Published by: Anno Mundi BooksISBN 13: 978-0-9543922-0-8
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No. 3 Best Selling Book at the Creation Science Movement, April 2006."It is not often that a really good book comes our way, but
Gascoignes Forgotten History is certainly one of them."
full text...
"This book provides a survey of many ancient traditions
from the ancient near east, the classical world and the British Isles."
full text...
"...a picture of our past that is very different than the
one taught in most schools." full
text...
"When I was given this book, I had a difficult time putting
it down... this book is a wonderful accompaniment to other texts and
offers a critical look at obscure texts not often discussed in more
mainstream history books... a roadmap through people and stories of
our roots." full
text...
"This book is an attempt, like some others before it, to survey
ancient mythological texts and compare them to Biblical accounts... it
makes Jonah a lot more understandable..."
full
text...
"...Mike shows that there is only one true history and that is
the history presented in Bible." full
text...
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This book is an attempt to revive the study of history, as it used to be, before it became corrupted by the assumption that early humans were descended from ape-like creatures over a long period of time. Before the time of Darwin and Huxley, most history books started off with a brief statement about creation and the flood, and how the three sons of Noah went to different parts of the world, Shem to Asia, Ham to Africa and Japheth to Europe. Then they would continue the history from that point onwards. A considerable amount of information was available, from non-Biblical sources, and much of it is still available today, although it sometimes requires the retrieval of obscure material from second-hand bookshops and library archives.
My source material has included the Babylonian history, from the fragments that remain of the works of Berosus, and the Greek mythology which is a highly embellished version of early history. After that, I have focused on the history of Britain and Ireland, because this is the part of the world where I live, and it is always easier to research one's own locality.
There has recently been a revival of creationism, as new evidence is continually emerging that contradicts the theory of evolution. I will not go into all this here, but many resources are available, and some of them are referenced from my Creation Science page. I have always believed in creation, not just from a religious perspective, but as the best scientific explanation of the origin of life. However, while reading through some of the latest creationist materials, I came across a book called After the Flood, by Bill Cooper, that was different from all the others. Instead of using science to prove our origins, it looked at the records that were left behind by our ancestors. While this might seem the obvious thing to do, there are very few books available on the subject, compared with the much larger number of books that take the scientific approach.
Having identified an area of neglected research that might be called Creation History instead of Creation Science, I began to look at some of Cooper's source materials, and other sources of ancient history. The result was an accumulation of material that had to be written up.
Preface |
1 |
Ancient and Medieval Sources |
4 |
Chapter 1 - Creation and the Flood |
7 |
Armorica, the Ancient Name of Brittany |
11 |
Ten Kings Before the Flood |
12 |
King Noah |
16 |
Longevity |
17 |
Oannes, the Fish-Man |
18 |
Jonah, the Reluctant Fish-Man |
22 |
The Bishop's Mitre |
23 |
Location of the Ark |
23 |
Mount Ararat |
24 |
Durupinar |
25 |
Urartu and Kurdistan |
25 |
North-West Iran - Sahand or Sabalan |
28 |
Eastern Cudi Dagh |
29 |
Central Cudi Dagh |
30 |
Cudi Dagh Culture Trail |
31 |
Historical Sightings of the Ark |
32 |
What Happened to Noah? |
32 |
Descent from the Ark |
33 |
Was it Plagiarism? |
36 |
Bible from Babylon? |
36 |
Babylon from the Bible? |
36 |
The Greek Story of Creation and the Fall |
37 |
Lamech and his Three Sons |
39 |
Who is Zeus? |
40 |
Chapter 2 - The Early Post-Flood World |
41 |
Gilgamesh |
42 |
The Battle Against Humbaba |
42 |
The Bull of Heaven |
43 |
The Death of Enkidu and the Search for Immortality |
44 |
The Descendants of Noah |
45 |
Additional Children of Noah |
49 |
The Egyptian Osiris and Greek Zeus |
54 |
The Greek Dionysus and Roman Bacchus |
57 |
Castration of Ouranos |
58 |
The Kings After the Flood |
59 |
The Greek Flood Stories |
60 |
The Flood of Atlantis |
60 |
The Flood of Ogygus |
61 |
The Flood of Deucalion |
62 |
From Noah to Dardanus |
64 |
Longevity Within the Greek Mythology |
66 |
Migration of Pre-Flood History to Greek Mythology |
66 |
How to Make a God |
67 |
From Adam to the Welsh and English Monarchies |
67 |
Chapter 3 - Dubious Histories |
69 |
Annius of Viterbo |
69 |
Is Fake History Worth Anything? |
71 |
Lost Works of Berosus |
71 |
History of the World According to Annius and Friends |
72 |
Travels of Noah into Europe |
72 |
Holinshed's Chronicles |
81 |
Fables and Endless Genealogies |
88 |
Chapter 4 - From Dardanus to the Welsh Kings |
91 |
Dardanus to Aeneas |
91 |
The British History from Brutus to Cadwallader |
93 |
Aeneas to Brutus |
94 |
From the Death of Brutus to the Arrival of the Romans |
97 |
From the Roman to the Saxon Invasion |
99 |
From the Saxon Invasion to the Death of Cadwallader |
105 |
Sources of British History |
112 |
Gildas |
113 |
Tysilio |
113 |
Nennius |
115 |
Geoffrey of Monmouth |
116 |
The Good Book of Oxford |
118 |
Polydore Vergil |
119 |
Chapter 5 - Anglo-Saxon Genealogies |
123 |
Anglo-Saxon Descent from Noah |
123 |
Anglo-Saxon Descent from Priam, King of Troy |
126 |
Which One Is Right? |
127 |
Early Saxon History |
127 |
Asgard - The Saxon Troy |
128 |
Babylon II |
130 |
Descendants of Woden |
132 |
Chapter 6 - History of Ireland and Scotland |
133 |
Early History of Ireland |
134 |
The Sons of Miletus |
136 |
British and Irish Histories |
143 |
What is Truth? |
145 |
Common Ground |
146 |
Chapter 7 - Early Christianity in the British Isles |
147 |
To the End of the Earth |
147 |
The Trade Routes |
148 |
The Jews in Britain |
154 |
Glastonbury |
155 |
Jesus and Joseph of Arimathea in Britain |
156 |
Jesus at Glastonbury |
158 |
Joseph in Britain after the Resurrection |
161 |
Date of Joseph's Arrival |
164 |
The Holy Thorn |
167 |
The Holy Grail |
167 |
Antiquity of the British Church |
168 |
Simon Zelotes in Britain |
169 |
The Silurian Royal Family in Rome |
170 |
Aristobulus in Britain |
174 |
The Apostle Paul in Britain |
177 |
Lucius, The First Christian King In All The World |
179 |
Emperor Diocletian and the Persecution of Christians |
181 |
Constantine, the First Christian Emperor |
181 |
The Pelagian Heresy |
183 |
Christianity in Ireland and Scotland |
184 |
Paladius |
184 |
St. Patrick |
185 |
Papal Authority |
185 |
St. Columba |
186 |
St. Augustine |
187 |
St. Aidan |
191 |
The Council of Whitby |
191 |
The Reformation |
192 |
193 | |
The Babylonian Apocalypse |
193 |
Planet-Gazing at Babylon |
197 |
Is There A Message In The Stars? |
198 |
Ragnarok |
200 |
The European Union |
203 |
Twelve Stars of the Madonna |
203 |
A Woman Rides the Beast |
206 |
The Tower of Babel |
210 |
Escaping the Apocalypse |
212 |
Bibliography |
214 |
Index |
223 |
Mike Gascoigne
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