Lebor Clann Glas


iconGreat Age of Civilizations [2680-2012 BCE]

1

1In the Great Age of the Hound and Young Bull,
2From one thousand, seven hundred and forty cycles of ATUN (SUN),
3And the years that followed (2680 BCE),
4The Civilizations of mankind did prosper.
5Not only by the grace of the gods,
6But their written wisdom.
7Since the rebellion,
8Against the ancient priests of the gods,
9Men had mastered the field.
10Masons had mastered stonework.
11Judges did exact fair rule of law.
12Artisans did make all kinds of wonders,
13And scribes did record all manner of science.
14Story and sacred observance.
15New gods created,
16With their own temples and priests,
17Some being the men of the ancients.
18E-SUS did become more than one god.
19Krishna to some, Jesus to others,
20Jesus Krishna to more,
21Horus to the Aegyptians,
22Zeus to the Greeks.
23Great myths and stories of their births,
24Reflecting the life of men.
25The needs of men,
26Not ancient priests of reason,
27And arrogance.

2

1In the land of the Aegyptus,
2Under the rule of Pharaoh Djoser,
3And the wisdom of blessed Imhotep (IM-HATAP),
4New gods and temples adorned.
5The greatest of the new gods,
6Was Ra, the sun,
7And Imhotep as High Priest,
8Did Preside at a city built for the new god,
9At Heliopolis.
10Never before,
11In the mysteries of man,
12Had the Sun risen above the Moon.
13For all civilizations,
14By the ancient priests,
15Had respected the Moon above all other Gods.
16Now event the lands of Ebla did make EL then sun,
17While YAH and YAHWEH remained the moon.

3

1Imhotep did make a calendar,
2In honor of Ra, the sun God.
3365 days, with the beginning in the Summer,
4Not the winter of the ancient Holly Ones.
5Thus Aegyptus did make themselves,
6Their own gods,
7And men as gods,
8And so hope for all men.

4

1Yet Pharaoh Djoser,
2And his most wise and blessed priest Imhotep,
3Did one more mighty act,
4To shame the ancient priests,
5Of their folly,
6And their High Curse.
7For they commissioned,
8For the new priests of Ra,
9The greatest initiation chambers,
10The world has ever seen,
11Or will ever see.
12Not caves of stone,
13Like the most sacred valley of the Boyne,
14But tributes to the genius of men,
15And the gods they made.

5

1So precise these ancient caves,
2For the living initiates of Ra,
3So massive of scale and perfection,
4They were wonders from the day.
5Imhotep and Djoser did conceive them.
6Their gleaming surfaces so finely finished.
7No mason mark,
8No imperfection, nor groove seen,
9Nor the entrance (concealed) to these wondrous temples.
10The kings of many lands did honor,
11Imhotep and Djoser and their temples,
12Upon the Giza plain.
13So that countless of the best masons,
14Artisans, and mathematicians did come.
15For no better beacon to the age of man,
16By the hands of free men,
17By the will of educated men,
18Not slaves,
19These miracle mountains stand.

6

1In the Great Age of the Hound and Young Bull,
2At two thousand and eighty cycles of ATUN (SUN),
3Past the dawn of the Great Age (2340 BCE),
4The Cuilleain had been abandoned,
5Their singing poems rejected,
6By the greatest civilizations.
7Only sung in the nearby lands,
8In the land of the Britanni,
9The lands of Espain,
10And the sacred Isle itself.
11All but one civilization had kept relations,
12The Great kings of Ebla,
13Did show due respect.
14And all gold and ready made bronze,
15From the earth of the Isle of the gods,
16Did come to Ebla first and no other.
17But for all others,
18Nothing but contempt,
19For ancient prose and priests.

7

1No more were the ancient priests revered as most high,
2Bra(h)mān called no more.
3Instead upon the curse of DON,
4A new title they had become,
5The DRU(V)ID.
6The ones immersed,
7In knowledge (VID/VEDA).
8A title while respect,
9Was no more a god.
10Nor indeed a Holly (holy) man,
11But a wise man,
12A mortal man.

8

1Yet upon these times did come hardship,
2To the lands of the Akkad,
3The lands of the Aegyptus,
4And the lands of the Amurru (Amorites).
5Even the fresh gods Did not help men,
6When famine came to their lands.
7So it was for the Northern cities of the Akkadians.
8Their storehouses empty,
9The well dry.
10Treaties did not stand,
11King Iblul-Il, King of Mari and dark priest,
12Of a city of human sacrifice and darkness,
13Did seize this moment as a sign,
14That their daemon gods had returned.
15He did send his greatest commander,
16Whose name was Enna-Dagan,
17On account of the daemon god worshiped.
18To attack Ebla unprepared,
19With great haste Enna-Dagan did move,
20Until his army was at the walls of Ebla,
21But bringing no supplies for siege,
22And on account of the destruction of the land,
23The men of Enna-Dagan,
24Did fall from thirst and hunger.

9

1But Iblul-Il was a crafty King,
2And had a plan.
3He did order his empty stores and empty yards to be burned.
4He then did send word to Sargon the Great,
5The most powerful leader of the Akkadians.
6That in such troubled times,
7King Ibbi did deliberately attack.
8And try to burn down his capital.
9OF the wicked city of Mari.
10Upon this news,
11Sargon did pitch a rage.
12The might of the Akkadians did rally,
13Upon the walls of the great city of Ebla.
14King Ibbi did call for help,
15But no ally could he find.
16A city of scholars and trades,
17No match for such an army,

10

1But King Ibbi was a crafty King,
2And had a plan.
3As the Akkadians approached,
4He did send his best scribes,
5And most valued scrolls,
6Of all the written languages of the known world,
7Of stories and science,
8Of trade and measure (mathematics),
9To the coastal port.
10There he ordered ships be sailed,
11With these (written) treasures,
12From all the great civilizations,
13To the Isle of the Druids.

