The British

 

 

The British are an entirely different culture to the English.

The British had occupied their own named island from no later than 1400 b.c.e. more likely 3500 b.c.e.

The Island of Britain can easily be translated as the area of Hyperborea.

 

The British had been on their Island for most of those Millennia, absolutely since the Trojan War. Since that is the area the Trojans Evacuated to after they were forced to leave Alba Longa and the City of Samhain Hills. Which was 577 years later conquered by descendants of the same army which conquered Troy.

 

 

The British were a collective and organized culture, which their enemies hated them to the point of needing to both extinct them and erase they ever existed.

 

Their language was of course Gaelic, specifically Manx which is the oldest form of Gaelic.

 

But what is truly startling is the connection between at least three waves of the Egyptians evacuated to Britain from 3000 to 1300 b.c.e; each time that culture did not use their own native language e.g. Hieroglyphics they started to immediately use Gaelic.

But the formal Gaelic on the walls of the Monuments is not every day conversational. Like the language used in Calligraphy is great, but not used for everyday interactions.

The letters used for every day interactions were different.

This concept is similar to that of the Asia languages; Korean, Japanese, and Mandarin. The formal letters and the everyday chatting at least a few decades ago were different.

 

Making a strong argument that Gaelic is a derivative of 1500 b.c.e Heiroglyphics. Fact

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

TR Welling