give up the ghost at Leptis Magnae.
15The control of the family slave trade and plantations then went to his son,
16Whose name was Publius Septimus Aper.
17In the same year,
18Aelius Hadrianus Cornelius Antonius and Annaea Claudia Faustina did marry,
19At a ceremony at Holly Rood Din Eidyn (Edinburgh).
20Emperor Hadrian did then grant the position of Legate of Gallia (Gaul) and Hispania,
21In perpetuity to King Aulus Cornelius Celsus of the Franks and his descendants,
22And did name him co-Consul of Rome in the same year as the Emperor,
23Making King Celsus the most powerful legate in the Roman Empire,
24Commanding all Germanica, Gaul and Hispania.

6

1In the year known as 121 CE,
2Thirteen hundred and twenty years since the dawn of the Great Age,
3Emperor Hadrian did finish his draft of a new law called Codex Regulae,
4Meaning the Code of the Rules of Law, later known as Hadrians' Law and The Code.
5Falsely corrupted in later texts as Hadrians' Wall to hide the first law of nations,
6And the first law uniting the ancient world that forbid the trade of pirates and bankers.
7With the assistance of the Holly at Holly Rood Din Eidyn (Edinburgh),
8Emperor Hadrian at the Imperial Court at Eboracium (York) did devise three books,
9Of twenty two chapters each as a total of sixty six (66) chapters,
10With the first Book concerning People and the nature of law, of rights and status,
11Including the recognition that all men and women no matter what their standing,
12Possess certain rights that cannot be seized or surrendered, even if they be slaves.
13The second Book concerned Property and the divisions of property as well as the value,
14And recording of property including the making of valid testaments and conveyances.
15The third Book of twenty-two chapters concerned Obligations and Trust as central to trade,
16And how obligations and conduct in commerce were to be regulated to prevent fraud and trickery.
17When Emperor Hadrian presented the finished draft of law to Emperor Cyllin,
18He asked if such law would honor the teachings of Jesus and the Golden Rule of Law,
19And if men would learn to follow true law instead of the lies of merchants and false priests,
20To which the Emperor of the Celts replied that no Emperor had done more to restore the law,
21Yet without a vision of the future, men will quickly return to the old ways,
22And their old fears and enslavement to the trickeries of such merchants and false priests.
23Emperor Hadrian replied that he had already done much in beginning the rebuilding of temples,
24Across the Roman Empire and in the unifying of cultures as demonstration of good faith,
25To which the Holly Emperor did reply that most men and women do not live in temples but towns,
26And to them their lives remain marginal in conditions no better today than a thousand years ago.
27In response, Hadrian did order his finest engineers and craftsmen to Eboracium (York),
28Where he ordered they devise a model of how people of all status and standing could live,
29In a community of three to ten thousand or more with running water, sewerage and heating,
30With wide and ample streets and protective walls and with a central square and entertainment,
31That men could learn to rise above their fears and prejudices and become truly civilized,
32And thus learn to appreciate the rule of law and the honor of heaven and the beauty of life.
33Hadrian called this new model of living under the golden rule of law the Metropolis,
34Meaning the standard city as the new standard by which all cities of the world,
35Were to be reformed and improved in years to come.
36Hadrian then commanded that the old quarters of Athens be remodelled as the first Metropolis,
37And that a Metropolis be constructed in each of the provinces as a living symbol of the harmony,
38That life under the Golden Rule of Law would herald to the Earth.
39In the same year Aelius Hadrianus Antoninus Augustus Pius and Annaea Claudia Faustina,
40Did have a son borne at Eboracium (York) they called Marcus (Aurelius) Cornelius.

7

1In the year known as 122 CE,
2Thirteen hundred and twenty two years since the dawn of the Great Age,
3Emperor Hadrian issued a supreme Imperial Edict from Eboracium (York) as Comes Palatinus,
4That the Codex Regulae known as the Codex of the Rules of Law be promulgated throughout the world,
5And that upon the sacred treaty between all Celts and peoples of the Roman Empire,
6The Codex Regulae be the Rule of Law of all peoples and all nations and all communities forever more,
7That no law, or edict or claim may diminish it, nor corrupt it, nor may any body usurp such law,
8As the Codex Regulae be the Rule of Rome and no other law be law if it be against such truth.
9In the same year, upon the continued rebellion of people in Palestine,
10Who professed themselves to be followers of the forbidden false religion of Iudaism,
11And the growing threat of the Briton (British) pirates,
12Emperor Hadrian issued an Imperial Edict pronouncing that anyone found to be a Iew, or Gew or Briton,
13Be culpable of a capital crime and to be immediately put to death as enemies of heaven and earth.
14Hadrian then ordered Lucius Artorius Castus to destroy Brittani (Brittany),
15And the British colonies in Hispania and the pirate colonies within the inland sea,
16While Marcus Petronius Mamertinus and general Quintus Tineius Rufus were ordered to purge Palestine,
17Of any remaining merchants, priests and followers of the false and forbidden religion of Iudaism.
18In Gaul and in Hispania, Lucius Artorius Castus smashed the forces of Pirate King Mericadoc of the Britons,
19With the survivors escaping to the coast of West Africa and renaming themselves the Amoricans.
20Yet the forces of Lucius Artorius Castus were tricked by a false surrender of the Britons in Dalmatia,
21And he was killed before the British pirates were slaughtered,
22And those Britons (British) that escaped renamed themselves the Veneti.
23Emperor Cyllin then made Gaius Artorius Castus the son of Lucius the new Pendraig (Dragon),
24While Emperor Hadrian ordered the construction of a sacred temple to Castus at the site of his death.
25In Palestine, Quintus Tineius Rufus routed the Iudean robbers and rebels,
26And then read the Imperial Decree from Emperor Hadrian and the Emperor Cyllin which said:
27Before all the gods and spirits of heaven and all here present and yet to come,
28Let it be known forever more that the name Jerusalem be damned and struck from history.
29For no city had caused so much madness and bloodshed upon such wickedness and lies,
30Of false priests and false profits of false religions and false gods.
31A city that refused to acknowledge its own history.
32Therefore a new name shall be given to this city in honor of the time of Akhenaten as Moses,
33For the city shall be called Aelia Capitolina,
34As an annex of the Capitolinium of Rome and a place of law and justice,
35And never again to be a site of false worship and the preaching of madness.

8

1In the year known as 123 CE,
2Thirteen hundred and twenty three years since the dawn of the Great Age,
3Aelius Hadrianus Antoninus Augustus Pius and Annaea Claudia Faustina,
4Did have a daughter borne at Eboracium (York) they called Annaea (Aurelia) Cornelia Faustina.
5Emperor Hadrian did then depart Eboracium (York) first to Mauretania, then Cyrene,
6Then to Egypt and then to Palestine and finally to the lands of the Parthians,
7Where for the very first time a Roman Emperor did meet with the King of Parthia.
8King Osroes had heard of many of the great works of Hadrian and his unity with the Celts,
9Yet remained cautious of the Roman Emperor on account of the destruction of Seleucia,
10At the hands of the legions of Trajan and the great damage wrought in the previous wars.
11Emperor Hadrian did then speak to King Osroes saying:
12Oh Great and noble King of the Four Corners of the World,
13May our descendants live in peace and harmony for a thousand years.
14I come in good faith and conscience to share with you the wonders that have taken root,
15Between all peoples who give their allegiance to Rome and to all who honor the Celts.
16Whereas we were once in terrible and destructive conflict,
17We have formed a new pact under the golden rule of law as honored by your ancestors.
18Yet so long as there remains uncertainty and differences between our peoples,
19There can never be the full fruits of such harmony.
20For you stand at the gateway to the riches of the far east,
21Yet you also face the growing might of the Scythian horde.
22How then might the people of Rome and Parthia form an unbreakable bond of peace?
23King Osroes did reply: Oh Mighty Emperor,
24May your descendants be remembered and worshiped by all generations.
25Your words as is the news of your deeds be powerful.
26Yet our people have suffered from such promises of peace in the past,
27Only to be awoken in the dead of night to find our flocks scattered and our fields burning.
28Emperor Hadrian did then reply saying: Therefore I pledge before you oh great king,
29And before heaven and earth that the finest masons and artists,
30Shall build the greatest of cities from the ashes of Seleucia,
31And in the heart of Rome a great and impregnable palace shall also be constructed,
32That it be for you and your descendants forever more as if the land of Parthia itself.
33For if you accept this pledge of good faith that all people may live under one Rule of Law,
34Then all I have sworn will come to be.
35Whereupon both men agreed and the most solemn and sacred pact was sealed,
36And for the first time in history more than three out of every four people in the world,
37Did live under one law being the Golden Rules of Law and Justice and Due Process,
38Of sixty six (66) chapters of three (3) books being Of People, Of Property and Of Obligations.
39Emperor Hadrian did then order a workforce of more than fifty thousand,
40Come to Parthia to reconstruct the city of Seleucia which the Parthians agreed to be renamed,
41Calling it Castela Metropolis in honor of purity and the spirit of unity,
42As the first castle in history and home when completed for more than two hundred thousand.
43In Rome, Hadrian commissioned the construction of the most impressive fortress,
44In the same design and style of Castela Metropolis and called it Castellum Citadella,
45Meaning the fortress and place that belongs to Castela,
46And the first and most famous Citadel in history,
47Later known as Castel de Angelo,
48And falsely by wicked pirates and priests as Hadrian's Tomb.

