Wednesday 28 February 2018

Michael Tsarion : The Druids, Culdeans, Gaels and the Creation of Christianity


Part 1


Part 2

The Pharaoh’s Daughter & Queen of the Scots with Ralph Ellis


Round Towers of Ireland, built by the Tuatha De Danaans?




The Round Towers Or The History Of The Tuatha De Danaans by Henry O'Brien (1808-1835) was published in 1834. The book was controversial at the time because O'Brien claimed that the round towers which were a common feature of early Irish Christian monastic sites were in fact built by pre-Christian pagans. According to O'Brien the towers were phallic symbols built by the Tuatha De Danann as part of an ancient cult he linked with ancient Greece, Egypt, India and Buddhism.

The book reviewer's claim its for pseudo-historians, science fiction writers and modern day conspiracy theorist, thats making a big claim when there is no document evidence, that they were built by monks, 

Click for more info...........

Ancient Goldworks found in Ireland



The collection of prehistoric goldwork ranges in date between 2200 BC and 500 BC. Most are pieces of jewellery but the precise function of some is unknown.

Click for more info.....

Dolmen de la Cabana Arqueta Spain

The dolmen has been dated to 4700 - 4500 BCE. Excavations have produced a dagger of silex, beads of steatite and a small one of gold (!).

Click for more info.......

La Cabaña Dolmen (or the Newgrange of Spain?)





La Cabaña Dolmen in Spain

Click for info......

La chabola de la Hechicera Dolmen



La chabola de la Hechicera (in BasqueSorginaren Txabola, "The Witch's Hut") is a dolmen group located in ElvillarÁlava, in the Basque Country in Spain. Three large vertical stones support a large horizontal flat stone. Nine large stones form a chamber in a polygonal shape. The corridor is made of five stones, and is divided into two. The site was probably a funeraryconstruction to hold the remains of the people in the settlement.

Click for more info......

Mysterious Megaliths of the Talaiotic People



Located in the Mediterranean Sea are a set of Spanish islands known as the Balearic Islands. One of those island, Menorca, is home to an impressive collection of megalithic stone monuments called the taulas.
The origin and purpose of the taulas is unknown, although they are the works of prehistoric humans. There have been several theories surrounding the mystery of the taulas, generally focused on religious or astronomical purposes. Some believe they are a religious symbol. Others believe the taulas served as a temple of healing. Finally, there is a theory that the taulas were aligned with the movements of the moon.

Click here for more info......

Contact Form

Name

Email *

Message *