11

1As Sargon the Great approached the capital,
2His army the shook the ground.
3Ibbi did offer Sargon an agreement,
4That he may have the city and its stores,
5All its temples and wealth of bronze,
6If he permit the people enough food to eat,
7And allow the city in peace.
8Sargon upon such terms agreed.
9He offered the king safe passage,
10And Sargon the Great did capture Ebla,
11Without blood nor fire, nor one life lost.

12

1King Ibbi,
2The last true King of Ebla,
3Did then take a ship unto the shores,
4To the most sacred Isle,
5Where awaited his offering,
6To the most ancient priests.
7The most senior of the High Council of the Druids,
8Who met King Ibbi,
9Was YO-SAP (Yôsēp/Joseph),
10His names meaning One who reveres learning.
11Since the times of the great curse,
12The High Council had debated,
13How might they restore,
14The ancient respects of man.
15Now upon the arrival,
16Of King Ibbi and his gift,
17The Council still debated.

13

1Ibbi did not bring a single sword,
2Nor spear to the most sacred Isle.
3To do so would be to break,
4A sacred oath to the gods themselves,
5Of thousands more years.
6Instead he did request an audience,
7With the High Council and YO-SAP.
8When he arrived he did find the priests,
9Discussing the contents of the scrolls,
10And the nature of stories and fables,
11Written since the great curse.

14

1Ibbi did wait until the priests did cease,
2As was most ancient custom.
3Then he did proclaim,
4Most ancient and revered Bra(h)mān,
5Most Holy Cuileann,
6I am a King without a land,
7You are the most sacred priests without entry,
8To the very sacred places you founded.
9Together we are united in circumstance.
10Man now writes his own story.
11And many a King knows not whether you,
12Are true or myth,
13Too late to change the writing of men.
14But harness it to better ends,
15Let me stay a while,
16So that I may learn and respect your ways,
17That I may find wisdom to reclaim,
18My throne of Ebla .

15

1As crafty as Ibbi was,
2The priests did not entertain him,
3Without first a plan.
4YO-SAP did thank Ibbi for his gift,
5And did agree to his request to stay,
6On three conditions,
7First, that the most sacred land of the Isle,
8Be priests who reign supreme,
9That no king nor noble may usurp,
10The will of the gods.
11Second, that the most learned scribes of Ebla,
12Did teach the Holly the writings of mankind.
13The Third, that Ibbi respect the rights of the priests,
14Upon conquering the lands once more.
15For this, YO-SAP did say all the riches,
16Of the sacred Isle,
17Be at the command of Ibbi as King.

16

1So it was,
2Ibbi became the first King of the sacred isle.
3In two thousand years.
4Near the sacred Ath Cliath Cuilleain,
5The sacred (holly) hurdled ford (of the river Lilley),
6Ibbi did found a new home and city,
7Called Eblana,
8The new Ebla.
9So it was the most sacred Isle,
10Came to be known as Ibbi-Éri,
11And the name Ibiru,
12The land of Ibbi.

17

1In the Great Age of the Hound and Young Bull,
2At two thousand two hundred and twenty cycles of ATUN,
3Past the dawn of the Great Age (2200 BCE),
4A great calamity befell the ancient lands of the Aegyptus,
5The Akkadians,
6And as far as the Indus.

18

1Great balls of fire and black metal,
2From the gods of the heavens,
3Without warning,
4Did cleave the earth.
5Across the Eastern half,
6Of the Great Inland sea,
7To the east of the River Jordan,
8All was laid to waste.
9To the West,
10All trees were uprooted.
11The ancient and mighty forests of pines,
12Turned to kindling,
13Beautiful lakes turned to salt.
14A Dead Sea,
15Where nothing has lived since.
16Even the southern lands of the Akkadians and the Aegyptians,
17Did not escape the wrath of the old gods.

19

1On the other side of the world,
2The mighty culture of the Aztlan was shook,
3High in the Antis (Andes) Mountains,
4The tribe of Atl had built a city of the gods,
5The Island city of ATL-ANTIS (Atlantis),
6The walls and city and temples were covered with gold, silver and copper.
7And metals that sparkled like red fire.
8The city did gain its wealth.
9Sets of channels and streams of man.
10Unlike anything of ancient times,
11Upon the Lake of the Rectangle (Lake Poopo),
12Great canals 100 ft wide and some as wide as 600 ft,
13Crossed the grain plains.
14Making use of the rains from Heaven in the winter,
15And waters that issued from the earth in summer.
16But in a single night,
17Upon these times,
18The city did sink below the waters,
19A great civilization lost.

20

1Widows and children cried.
2For all the knowledge of man,
3Did not them from the violence.
4Of the most ancient of gods,
5And the great city Ebla,
6Burnt and destroyed.
7Not by man,
8But by the gods themselves.

21

1Darkness, as before,
2Did envelope for three hundred years,
3While the races of men,
4Did fight and war among themselves,
5To survive.
6The descendants of Ibbi,
7The exiled scribes of Ebla,
8And the sacred priests,
9Did form a bond of unity and knowledge,
10Unleashing the power of written wisdom,
11Of science and mathematics.
12Priests did become proficient,
13With but one purpose,
14New inventions,
15For war.

22

1So it was,
2An oath to the gods,
3That no weapons of war,
4May be on the most sacred soil.
5For by design,
6The priests and the scribes,
7Of the land of Ibiru,
8Did devise the most terrible,
9Weapons of battle,
10Waiting for the time to strike.