9

1In the year known as 124 CE,
2Thirteen hundred and twenty four years since the dawn of the Great Age,
3Emperor Hadrian returned to Athens a living god in the eyes of the people,
4To celebrate the first Olympic Games at the completed Stadion Olympeion,
5And the first Olympic Games which did bring the whole world together.
6Athletes from the provinces of Hispania and Gallia and from Africa and Asia did come.
7Athletes from Palestine and Egypt and Arabia and even Parthia did come.
8Even athletes from the Celtic lands of Eire (Ireland) and Englia and Francia,
9Did participate in the Olympic Games and for ninety days no wars or conflict were fought.
10At the conclusion, Emperor Hadrian did declare that the first university in history,
11Would be formed called the Academia Athenaeum, near Capitoline Hill,
12In honor of the Akademia in Athens and that Valentinus would be its first rector.
13In the year known as 125 CE,
14Thirteen hundred and twenty five years since the dawn of the Great Age,
15Hadrian returned to Rome to celebrate the completion of the new Pantheon,
16As floods and humid torrential rains continued across much of northern Africa and Europe.
17The flooding in Numidia, Sicily and Egypt caused the destruction of much of the crops,
18As people sought shelter and food in the major cities.
19Rome and Alexandria were plagued by swarms of mosquitoes and Malaria,
20As Mauretania, Numidia and Egypt were affected by locust plagues causing even greater destruction.
21In Rome Emperor Hadrian did succumb to Malaria and fell gravelly ill,
22Ordering his son Aelius Hadrianus Cornelius Antonius to return to Eboracium (York),
23As now hunger grew in Rome and Italy on account of the shortage of grain.
24Yet in Africa Legate Publius Septimus Aper refused to act against the plague,
25Or help relieve the starving of people in his provinces,
26So that tens of thousand died of disease and lack of food.
27As Hadrian remained ill, the emperor ordered Praetorian Quintus Marcius Turbo,
28To take charge of an invasion of North Africa and to seize and bring to justice,
29The gens Septima for their disgrace and dishonor of Rome and all humanity.
30When Quintus Marcius Turbo and his elite legions and generals arrived in North Africa,
31They met little resistance as society had completely broken down,
32And Publius Septimus Aper with his sons Gaius Septimius Severus and Lucius Septimus Aper,
33Had fled south and deep into Africa to escape the wrath of Emperor Hadrian.
34Quintus Marcius Turbo the ordered his general Gaius Julius Materia,
35Falsely cursed by the gens Septima as Maternus, to pursue and execute the Septima,
36As cowards and men without any inch of honor or nobility.
37Yet the further south Gaius Julius Materia did pursue the cowardly Septima,
38The Septima aided by their slave trading allies remained a few steps ahead.
39For months Gaius Julius Materia and his legions continued in pursuit of the Septima,
40As many of the soldiers died from disease and exhaustion until reaching the great inland lake (Lake Chad),
41Where Publius Septimus Aper sought to destroy his Roman nemesis,
42Only to be killed himself and his gens nearly extinguished.
43Yet Gaius Julius Materia was forced to withdraw for lack of men and supplies,
44And the cowards Gaius Septimius Severus and Lucius Septimus Aper,
45Remained in hiding deep in Africa,
46Only to discover untold riches to plunder from the central kingdoms of Africa.

10

1In the year known as 126 CE,
2Thirteen hundred and twenty six years since the dawn of the Great Age,
3Gaius Cornelius Clemens of the Franks and son of King Celsus,
4Did have a son, whom he named Gaius Cornelius Celestius.
5In the same year, Emperor Hadrian on his improving health,
6Did travel to North Africa and to the Roman Fortress City of Lambaesis,
7To oversee the restoration of grain supplies and order in Africa.
8In the year known as 127 CE,
9Thirteen hundred and twenty seven years since the dawn of the Great Age,
10Emperor Hadrian returned to Rome and issued an edict from the Palatine,
11That henceforth, every province must make provision of stores and aid,
12And that the poor and hungry be given free food in times of need,
13For any leader that permit the starvation of their people,
14Abdicates all authority of office and becomes nothing more than an impostor.
15Emperor Hadrian did also reform the land laws for small farmers,
16So that any man or household may have access to some land,
17To grow their own food and provide for their own family,
18Even if they be without other means of wealth.
19Hadrian did then issue the first laws in history that forbid speculation,
20On staple foods and that any merchant caught inflating the prices of basic food,
21Be put to death as an enemy of the state,
22For threatening the very stability of society and the Empire.
23Hadrian did then return to Athens accompanied by Valentinus to see High Priest Heracles.
24In Athens, Hadrian did ask how men could be persuaded from becoming like savages,
25And forgetting all knowledge of civilization in times of crisis.
26Valentinus replied that he conceived until the sickness within false religions,
27Be finally erased with greater equality of knowledge and education,
28Then tricksters and fear mongers would always find a willing audience,
29In times of great sickness and tragedy.
30High Priest Heracles of Larissa did not agree and instead took a different view, saying:
31That while men need greater education and truth of knowledge,
32Too few times in history has mankind witnessed the ideal on earth as a guide to their ideas.
33Instead, the people know only of servitude and tyranny despite the high words and laws.
34For ask a man to trust that heaven exists and he may be deceived by false priests and moneylenders.
35But show a man what heaven is and there can be no doubt as to the standard of rule of law.
36In the same year Holly King Cúinn (Conn) of Eire (Ireland),
37The great grandson of Holly Emperor Jesus (Yahusiah),
38Did have a son he named Cúirt.

11

1In the year known as 128 CE,
2Thirteen hundred and twenty eight years since the dawn of the Great Age,
3King Aulus Cornelius Celsus of the Franks,
4Grandson of Jesus and son of Gaius Cornelius Tacticus,
5Legate of Gallia (Gaul), Germanica and Hispania,
6Did give up the ghost.
7Emperor Hadrian did then attend the funeral ceremony at Colone (Cologne),
8As did Emperor Cyllin and all the Diaspora in honor.
9Gaius Cornelius Clemens was then anointed King,
10By Pontifex Maximus Cuibelinus (Cunobelinus),
11As the first sacrament of Coronatum (Coronation) in history.
12In the same year,
13King Gaius Cornelius Clemens of the Franks did have a daughter,
14Named Sabina Cornelia Clementia.
15In the same year,
16Hadrian returned to Athens to preside over the second Olympic Games,
17Where he did pronounce to all the delegates and dignitaries of the world,
18The formation not only of a new kingdom of conscience and the rule of law,
19But the kingdom of Heaven on Earth and true Paradise, saying:
20As the gods and our ancestors be our witness to the world assembled here as one,
21Let these words be written and remembered for all generations to come,
22That every man or woman, no matter what their status at birth, nor race or creed,
23May know of these events and decrees of the highest of all standing and sacredness,
24That no body or king or priest may usurp such truth,
25No scribe or historian or philosopher corrupt such words without condemning themselves for eternity.
26For upon this day of the opening of the Olympic Games we celebrate the formation of Eukadia (Ucadia),
27Through the uniting of Macedonia and Lacedonia and Crete and Islands once more into a sacred whole,
28In honor of the vision of the Great Xerxes as Pericles and glorified as Zeus,
29And his son Artaxerses revered as Xenophon and his grandson Arxenes as Plato,
30Nearly six hundred years ago at this very sacred place.
31And while Xerxes did rename all the lands and islands known as Eliada,
32To the sacred name of Acadia to mean all men are equal under the Divine,
33Where no man or woman be a slave or lesser than another,
34Where men and women could live as equals under a true rule of law,
35And that people could live not by superstition or fear or corruption but by good character and conscience,
36So it is that the world now bears witness to the creation of Eukadia (Ucadia),
37Meaning the well spring of the Divine Spirit of all creation and the Kingdom of Heaven upon the Earth.
38Thus it be befitting that the custodian of paradise on Earth be bestowed,
39To the same bloodlines of Zeus and Xenophon and Plato and the great kings of Sparta,
40Pappa Basileus and father priests and custodians and protectors of such sacred lands,
41That Heracles and his progeny continue to honor their sacred vow to the heaven,
42In the protection of Olympus and now to the gardens and valleys and cities of paradise,
43That men of good character and talent and a thirst for true wisdom may come,
44That women who seek equality and justice and stability of civilization may come,
45That all who seek to truly respect heaven and our ancestors may come and give offerings,
46And no more shall false priests and men of no conscience or virtue be able to hide,
47Nor speak untruths to any man or woman as to the ideal of Heaven or Earth.
48For Eukadia (Ucadia) is and always shall be the highest Kingdom of Heaven on Earth,
49And Eukadia (Ucadia) is and always shall be the one true Rule of Law,
50And let no man or woman speak falsely against such truth, lest by such speech they condemn themselves.
51So it was then that Eukadia (Ucadia) was formed by Hadrian and not in the name Arcadia,
52As false priests and false scribes of madness have since corrupted.
53Thus, for the first time Eliada (Greece) as Eukadia (Ucadia) was united after hundreds of years,
54And not merely some valleys and hills of the Peloponnese called Arcadia.

12

1In the year known as 129 CE,
2Thirteen hundred and twenty nine years since the dawn of the Great Age,
3King Osroes of Parthia did give up the ghost.
4In honor of the great treaty between Rome and the Parthians,
5Emperor Hadrian did go to Castela Metropolis (rebuilt Seleucia),
6To greet the new King Parthamaspates the son of Osroes.
7Hadrian did then stay in Parthia for some months,
8Before leaving and travelling to the west to ancient Petra,
9And then the new capital Basra of Arabia,
10And then Aelia Capitolina (old Jerusalem) to dedicate a new temple to Sophia (wisdom).
11In the year known as 130 CE,
12Thirteen hundred and thirty years since the dawn of the Great Age,
13King Linus of Cymri (Wales) did give up the ghost.
14The crown of Cymri did then befall to his son,
15Whose name was named Lleyn.
16In the year known as 131 CE,
17Thirteen hundred and thirty one years since the dawn of the Great Age,
18Herodes the son of Pappa Basileus Heracles of Eukadia (Ucadia),
19Did have a son he named Hippocrates.
20In the year known as 132 CE,
21Thirteen hundred and thirty two years since the dawn of the Great Age,
22Emperor Cyllin (Cullen/Collins) of the Celts,
23Holly King of Caledonia (Scotland) and High King of the Kings of Englia (England),
24And the great grandson of Jesus (Yahusiah) and Mariamne,
25Did give up the ghost.
26The Holly crown of Caledonia as Emperor of the Celts,
27Did then befall to his son Cuinan (Conan).
28In the same year, Herodes the son of Pappa Basileus Heracles of Eukadia (Ucadia),
29Did have a daughter he named Despina Phoebe, meaning the Lady of Light,
30And by the name Domina Lucilla in Latin.
31In the year known as 134 CE,
32Thirteen hundred and thirty four years since the dawn of the Great Age,
33Arrius Calpernius Piso as Papius formed an alliance with the Scythian tribes,
34To train the nomadic robbers and raiders into a military force,
35Capable of seizing and holding cities against legions.
36Yet the first attempts of Arrius Calpernius Piso and the Scythians of taking the north of the Black Sea,
37Did fail and Arrius Calpernius Piso withdrew his force after only a few days.
38In the same year, Praetorian Prefect and Protector of Rome Quintus Marcius Turbo,
39Did give up the ghost.
40Emperor Hadrian did then appoint Marcus Petronius Mamertinus as head of the Praetorian.

13

1In the year known as 136 CE,
2Thirteen hundred and thirty sixth years since the dawn of the Great Age,
3The 4th Olympiad of the united ancient world was held again in Athens in Eukadia (Ucadia).
4Emperor Hadrian who had returned to Eboracium Comes Palatinus (York),
5Remained gravely ill and did send his son Aelius Hadrianus Antoninus Augustus Pius,
6Who dedicated the games to Hadrian and to the enlightenment of all people.
7In the year known as 138 CE,
8Thirteen hundred and thirty eight years since the dawn of the Great Age,
9Emperor Publius Aelius Hadrianus,
10Did give up the ghost at Eboracium Comes Palatinus (York).
11Emperor Cuinan then declared an unprecedented ninety days of mourning for all Celts,
12While King Parthamaspates of Parthia declared all Parthians and dependents,
13Wear black clothing as a sign of mourning and honor of the spirit of a great leader.
14After the body had been embalmed in the ancient ways of the Egyptians,
15Aelius Hadrianus Antoninus Augustus Pius did accompany the body from Englia,
16Back to Rome as his adopted father had requested for his funeral and cremation.
17In Rome, the greatest gathering ever seen of kings, emperors, princes and leaders did come,
18To honor the legacy of a titan of virtue and wisdom.
19As Hadrian had requested, the funerary was presided by Antoninus Augustus Pius,
20Who spoke to the world assembled and did pronounce this eulogy:
21In the days to come we will be called to honor an Emperor in custom and manner of the laws of Rome,
22As a living God and worthy of worship in the Pantheon of the Greats.
23For this is the will of the people and the Senate of Rome.
24Yet such time has not yet arrived to speak of the Divine qualities of our father,
25But to remember the physical man who once lived amongst us; and
26To return his mortal body to earth and dust; and
27So releasing his mind from any further sense of obligation unto this plane of existence.
28Let all of us assembled here today then remember and honor the man Publius Aelius Hadrianus.
29That as a man sought to live every day to its fullest,
30Constantly seeking the truth and to better his education,
31Yet humble in all his knowledge as to the highest ideal of law,
32That no one be above the law and all are subject to it; and
33That no man or woman be born a slave, nor burdened by debt or spiritual blemish; and
34That no man or woman be lesser or greater than another by right of blood, or race or creed; and
35That all men and women of reason possess the immutable right to life and freedom and choice.
36How does one ever adequately express in words the life of any man or woman,
37With all our experience and actions, our intentions and dreams as well as our successes and failures.
38Yet as true testament to my father and teacher, I can find no better example,
39Than his only wish to me that I allow his words to be spoken at this occasion,
40To lessen the burden upon me.
41Therefore, let me conclude in the very words that Publius Aelius Hadrianus himself,
42Did speak as the measure by which all should seek to remember and honor him:
43Some men are remembered because their feats and exploits are memorialized in stone and scroll,
44As legends through fame, or fortune or chance.
45Yet our most sacred temples and memorials are never reserved for these.
46Instead, our most hallowed places are dedicated to those unnamed heroes of each generation,
47The men and women that exemplified the qualities of dedication, of courage, of self sacrifice and humility.
48Sometimes during our lives, we are honored to meet these rarest of people,
49Who do not boast of their achievements, nor adorn themselves in finery,
50But celebrate their triumphs quietly and without arrogance.
51Yet these are the very men who have fought the bloodiest battles and won,
52These are the men who have built the mightiest cities and then returned to their modest homes,
53These are the merchants of honest scales and the teacher who speaks the truth.
54Thus, if any man or woman seeks to honor my memory,
55Then honor the memory of one of these true heroes first.
56And if one seeks to truly honor my life,
57Then live each and every day to the fullest and honor the true Rule of Law.
58For no greater monument or offering can there possible be,
59Than the equality and fraternity and respect among all peoples,
60As civilized beings.

14

1In the year known as 138 CE,
2Thirteen hundred and thirty eight years since the dawn of the Great Age,
3Aelius Hadrianus Antoninus Cornelius Augustus Pius,
4Brother to King Gaius Cornelius Clemens, King of the Franks and Legate of Gallia and Hispania,
5Son of Aulus Cornelius Celsus and Great Grandson of Jesus and Mariamne,
6And adopted son of Emperor Publius Aelius Hadrianus,
7Did become the first of the Diaspora and first Holly Emperor of Rome.
8Within the first weeks of his reign, Emperor Antoninus Pius did send emissaries,
9To each and every Province and kingdom to pledge on the word of Hadrian,
10That the new Emperor would dedicate his reign to perfecting the Rule of Law,
11And to end inefficiency and corruption within all administration,
12That if a leader was dedicated to his office then he be a worthy ally,
13Yet if any leader did seek to corrupt, or pervert the law, then his position be in jeopardy.
14As a sign of good faith, Antoninus Pius ordered that all the main roads between the provinces,
15Be widened and improved and maintained that no highway be permitted to be in disrepair.
16The Emperor, then ordered that small forts be stationed be built along key highways,
17Between major towns to patrol against robbers and thieves.
18He then ordered that for the first time an accurate measure be made,
19From the Obelisk of Amenhotep in Rome to the distance between each other city,
20That a legion may know within half a day the distance for slow or quick march.
21These reforms greatly pleased the merchant classes throughout the empire,
22As the improved roads and safety permitted greater travel,
23And the distance measures for legions aided in the movement of produce.
24Even the pirates known as the Amoricans, the Britons and the Veneti were reduced to a few boats.
25Never in the history of Rome had the world known such peace and goodwill.

15

1In the year known as 140 CE,
2Thirteen hundred and forty years since the dawn of the Great Age,
3The 5th Olympiad of the world was held in Athens in Eucadia (Ucadia),
4Presided by Antoninus Pius.
5In the following year (141 CE), a great omen in the form of a comet did appear,
6At the same time as Hispania did endure a prolonged drought and loss,
7Yet due to the reforms of Hadrian in the feeding of the people,
8No widespread famine did erupt and instead the Emperor ordered,
9That greater irrigation and storage of water be constructed under the major cities of Hispania,
10So if such drought did endure, the people would not die of thirst.
11In the year known as 142 CE,
12Flooding and storms returned to much of Europe and Asia that crops were ruined,
13And people sought shelter within the cities.
14Yet the rise of sickness and signs of plague and the pox did erupt in different cities,
15While the traditional Roman Doctors and Physicians prescribed poisons (medicines) and spells.
16Emperor Antoninus Pius did then summons the son of Pappas Basileus Heracles,
17Whose name was Herodes to aid in how such superstition could be eliminated.
18Herodes did recommend that a strict code of Therapy be instituted across the Empire,
19And that trained and competent Therapeutae be dispatched to each major city,
20With administrative authority to close the potion shops of Roman Physicians,
21And outlaw all forms of medicine and superstitious spells.
22Emperor Antoninus Pius did then grant powers to the new Therapeutae to oversee the sanitation,
23Of each city and to remove officials whose policies promoted disease and ignorance,
24So that within a few months the outbreak of plague and pox had diminished,
25And the fear of the people subsided.
26In the year known as 143 CE,
27Thirteen hundred and forty three years since the dawn of the Great Age,
28Priest King Heracles of Eucadia (Ucadia) Did give up the ghost.
29The role of Priest King and protector of paradise as Pappa Basileus,
30And custodian of the kingdom of Heaven on Earth,
31Did befall to his son whose name was Herodes.
32In the same year, Marcus Calpernius Piso also known as Ignatius,
33Did have a son he named Justinius Calpernius Piso later known as Sohaemus and Justin Martyr.

16

1In the year known as 144 CE,
2Thirteen hundred and forty four years since the dawn of the Great Age,
3The 6th Olympiad of the world was held in Athens,
4As peace continued across the Roman and Celtic Empires.
5In the year known as 145 CE,
6Thirteen hundred and forty five years since the dawn of the Great Age,
7Lucius Septimius Severus the son of Publius Septimus Geta,
8Was born in exile and hiding deep within central Africa.
9In the same year, Cuinneach (Kenneth) the son of Cuinnwyd (Conrad) was born,
10In Caledonia in Englia.
11In the year known as 148 CE,
12Thirteen hundred and forty eight years since the dawn of the Great Age,
13The 7th Olympiad of the world was held in Athens.
14At the Olympic Games, Emperor Antoninus Augustus Pius did announce the betrothal,
15Of his son Marcus Aurelius Cornelius Servus to the daughter of Pappa Basileus Herodes,
16Whose name was Despina Phoebe, meaning the Lady of Light or Domina Lucilla in Latin.
17In the same year, King Parthamaspates of Parthia,
18Did give up the ghost.
19The crown of Parthia did befall to his son named Sanatruces,
20As peace between all civilized people did continue,
21Under the Golden Rule of Law,
22For the longest period since the age of the Hyksos.
23In the year known as 149 CE,
24Thirteen hundred and forty nine years since the dawn of the Great Age,
25Marcus Aurelius Cornelius Servus and Domina Lucilla did wed at Athens in Eucadia (Ucadia),
26Before departing to Eboracium Comes Palatinus (York) on Englia.
27Ten months later Annaea Cornelia Faustina also known as Faustina the Younger was born.

17

1In the year known as 151 CE,
2Thirteen hundred and fifty one years since the dawn of the Great Age,
3Major earthquakes did erupt throughout western Anatolia (Turkey),
4Destroying major cities and temples across the region.
5The cities of Smyrna, Samos, Ephesus, Miletus and Pergamum were utterly ruined,
6As Sardia and the island of Rhodes were badly damaged.
7At the same time from Eboracium (York) in Englia, news did come,
8Of the birth of a son for Marcus Aurelius named Lucius Aurelius Cornelius Commodus.
9Many in years to come did see the circumstances surrounding the arrival of Commodus,
10As a dark omen that he somehow be a powerful wizard.
11At the same time King Cuinan (Conan) of Caledonia (Scotland),
12Emperor of the Celts and the great grandson of Jesus (Yahusiah),
13Did give up the ghost.
14The crown of Cruithri and the title of Emperor of the Celts did then befall to his son,
15Whose name was Cuinnwyd (Conrad).
16In Dalmatia a leader did then rise up and call himself Baalmar meaning the "Great Lord",
17Proclaiming that it was by his power and magic the greatest Roman cities in Asia,
18Were crushed and turned to dust.
19In north Africa the mercenary forces of Publius Septimius Aper did rise up,
20And seize control of Leptis Magna and several other cities,
21While Arrius Calpernius Piso as Polycarp did attack and seize the cities of Anatolia,
22Proclaiming it be by his hand alone as a god that the cities were destroyed.
23Emperor Antoninus Augustus Pius did personally lead the legions to confront Piso,
24In Anatolia while Marcus Aurelius did engage his forces against the Septima,
25And Pappas Basileus Herocles of Eucadia (Ucadia) did engage against Baalmar.
26Yet the Scythian land pirates were no match for the legions of the Holly Emperor,
27And Arrius Calpernius Piso as Polycarp was captured and swiftly executed,
28But not before Calpenius Piso as Polycarp did utter a high curse, saying:
29By the blood of all martyrs against the Holly,
30Let the day come when your blood will cease to flow,
31And your name will wither to dust,
32And all you have written shall be forgotten,
33And replaced by those who worship my blood as gods.
34After Calpernius Piso as Polycarp was executed,
35Emperor Antoninus Augustus Pius ordered that any man or woman found possessing writings of Iudaism,
36Or any other text of such falsity and lunacy,
37Were to be executed as an enemy of Heaven and Earth.
38In Africa, Marcus Aurelius did recapture Leptis Magna and push the rebels back,
39And did rout the mercenary army of Publius Septimius Aper killing him.
40Yet his son Publius Septimius Geta did escape by the tradition of the Septima,
41By abandoning the mercenary army and his own father to save his own skin.
42In Dalmatia, Pappas Basileus Herocles of Eucadia (Ucadia) did push Baalmar,
43Into hiding in the mountains and peace was restored.
44Upon the execution of his father, Marcus Calpernius Piso as Ignatius,
45Did rally the people of Smyrna and the region to try and kill the Emperor,
46Saying that only when the great Holly wizards be gone,
47Would the prosperity of the seven cities made rich from slaves and trade return.
48Yet the uprising by the people of Anatolia against the legions did fail,
49After thousands of Roman legionnaires were killed.
50Emperor Antoninus Augustus Pius did then order a decree that henceforth,
51The former cities of Smyrna, Samos, Ephesus, Miletus, Sardis, Rhodes and Pergamum of Anatolia,
52Be forever cursed as the refuge of men and women without honor,
53And people of such utter madness and stupidity,
54That they would rather cut the hand that comes in aid,
55And believe the falsities of the silver tongue that comes to enslave.
56Emperor Antoninus Augustus Pius did then return to Rome and decree,
57Henceforth all forms of slavery be immoral and unlawful and forbidden.

18

1In the year known as 152 CE,
2Thirteen hundred and fifty two years since the dawn of the Great Age,
3The 8th Olympiad of the world was held in Athens,
4As dissent continued to grow across North Africa, Arabia and Egypt,
5As the former slave traders did encourage any and all forms of dissent.
6No greater insanity did exist than the death cult of Marcus Calpernius Piso as Ignatius,
7That continued to attract followers especially among the cursed seven cities of Asia,
8Of Pergamon, Smyrna, Ephesus, Samos, Miletus, Sardis and the island of Rhodes.
9Marcus Calpernius Piso as Ignatius of Smyrna and his followers embraced the ruins,
10Proclaiming their god the Lord of Hosts would reign fire and brimstone,
11Upon the world and all who worshipped Law and Order and Peace and Dignity were doomed,
12For the Lord of Hosts would soon end the world and all who did not reject life,
13And embrace death as mindless slaves obedient to the insanity of a non religion.
14Even after Emperor Antoninus Augustus Pius ordered the cult of Ignatius be a capital crime,
15The willingly stupid and fanatical followers of the false teacher of Piso,
16Did embrace death and celebrate their doom like people suffering fits,
17By singing and mouthing nonsensical phrases as they were led to their executions.
18In the year known as 153 CE,
19Thirteen hundred and fifty three years since the dawn of the Great Age,
20(Flavius Josephus) Valentinus did give up the ghost at the age of 79,
21And Emperor Antoninus Pius did declare a month of mourning.
22In the year known as 154 CE,
23Thirteen hundred and fifty four years since the dawn of the Great Age,
24Upon more attacks by the crazed and fanatical followers of Marcus Calpernius Piso as Ignatius,
25Emperor Antoninus Augustus Pius ordered that ruined western Anatolia be purged of all people,
26And that no longer would the mentally ill and stupid followers of Piso be executed,
27For their madness and stupidity be the gravest of punishment in itself.
28He did then order they be exiled to live in separate ghettos built across Asia,
29And required by law to wear a blue badge in the shape of a Roman "P" as a sign to all the world,
30They be mad with stupidity and ignorance and a danger to themselves and the community,
31Until they be cured of their blind allegience to the false teachings of Piso as Ignatius.
32Marcus Calpernius Piso himself did then first escape to Alexandria with his family.
33Yet upon being discovered he was forced to flee, leaving his son Justinius Calpernius,
34And travelling to the south of France and midst the ruins of Lucifer (Lyons),
35Then changing his name to Irenaeus where he then dedicated himself to a new life mission,
36To write the most awful falsities, profanities and apostacies against Heaven and the Divine,
37To confuse and enslave all too weak of mind to discern or question,
38Proclaiming that one day the faith of the Lord of Hosts and the damnation of the world,
39Will consume all logic and reason and every city and people,
40And like ignorant monkeys, people will pray and rejoice for the day of judgment to come,
41And the complete destruction of the world.

19

1In the year known as 156 CE,
2Thirteen hundred and fifty six years since the dawn of the Great Age,
3The 9th Olympiad of the world was held in Athens,
4And the longest peace in ancient history continued between the empires.
5In the year known as 158 CE,
6Thirteen hundred and fifty eight years since the dawn of the Great Age,
7King Lleyn of Cymri (Wales) did give up the ghost.
8The crown of Wales did befall to his son Lloyd (Lled).
9In the same year, Lucius Septimus Flaccus and the brother of Publius Septimius Geta,
10Did have a son he named Lucius Septimus Tertullianus, also known as Tertullian.
11In the year known as 160 CE,
12Thirteen hundred and sixty years since the dawn of the Great Age,
13The 10th Olympiad of the world was held in Athens,
14And Emperor Aelius Antoninus Cornelius Pius did announce his abdication to his son,
15Marcus Aurelius Cornelius Servus as the new Holly Emperor,
16And descendant of Emperor Jesus and Queen Mariamne and King Tacticus of the Franks,
17And descendant of four lines of Emperors through his mother and father.
18In the year known as 161 CE,
19Thirteen hundred and sixty one years since the dawn of the Great Age,
20There was great flooding across the whole of Europe and Asia,
21As summer rains did not ease, causing rivers to break and crops to be destroyed.
22Riots did erupt across cities of Anatolia and Armenia and Parthia because of shortage of food.
23In the same year, Emperor Aelius Hadrianus Antoninus Cornelius Augustus Pius,
24Did give up the ghost.
25Yet the flooding and disease of Rome was so severe, that Emperor Marcus Aurelius,
26Did order the funeral ceremony to be shortened and conducted at Athens in Eucadia (Ucadia).
27Despite the shorter period of official mourning, all the major emperors and kings of the world,
28Did come to Athens to honor the Holly Emperor.
29Justianus Calpernius Piso also known as Justin Martyr did then depart the ghetto of Alexandria,
30To Armenia where the people were in rebellion. Soon after he became the leader of the rebels,
31Changing his name to Sohaemus and declaring himself savior of the people.
32With King Sanatruces of Parthia at Athens for the funerary ceremonies,
33And before the uprisings in Armenia could be punished,
34The Parthian Kingdom collapsed as city after city rioted to gain the last remaining food stores.
35King Sanatruces of Parthia pleaded with Emperor Marcus Aurelius to come to the aid of his people,
36Despite the crisis of Rome itself because of the floods.
37Yet Marcus Aurelius agreed and called upon King Herodes of Eucadia (Ucadia),
38To be the protector of the people and to hold the powers of the Emperor,
39Whilst Marcus Aurelius accompanied King Sanatruces of Parthia with the Roman legions to Parthia.

20

1In the year known as 161 CE,
2Thirteen hundred and sixty one years since the dawn of the Great Age,
3Emperor Marcus Aurelius Cornelius Servus and King Sanatruces of Parthia did restore order,
4Across the Parthian Empire and in its capital Castela Metropolis (Seleucia).
5Marcus Aurelius did then pledge to the Parthian King the service of the Roman legions,
6To aid in the building of new roads and stores and water to the standards that had saved Rome.
7In response, King Sanatruces of Parthia did then vow that the law of Gnosticism,
8Of the Golden Rule of Law by which all are equal under one law shall be the standard,
9And did pledge the end of slavery and the forbiddence of the false practices of Iudaism,
10Calling upon Emperor Marcus Aurelius to give the world its first united law,
11Beyond the divisions of culture, or war, or skin, or creed or ancient feuds.
12Thus Marcus Aurelius returned to Englia and Eboracium (York) to oversee,
13The completion of the first and true law of democracy, of liberty and rights of justice to all.
14In the year known as 163 CE,
15Thirteen hundred and sixty three years since the dawn of the Great Age,
16Justianus Calpernius Piso as King Sohaemus of Armenia,
17Did have a son he named Adamantius Calpernius Piso as the Origen of a new race of gods,
18Who would rule the world under completely false scriptures and laws that would decree,
19The rights of merchant elite to treat men as slaves and that those doomed by such pirates,
20Were doomed to return as slaves and never be free unless they pledged undying loyalty.
21In celebration of his new son also known as Origen, Justin Martyr as King Sohaemus,
22Did rename the capital of Artaxata as Kaine Polis or the City of Kainites (Knights).

21

1In the year known as 164 CE,
2Thirteen hundred and sixty four years since the dawn of the Great Age,
3Emperor Marcus Aurelius Cornelius Servus did return to Athens to celebrate,
4The 11th Olympiad and the completion of his Civil laws known as the Digesta,
5And his ecclesiastical laws known as the Meditations.
6The Emperor did pronounce the betrothal of his eldest daughter named Annaea Cornelia Faustina,
7To her first cousin Gaius Cornelius Celestius,son of King Cornelius Clemens of the Franks,
8And the betrothal of his cousin Sabina Cornelia Clementia,
9To the Holly Crown Prince Cúirt mac Cúinn of Eire (Ireland).
10Then to the assembled kings, princes and rulers of the world,
11Represented by their finest athletes, artists and minds,
12Marcus Aurelius Cornelius Servus did speak as to the Universal Laws of Mankind, saying:
13At this 11th Olympiad it is fitting we celebrate what is best in humanity,
14And that for a few short weeks, we allow our sight to rise to heaven,
15To briefly cease in our quarreling and that which divides us.
16To remember the extraordinary lives and virtues of our forefathers,
17And to celebrate our greatest achievements as a species.
18Therefore, it is proper we speak of the triumph of the Golden Rule of Law,
19Over the powerful forces of profit, of fear and oppression,
20So that all are truly equal before the law and none are above it.
21And that all forms of slavery and forced servitude now be reprobate and forbidden in law.
22Thus, it is because of this very achievement that I come before you today,
23Not as your Emperor, or a living god or the son of the gods,
24Or even the blood descendant of the Holly king of kings and priest of priests,
25But as your father, your friend and your equal.
26Therefore, let us speak as fraternal brothers and equals,
27Distinguished not by our fortune of birth, or race, or color or creed,
28But by the competency of our skills and the proficiencies of our minds.
29Indeed, let us speak plainly and truthfully that this day be remembered,
30Not for towering rhetoric but the sensibility of reason.
31For many a great teacher and priest has brought forth the wisdom of law,
32And even in some times past men have lived briefly under freedom,
33And even for briefer times in peace and respect,
34Only to be scattered like leaves upon an autumn storm at the signs of impending doom.
35Thus the finest of laws be naught, if there be no deep foundation upon which it may take root,
36Nor even the strength of the Golden Rule of law be sufficient against the artful guile,
37Of the flatterer, the promiser and the liar.
38Verily, even the law (Digesta) I bequeath to the world today,
39May one day be consigned to dust or corrupted beyond logic or reason,
40No matter how many jurists seek to defend it,
41Unless men be told the truth of their circumstance,
42No matter what the cost or the risk of confusion or doubt.
43For a man cannot be truly free if he remains trapped in ignorance as to himself,
44And a man who knows nothing of the truth of existence may be deceived both in life and the afterlife.
45The Holly Priests and Great Prophets of Yeb have understood such paradox,
46Longer than any others throughout each age of the thousands of years of civilizations,
47For they were bred for one purpose above all others to be the priests of priests,
48The connection between this world and the next,
49To be the keepers of the deepest knowledge and to know beyond what should be the knowable.
50Yet such knowledge and breeding did give rise at times to an arrogance against humanity,
51That men be beneath the wisdom of the most ancient priests of the Green Race.
52But some rejected such arrogance and I honor the memory of my ancestor Yahusiah (Jesus),
53As one who sought to reveal the truth of all wisdom to all men.
54Yet the men of his time more than one hundred years ago did not comprehend his message,
55Nor could they distinguish profound wisdom from the artful untruths of the impostors,
56So such words did fall to the ground and much was lost to the ears and eyes of men.
57Thus, I shall not speak to you of the wisdom and brevity of that which is contained in the law,
58For the Golden Rule of Law speaks for itself and all may read hereafter.
59Instead, I shall speak to you of the deepest truth as to whom each of you are,
60That some of what I say be remembered and that men learn the greatest knowledge of humanity.
61Verily, I say to each and every one of you that Life is a Dream, yet a Dream according to Rules,
62That many the finest minds have discovered and yet many more rules are yet to be considered.
63That the only reality is mind, and that the world around you is in a sense an illusion.
64That you are mind and therefore immortal and so can never die.
65That the universal dream is change; and our life is what our thoughts make it.
66That Death is merely a doorway. Death smiles at us all, all a man can do is smile back.
67That what we do now in our minds and lives echoes in eternity.
68That the happiness of your life depends upon the quality of your thoughts.
69That whoever does wrong, wrongs himself; whoever does injustice, does it to himself, making himself ignorant.
70That you have power over your mind - not outside events. Realize this, and you will find strength.
71Verily, even if this knowledge is lost for thousands of years this moment and our existence never ceases.
72It is in this deepest of wisdom we find the key to true emancipation as freedom from all our fears.

22

1In the year known as 165 CE,
2Thirteen hundred and sixty five years since the dawn of the Great Age,
3The Earth did test the limits of men as to the north the lands did cool and dry,
4And across the lands of the inland sea (Mediterranean), the drying did cause great hardship,
5As Hispania lost much of its forests and grasslands and famine and drought gripped Asia and the East,
6With crops and forests lost to fire, to locusts and storms of dust.
7In the ancient lands of the giant Normen (Men of the North), who called their lands Asgardi,
8The cooling and ice caused terrible starvation and bloodshed among the people,
9Between the powerful king Avaldi of the North who sought lands from king Bergi of the south.
10As even the southern lands of Asgardi (Greenland) became impossible to farm,
11The kings did agree to leave their homeland for new lands,
12With king Avaldi and his three sons and tribes of more than one hundred and fifty thousand,
13Sailing west to the new lands they named Valhalli (North America),
14Settling along the east coast.
15King Bergi and his two sons Buri and Boli did travel south and east,
16With King Bergi conquering the island of Aki (Iceland) and making it his capital,
17While Buri did land more than one hundred thousand of his tribes upon Scandinavia (Nordi),
18And Boli did travel east and land his clans of sixty thousand upon the Goti (Goth) lands (Russia).
19Yet Bestia the daughter of king Bergi refused to leave and remained on Asgardi.
20In the same year, Great Holly King Cúinn (Conn) Cétchathach of Eire (Ireland),
21Did give up the ghost.
22The High Kingship of Ireland did then fall to his son,
23Artur (Arthur) mac Cúinn of the Cuilleain and great great grandson of Jesus and Mariamne.
24In the same year, Cúirt mac Cúinn and Sabina Cornelia Clementia,
25Did have a son they named Cúirmac.
26Emperor Marcus Aurelius did then launch his campaign against Calpernius Piso as King Sohaemus,
27And aided by General Marcus Valerius Maximianus, the Romans routed the Armenians,
28And reduced to rubble the city of Kaine Polis, and killing many thousands.
29Yet Justianus Calpernius Piso as King Sohaemus escaped dressed as a woman,
30After ensuring the public spectacle of what appeared to be Roman assassins taking the life of the king.
31Thus, the RomanS considered Piso dead and his subjects believed their king a martyr (Justin Martyr).
32Justianus Calpernius Piso and his son Origen did then travel to Babylon to seek refuge.
33Upon news of the death of his son, Marcus Calpernius Piso as Irenaeus of Lyons did come out of hiding,
34And curse the Holly Emperor for killing his son and vowing that his writings of lies and filth,
35Would last a thousand years and become the foundation of a religion of curses,
36While the truth of the Holly and Marcus Aurelius would be forgotten and destroyed.
37Soon after Marcus Calpernius Piso as Irenaeus of Lyons was also discovered and executed.
38The Emperor then turned his sights upon Baalmar (Ballomar) and the uprisings of the Dalmatian pirates.
39Yet the rise of disease and misery across Asia, Arabia, Syria, Palestine and Parthia, forced a halt.
40In Parthia, the Roman Legions were forced to withdraw as terrible outbreak of the pox,
41Devastated city after city causing even King Sanatruces of Parthia to flee to his Citadel at Rome.
42As more and more people did continue to die from disease and hunger,
43Justianus Calpernius Piso now as the wandering prophet Mani,
44Did declare that Eucadia (Ucadia) be the land of milk and honey,
45And that its waters could cure all ill and there was no disease or hunger or death.
46At first the numbers of refugees coming to Eucadia (Ucadia) was but a trickle.
47Yet soon it became a raging torrent of desperation, forcing old Herodes to close the borders,
48Whereupon Baalmar and his growing army did invade Eucadia (Ucadia) hungry in search of redemption.
49Pappas Basileus Herodes called out to Marcus Aurelius for help to which the Emperor diverted his army,
50And called to Herodes that his brilliant son Hippocrates the Therapeutae devise a cure to the plagues.

23

1In the year known as 166 CE,
2Thirteen hundred and sixty six years since the dawn of the Great Age,
3King Gaius Cornelius Celestius of the Franks and Annaea Cornelia Faustina,
4The daughter of Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius,
5Did have a son they named Aurelius Cornelius Albinus.
6In the same year, Marcus Aurelius did send legions to Eucadia (Ucadia),
7To aid against Baalmar (Ballomar) and the mass of refugees that threatened to strip the lands.
8Hippocrates had already departed to Egypt in search of an ancient cure against the plague
9Yet all his efforts were not enough against the tumult of suffering.
10City after city and town after town was devastated by the pox and plague,
11As people wept amongst the dead and dying with Rome herself losing more than five thousand a day.
12Across Parthia, Syria, Palestine and Asia the plague was even worse,
13As whole cities were desolated to become the hauntings of the dead and carrion.
14In Babylon, Justianus Calpernius Piso as the prophet Mani did witness utter devastation.
15Yet the plague and the pox did not visit his house or son Origen.
16At such a sight, Justianus Calpernius Piso proclaimed to the people he be protected by demons,
17Far more powerful than any of the ancient gods and that the death was a punishment,
18For all who refused to practice the old ways of child sacrifice and blood oaths.
19Instead Mani promised he could save people from the wrath of Satan the lord of hosts,
20If they pledge their undying obedience to him.
21Word quickly spread across the ancient world that a miracle worker called Mani of Babylon,
22Sent by Satan to form a sacred covenant for all who would pledge themselves as the Chosen People.
23Tens of thousands flocked to Babylon to save themselves from the plague,
24In the hope of being saved and to hear of this all powerful demon god.
25There in Babylon, midst tens of thousands of desperate and dying devotees,
26The fraud and impostor Justianus Calpernius Piso as Mani did proclaim:
27Verily, I tell all men the truth that there is no omnipotent God or Divine Creator of Good.
28For if there were, how could such a God permit such evil, if he be not evil himself.
29The Holly priests and prophets have lied to you for centuries when they spoke such stories.
30For there be no salvation in their laws or pretense of honor or justice and rules.
31Rules that keep them as Green Race of Gods among men suffering as slaves and animals.
32No, I tell you the truth that they are responsible for the miseries of this world.
33For they follow the Adamus the man that sought to defy the spirit forces of Satan,
34And rule as Gods for themselves forever.
35If this were not true, then why do they not share their secrets of the ancients of Egypt,
36And the steps of immortality and reincarnation which they keep for themselves.
37They are the worst keepers of secrets.
38Light and Dark, Life and Death, Birth and Rebirth.
39Knowledge is the enemy of life and seeking to reason and questioning is an arrogance against Satan.
40But faith alone in absolute obedience and trust is sufficient to end suffering.
41Therefore, pick up your staff and follow me as the Chosen People of God (Satan).
42And all who defy you and challenge you shall be rendered dust and enslaved as animals.
43Verily I say to you this day that Satan has pledged a new covenant in the blood of our enemies,
44That only the Chosen People be permitted to enslave others. Truly it is our birthright.
45And before Satan comes to judge the world and reward his Chosen people and reap the flesh of the slaves,
46We will control the world as Lords and Masters of all others as ignorant animals.
47Soon the religion of Mani called Mania had spread across Parthia and Asia and Africa,
48As people called Maniacs followed obediently his teachings in the hope of saving themselves.

24

1In the year known as 167 CE,
2Thirteen hundred and sixty seven years since the dawn of the Great Age,
3Hippocrates returned to Athens and Eucadia (Ucadia) from Egypt,
4Bringing with him hundreds of cats which he ordered be freed to roam the city unharmed,
5For Hippocrates did speak that such pestilence that so afflicts the world,
6Be no supernatural force nor punishment of demons or gods,
7But the work of parasites who by their own nature are without reason or self control,
8Or sense or ability to live in harmony with the people, but must consume to excess,
9And procreate and destroy everything around them.
10Yet the solitary cat being the outcast is the perfect match against the rodent,
11That must be hunted down and destroyed because it cannot be redeemed.
12Thus any city that permits such parasites and rodents to roam in its midst is doomed.
13Within only a few weeks the number of sick and dying within Athens halted,
14And Marcus Aurelius ordered that cats be introduced into every city and not to be harmed.
15Thousands of cats were brought to Rome and within weeks the plague ceased.
16Hippocrates did then implore the Emperor issue an imperial edict,
17That never again the practice of such crude and insane practices as Medicine,
18Born from ignorance and secret fraternities that celebrated corrupt knowledge,
19And used such absurdity as Pharma (poisons) and blood letting,
20When Therapeutae priests had proven such barbaric practices did nothing to aid the sick.
21The Emperor agreed and issued an Imperial Edict forbidding the practice of Medicine,
22As a capital crime against Rome and all forms of knowledge and reason,
23And that henceforth any man qualified to heal or tend to the sick was required to make a Solemn Oath.
24The Oath came to be known as the Hippocratic Oath and did say:
25I invoke the favor of the Divine Creator of all Existence and Life,
26And implore the spirits of my ancestors to bear witness to my most solemn oath,
27Upon the names and lives of all my household and all those yet to come,
28That even upon peril against my life I shall not disavow this sacred Covenant:
29First: I pledge that for as long as I shall live, I will be a seeker of truth and a servant to true knowledge; free from any superstition, prejudice, fear or malice; and
30Second: I swear that to the best of my ability, I will protect the dignity of life and will promote wellness above all; and will tend to the needs of the sick and the dying; and
31Third: I pledge to honor the sanctity of trust given to me and I will keep confidence and refrain from pursuing any financial or unfair advantage gained from my position; and
32Fourth: I promise to use logic and reason in all my diagnosis and I will refrain at all cost from cutting or poisoning the body unless it is the only reasonable conclusion to saving a life; and
33Fifth: I vow to keep firm and inviolable this sacred Covenant. May it grant me your favor and good fortune. If I do transgress, I shall be at your mercy; and if I have sworn falsely in bad faith and bad character this day, may you portion to me that which is deserved upon such profanity and disgrace before Heaven and Earth.
34In the same year, the Great Pappas Basileus Hippocrates did have a daughter,
35He named Hippolyta.

25

1In the year known as 168 CE,
2Thirteen hundred and sixty eight years since the dawn of the Great Age,
3As word of the miracles of Hippocrates at saving the world from death did spread,
4The world celebrated the 12th Olympic Games at Athens in Eucadia (Ucadia).
5Justianus Calpernius Piso as Mani became bitter at the success of ending the plague,
6And did everything in his power in the east to perpetuate the fear and misery,
7Causing many to abandon the pseudo religion of Mania and the Maniacs.
8Yet Piso had also built a formidable mercenary army,
9So that King Sanatruces on his return could not gain control of Babylon or the west.
10Marcus Aurelius did then order General Marcus Valerius Maximianus and the legions,
11To crush Baalmar and the Marcomanni in the lands of Dalmatia and Pannonia.
12Yet as General Marcus Valerius Maximianus advanced, the forces of the Marcomanni,
13Aided by the pirate merchants did escape and did capture Aquileia and Patavium,
14As the first invasions of Italy since the time of the Celt revolts.
15General Marcus Valerius Maximianus regained control of Aquileia and Patavium,
16And then split the forces of Baalmar forcing half of his army to retreat,
17While more than 20,000 were then crushed against the Auxillery legions moving north.
18Baalmar did escape to Pannonia and did spend the rest of his days a hunted man.
19In the northern lands of the Rus (Russia),
20The giant Normen of Buri and his sons Odi and Vili did take more land from the Franks,
21With King Gaius Cornelius Celestius calling upon Marcus Aurelius,
22To come to his aid to defeat the Normen giants.
23In the year known as 169 CE,
24Thirteen hundred and sixty nine years since the dawn of the Great Age,
25Hippocrates the son of King Herodes of Eucadia (Ucadia),
26Did have a son he named Heraclites.
27In the year known as 170 CE,
28Thirteen hundred and seventy years since the dawn of the Great Age,
29Pappas Basileus Herodes of Eucadia (Ucadia),
30Did give up the ghost.
31The role of Priest King and protector of paradise,
32And custodian of the kingdom of Heaven on Earth,
33Did befall to his son whose name was Hippocrates.
34In the same year King Gaius Cornelius Celestius and the Romans,
35Pushed the Rus (Norman Giants) of Buri and and his sons Odi and Vili,
36Back from the lands of the Franks.
37In the same year Babylon succeeded in forming a peace treaty with Sanatruces,
38And peace was restored to Parthia.
39In the year known as 171 CE,
40Thirteen hundred and seventy one years since the dawn of the Great Age,
41Domitia Cornelia Lucilla the third child and youngest daughter of Marcus Aurelius,
42Was betrothed to Holly Crown Prince Cuinneach (Kenneth) of the Celts.
43Yet Domitia Cornelia Lucilla refused her father saying if the law be true,
44She be permitted to choose her own destiny and love.
45Marcus Aurelius did reply that indeed no man or Emperor or priest may force the mind of another,
46Yet matrimony was a most solemn responsibility.
47Thus if Domitia Cornelia Lucilla did not wish to be wed, he could not force her,
48But nor could he undo what had already been done.

26

1In the year known as 172 CE,
2Thirteen hundred and seventy two years since the dawn of the Great Age,
3The world celebrated the 13th Olympiad at Athens in Eucadia (Ucadia), as the climate cooled.
4The lands of the Rusi Celtic Giants (Russia), Caledonia and even the north of Eire (Ireland),
5Were now covered in thick snow and ice for most of the year.
6Thanks to the brilliance and wisdom of Pappas Basileus Hippocrates,
7Emperor Marcus Aurelius had succeeded in restoring peace to most of the world,
8Except for North Africa and now Egypt which continued to be influenced by the Septima,
9Who recruited the traitor Gaius Cassius Avidius supported by an African mercenary army of 30,000,
10To rise up and halt the shipments of grain from Egypt and Palestine,
11And thus force Marcus Aurelius to terms thereby enabling the Septima to return.
12The mercenary horde of Gaius Cassius Avidius overwhelmed Egypt and soon seized Palestine,
13Before Marcus Aurelius did call upon General Marcus Valerius Maximianus once more from retirement,
14To defeat a treacherous enemy that sought to hold Rome hostage through the mouths of its people.
15General Marcus Valerius Maximianus restored order in Egypt by routing the mercenaries,
16Forcing Gaius Cassius Avidius and his bloodthirsty son Cassius Dio into Syria.
17Yet the Septima had forseen the weakness of the mercenary army and instead,
18Bribed many of the auxiliaries to fall back in reinforcing Maximianus,
19So that in Syria, Gaius Cassius Avidius had numerical advantage to the cavalry of Maximianus.
20Yet upon the dawn of the day of battle, with the forces of General Marcus Valerius Maximianus,
21Outnumbered more than ten to one, the great general of Rome did speak to his cavalry saying:
22No man be less for fear of the mortal peril he be compelled to face,
23Nor of the arms of death seeking to grip his essence.
24For a true hero be any man who advances toward the veil, despite his fears.
25Yet we are more than blood and flesh and sword,
26For we are truly immortal and can never die.
27The only question is how we meet this day and our destiny.
28For today I am not your general but your brother,
29And so it shall be that we either are victorious together or die together in glory.
30Thus General Marcus Valerius Maximianus and his cavalry rode against Gaius Cassius Avidius,
31And cut the mercenaries to pieces causing the remainder to flee in fear including Cassius Dio.
32Yet Gaius Cassius Avidius did not escape and was executed midst the bodies of the fallen.
33His son Cassius Dio did travel to Babylon to offer his services to Mani,
34Promising that he would use all his skills to rewrite history and corrupt the truth,
35To honor the Piso and to defile Heaven and Earth that had so cursed his House and his father.
36Mani accepted the pledge of Cassius Dio and within a few years,
37Cassius Dio had completed his first work of fiction proclaiming utter absurdities and frauds,
38Against the names of the emperors and even the truth of his own family.

27

1In the year known as 173 CE,
2Thirteen hundred and seventy three years since the dawn of the Great Age,
3Emperor Cuinnwyd (Conrad) of the Celts and King of Caledonia of Englia,
4Did give up the ghost.
5The position of Emperor of the Celts did befall to his son Cuinneach (Kenneth),
6At a time the conditions for Caledonia had become colder and dryer.
7Yet peace held across the Empires of the Celts, the Franks, the Romans and Eucadia (Ucadia).
8In the year known as 176 CE,
9Thirteen hundred and seventy six years since the dawn of the Great Age,
10The world celebrated the 14th Olympic Games at Athens in Eucadia (Ucadia).
11In the year known as 178 CE,
12Thirteen hundred and seventy eight years since the dawn of the Great Age,
13An earthquake did strike the east of the inland sea (Mediterranean),
14Justinianus Calpernius Piso as Mani did proclaim it a sign of the coming end of the world,
15When Sabbaoth would destroy Rome for its iniquity and all who did not follow the Chosen People.
16Quintus Septimus Tertullianus also known as Tertullian did then travel to meet Justianus,
17In the city of Babylon to form an alliance to regain power,
18And to hatch a plan to end the world.
19In Babylon, Justinianus Calpernius Piso did demonstrate to Tertullianus the power of faith,
20Saying: The Septima may have captured the gold of Africa,
21But I (Mani) have seized the souls of men.
22I contend that fanatical religion be more powerful than all the gold in the world.
23Justinianus Calpernius Piso did then order a company of five hundred of his guard,
24As devoted Maniacs to march singing off the walls of the city to their death,
25As Quintus Septimus Tertullianus watched on.
26Tertullian was amazed and declared that with the aid of Piso he would form,
27The most malevolent and perverse religious rituals of history,
28To control the minds of men and cause them to serve as willing beasts.
29Tertullian and Justinianus Calpernius Piso then agreed,
30The best timing be 15th Olympic Games at Athens where they would assassinate Marcus Aurelius,
31And cause war against Rome and Parthia.
32Upon returning to Africa, Tertullianus did send agents to Rome to spread fear and mistrust,
33That the cats be agents of Hippocrates as a wizard eating the flesh of young children.

28

1In the year known as 180 CE,
2Thirteen hundred and eighty years since the dawn of the Great Age,
3Emperor Marcus (Aurelius) Cornelius Servus did celebrate,
4The opening of the 15th Olympic Games at Athens in Eucadia (Ucadia),
5Attended by the finest athletes and poets and the kings of Parthia, Franks and the Celts.
6Marcus Aurelius did then pronounce the betrothal of his son Lucius Cornelius Commodus,
7To Hippolyta the daughter of Hippocrates as a sign of unity between Rome and Eucadia (Ucadia),
8And that when she came of age in three years they would be wed.
9Yet soon after the main feast of kings and emperors,
10The assassins of Justinianus Calpernius Piso dressed as Parthians did strike,
11And Marcus Aurelius did succumb to poison.
12Other agitators of Piso in Athens did demand the head of Sanatruces as a serpent,
13Demanding Parthia be utterly destroyed for such perfidy.
14Upon the murder of Marcus Aurelius, King Sanatruces did abdicate,
15And hand authority to his son Artabanus before ordering his remaining guard be executed,
16As punishment for permitting a traitor among their midst,
17And then travelling in simple clothes to the Citadel of Rome,
18To live the rest of his days as atonement for the death of the man that had saved so many.
19Commodus and Artabanus did then mass legions against the Maniacs and Babylon,
20To wipe from the face of the earth the false religion and insanity of the Piso.
21Yet Justinianus Calpernius Piso as Mani and his son Abram Origen did secretly escape,
22And find refuge in the east at Gor in the Province of Pars.
23Soon after the legions of Rome and the army of Parthia destroyed the Mani kingdom,
24And tore the ancient city of Babylon down to its foundations and killing every living thing,
25Proclaiming that the Whore of Babylon shall never again rise up to threaten the world.
26At the same time in Africa, Lucius Septimius Severus did seize Leptis Magna,
27And the lands of Mauretania, before declaring himself an ally of Commodus,
28And that he would not disrupt the shipment of grain or supplies to Rome,
29Before offering to give all grain and produce without cost for a year,
30As a sign of good faith.

29

1In the year known as 181 CE,
2Thirteen hundred and eighty one years since the dawn of the Great Age,
3Domitia Cornelia Lucilla the third child and youngest daughter of Marcus Aurelius,
4Did finally wed Emperor Cuinneach (Kenneth) of the Celts.
5The following year they did have a son named Cuinel (Connell).
6In the year known as 183 CE,
7Thirteen hundred and eighty three years since the dawn of the Great Age,
8Lucius Septimius Severus continued to supply free food to Rome,
9As the people celebrated their prosperity and attending endless games.
10In the same year, Emperor Lucius (Aurelius) Cornelius Commodus did wed Hippolyta.
11The following year they did have a son,
12They named Marcus Aurelius Cornelius Verus.
13In the year known as 184 CE,
14Thirteen hundred and eighty four years since the dawn of the Great Age,
15The world celebrated the 16th Olympiad at Athens in Eucadia (Ucadia),
16As Commodus did reward the good faith and honor of Lucius Septimius Severus,
17By making him Consul and Legate for Africa.
18In the same year, Emperor Commodus appointed Marcus Atilius Aeditumus,
19As Praetorian Prefect and Protector of Rome,
20While the emperor himself spent his days living in Athens.

30

1In the year known as 188 CE,
2Thirteen hundred and eighty eight years since the dawn of the Great Age,
3Crown Prince Aurelius Cornelius Albinus of the Franks,
4Did have a son he named Aurelius Cornelius Auspicius.
5In the same year, before the commencement of the 17th Olympic Games,
6Marcus Atilius Aeditumus as Praetorian and Protector of Rome,
7Sought to end the dependency and addiction of Rome to the aid of the Septima.
8Yet the Romans who had become addicted to games, waste and superstitions,
9Rose up against the Praetorian and killed Marcus Atilius Aeditumus.
10Commodus did then promise that Rome would continue to receive subsidy,
11And appointed Marcus Aemilius Lepidus as his new Praetorian.
12In the year known as 189 CE,
13Thirteen hundred and eighty nine years since the dawn of the Great Age,
14A giant explosion in the islands of southern lands (Taupo) shook the world,
15Greater than at the time of Thera and the darkness before the Hyksos.
16Within months, the lands of the south were in a deep winter,
17And soon to the north the sun disappeared and the rains stopped,
18And the crops and trees withered and died and snow and ice gripped,
19The sacred isles and the northern lands of Europe and across Asia.
20King Cuinneach (Kenneth) of Caledonia and Emperor of the Celts,
21Did abandon Holly Rood Din Eidyn (Edinburgh) to make his new capital,
22Glastonbury in the lands of the Dumnonni.
23King Gaius Cornelius Celestius of the Franks,
24Did abandon Cologne and travel south west, making Trier his new capital.
25To the far north, the last of the Normen tribes abandoned their home Asgardi,
26And sought refuge in warmer lands to the south (Ukraine & Poland), displacing the Suebi tribes.
27In Parthia, the people began starving and revolted against Artabanus,
28While along the inland sea (Mediterranean), people begged the Septima to sell them precious grain.
29Emperor Lucius Cornelius Commodus demanded that Lucius Septimius Severus release grain,
30Yet Septimus Severus complained that he was not responsible for he had sent grain,
31But Marcus Aemilius Lepidus did not release it to the people.
32Soon after there were riots in Rome and across Italy and Dalmatia,
33As people attacked the stores and seized the grain.
34When the Emperor summonsed Marcus Aemilius Lepidus to account for his actions,
35He did declare that he judged it better some survive the end of the world,
36Than all eat today and starve tomorrow.
37The Emperor did then appoint Lucius Septimius Severus as Protector of Rome and Consul,
38On the pledge that he would aid in the supply of grain and help prevent great starvation.
39Lucius Septimius Severus did at first honor his pledge ensuring grain continued to flow,
40Even as more and more people moved to the cities to seek food and shelter.
41Yet rumors began spreading that the darkness was the cause of the Holly,
42And that Commodus be a black wizard worshipping false gods.
43People began killing the cats in Rome and other cities for fear,
44They be familiars in the service of the Holly as warlocks and Commodus.
45Soon after plague and the pox returned to Rome and cities of Africa,
46And Lucius Septimius Severus left Rome after appointing Publius Helvius Pertinax as his agent.

31

1In the year known as 191 CE,
2Thirteen hundred and ninety one years since the dawn of the Great Age,
3The great darkness continued across the ancient world,
4As now not only were people dying of starvation and cold across Europe,
5But now hundreds of thousands as plague and pox had returned to cities,
6In the absence of cats and reason.
7Only the cities of the Celts and Eucadia (Ucadia) remained free of sickness,
8Such that large numbers sought refuge and sanctuary in the kingdom of heaven on earth.
9Justinianus Calpernius Piso as Mani and his son Abram Origen did emerge from hiding,
10With a new army of fanatics from Gor in the Province of Pars into Parthia.
11Yet the false religion of Mania had evolved beyond pure fear and indoctrination.
12Now those who followed Mani as Maniacs did have a symbol of their devotion to insanity,
13In the symbol of the fish and the fish head and the chevron as the symbols of the Piso.
14Justinianus Calpernius Piso demanded that followers begin wearing woolen headdress,
15Called Kippa to hide their thoughts and minds from the Divine Creator,
16And as an outward sign of devotion to Sabaoth as the Lord of Hosts,
17And that they did dedicate their life to being ignorant slaves and to live like monkeys.
18Justinianus Calpernius Piso as Mani did pronounce: Verily Lord Sabaoth,
19Has brought upon those who teach intellect and reason and serve heaven,
20The end of the world and terrible destruction for their hubris.
21For none shall find love nor wisdom through intellect but through mindless devotion,
22That they pray to spirits they do not know without question,
23That they follow my edicts even unto death and their own misery,
24That they act as sheep till they become as sheep and I their shepherd.
25For white is black, true is lies, good is evil and evil is good.
26Verily, I shall send out an army of preachers who will spread falsities and fear,
27That the people be not able to tell right from wrong, good from bad, truth from lie.
28I say to you, even men who proclaim to be virtuous be prepared to kill for money,
29And turn a blind eye to evil for the safety of a home.
30That women most pure be corrupted into prostitutes and demons to control their men,
31Upon the promise of safety and the fear of losing what little they possess.
32My teachers shall be like wolves in the skins of sheep among the flock,
33And such madness they shall spring forth that the old world shall collapse from within,
34And only the Piso and those that serve with absolute dedication shall rule,
35As gods among such stupid and ignorant animals as mankind.

32

1In the year known as 192 CE,
2Thirteen hundred and ninety two years since the dawn of the Great
3Upon the eve of 18th Olympic Games at Athens in Eucadia (Ucadia),
4As the world did continue to suffer great hunger and fear,
5Lucius Septimius Severus staged a coup against Praetorian Prefect Marcus Aemilius Lepidus,
6Having it appear he had been murdered by mobs in the absence of Lucius Septimius Severus.
7It was Publius Helvius Pertinax then who appeared to capture the perpetrators and restore order.
8Lucius Septimius Severus pleaded with Commodus that he appoint Publius Helvius Pertinax,
9And replace his bodyguards with men that could be trusted for fear of a plot against the Emperor.
10Commodus agreed and Publius Helvius Pertinax and an company of Praetorian loyal to the Septima,
11Did come to Athens on the pretence of protecting the Emperor.
12Yet upon the first night of the Games the new Praetorian Prefect Publius Helvius Pertinax,
13Did murder the Holly Emperor Commodus as well as Empress Hippolyta and their son Verus.
14On the news of such a vile and wicked act the world was in uproar,
15Yet before Publius Helvius Pertinax and his Praetorian could be captured,
16He did escape back to Rome pursued by Heraclites the brother of the slain Hippolyta.
17Safely back behind the walls of Rome, Publius Helvius Pertinax did arrange for the Praetorian,
18To elect him as Emperor proclaiming that the people have the right to choose their own leader,
19And the people had spoken so let no god or spirit defy the will of the people.
20At first the forces of Heraclites did seek to break the gates of Rome to no avail,
21Until Lucius Septimius Severus did declare that he would land in Italy,
22With an army of two hundred thousand and every one guilty of aiding the murderers,
23Shall be held to account and executed.
24Yet the defences of Rome did hold stronger than expected,
25As the residents did fear for their own lives at the hand of Septima,
26Such that he did send for a hundred thousand more reinforcements.
27Yet still the walls of Rome did not fall until Septima did hurl gold coins,
28Into the city and proclaimed that Rome had nothing to fear if they deliver but one head,
29That of Publius Helvius Pertinax.
30Within the hours of the next day the pretent Emperor Helvius Pertinax was dead,
31And the people of Rome surrendered and opened the gates.

33

1In the year known as 193 CE,
2Thirteen hundred and ninety three years since the dawn of the Great Age,
3King Gaius Cornelius Celestius did give up the ghost.
4The Crown of the Franks did befall to his son Aurelius Cornelius Albinus.
5King Aurelius Cornelius Albinus of the Franks did then demand that Lucius Septimius Severus,
6Pledge the loyalty of his legions to Albinus as the lawful and rightful heir,
7And grandson of Marcus Aurelius.
8Yet Lucius Septimus Severus refused, saying the Goddess Cybele as Queen of Heaven,
9And Magna Mater the protector and mother of Rome had ordained him Septimus Severus,
10To be the servant of servants under Quintus Septimus Tertullianus as Pontifex Maximus.
11Quintus Septimus Tertullianus did then arrange a grand procession through Rome,
12Where the people of Rome pledged their souls to Magna Mater the mother of Moloch,
13The true name of Satan to be protected from the plague and further misfortune.
14Thus Lucius Septimius Severus was proclaimed by the adoring people of Rome,
15As their one true Emperor.