02/99 The Celtic monastic chronicler Gildas (516?570?) wrote "of Christ bringing his light to these islands at the height of http://www.orthodox.clara.net/first_christians_in_britain.htm
Extractions: by Michael Wilson (first in a series of talks on British Orthodox Christianity) There are legends that say that Our Saviour Christ himself lived and walked in our land around the area of Glastonbury, Somerset and Cornwall. Most of us are familiar with Parry's setting of Blake's poem "Jerusalem". These legends are connected with the historical fact that the South West of England was one of the few sources of tin in the ancient world with which the Phoenicians traded. In 445 BC Herodotos spoke of Britain as "Cassiterides" the Tin Islands. Others mention the same trade and that Solomon's temple was ornamented with plates of tin from Britain. So, from early times, trade and cultural links existed between Britain and Phoenicia the area north and west of Galilee. Glastonbury was itself a port at this time, the sea now having retreated back. Even as late as the So from the archaeological evidence it appears Christianity had evidently moved ahead socially as well as geographically. When St. Alban was martyred at Verulanium, the present St. Albans in 209 AD under the Severian persecution, Tertullian of Carthage noted in his writings (as did Origen in the 3
Extractions: Tempo richiesto : 0.07 secondi Documenti artu ...il sito " History, Historians and Historiography " mette a disposizione il testo del " De Excidio Britanniae et Conquestu " di Gildas, della " Historia Brittonum " di Nennio e della " Historia Regum... Url : erewhon.ticonuno.it/arch/rivi/narrare/artu/artu3.htm Data Dimensione : 7 Kbytes Il luoghi del Graal ...il Vangelo. Questo veniva confermato molto prima dal cronista Gildas III (516-570) nel De Excidio Britanniae , dove egli affermava che i precetti del cristianesimo furono portati in Britannia negli ultimi... Url : www.geocities.com/Athens/Delphi/3636/luoghi.htm
The History Of Jesus Christ : Annex 4 : Glastonbury The British historian Gildas (516?570? AD) wrote that Christ was livingin Avalon during the reign of Tiberius Caesar who died in 37 AD. http://www.nullens.org/jesus/annexes/jch_anx4.htm
Extractions: Current location: Annex 4: Glastonbury By tradition Glastonbury has been associated with King Arthur whose wife, Guinevere, was kidnapped by Melwas, King of Summer Land or Somerset, who imprisoned her in his castle on the Tor. Arthur rescued her with his army. A mysterious cauldron or Grail is part of the Celtic mythology. This object later on was linked to Christ and the Last Supper. Joseph of Arimathea, who buried Jesus, received the Holy Grail as a memento of Him. Later on, the legend tells us that he brought it to Glastonbury and buried it on Chalice Hill, probably near Chalice Well. Medieval tradition is filled with the quest for the Holy Grail by King Arthur and his Knights. In Somerset many people still believe that Joseph of Arimathea and the boy Jesus built Glastonbury's first church on the present site of the Lady Chapel in honour of the Virgin Mary. Glastonbury became the first home of the Marian cult in Britain in about 500 AD.
« De Excidio Britanniae » In AnnoMille, Il Medioevo In Un Click Translate this page Questo veniva confermato molto prima dal cronista Gildas III (516?-570?) nel De ExcidioBritanniae, dove egli affermava che i precetti del cristianesimo furono http://www.annomille.it/web.php/3100000008/de excidio britanniae.htm
Extractions: Tempo richiesto : 0.07 secondi Documenti artu ...il sito " History, Historians and Historiography " mette a disposizione il testo del " De Excidio Britanniae et Conquestu " di Gildas, della " Historia Brittonum " di Nennio e della " Historia Regum... Url : erewhon.ticonuno.it/arch/rivi/narrare/artu/artu3.htm Data Dimensione : 7 Kbytes Il luoghi del Graal ...il Vangelo. Questo veniva confermato molto prima dal cronista Gildas III (516-570) nel De Excidio Britanniae , dove egli affermava che i precetti del cristianesimo furono portati in Britannia negli ultimi... Url : www.geocities.com/Athens/Delphi/3636/luoghi.htm
Sanctuary By Gildas Badonicus, the earliest known British historian ( 516?570? AD), Josephof Arimathea was referred to as nobilus decurio which is similar to the http://www.sanctuaryofprayer.com/answers5.html
Extractions: Where was Jesus during the "lost" years...and is there a connection between that...and Joseph of Arimathea...and the Shroud of Turin? These answers would become a book, but we will give a brief synopsis here, based on Bible facts, a legend (more fact than fiction)...and actual historical documents. First we must establish that the wealthy Joseph of Arimathea (present day Ramallah in Israel) was, in fact, great uncle to Jesus. Joseph of Arimathea is described in the Bible as a counsellor a good man ...and a just ...who, concerning Jesus' death sentence, " had not consented to the counsel and deed of them " ( the Sanhedrin...of which he was a member). He was also, secretly, a disciple of Jesus . After the Crucifixion, when evening had come, Joseph went to Pontius Pilate and begged the body of Jesus , though Mark 15: 43 states that he " went in boldly unto Pilate ". Then
Index of A Savoyard Gildas (516?570?) On The Ruin of Britain (De ExcidioBritanniae) Gilman, Charlotte Perkins (1860-1935) Herland Our http://www.changanyouth.xahu.edu.cn/pages/novel/G/
Glastonbury's History: Good King Lucius Geoffrey of Monmouth tells us that Gildas (AD 516?570?) recorded the names and actsof these missionaries in a book now lost, The Victory of Aurelius Ambrosius. http://www.isleofavalon.co.uk/history/h-lucius.html
Extractions: St. Joseph's little circle of twelve disciples was kept going by anchorites - as one died another was appointed; but in course of time a certain slackness seems to have come over them. William of Malmesbury tells us that the holy spot at length became a covert of wild beasts. Then in the days of Good King Lucius aforesaid came a revival. Llewrug Mawr, Llewrug the Great (grandson of Saint Cyllinus and great-grandson of Caractacus), nicknamed Lleiver Mawr or the great luminary (hence his latinised name of Lux or Lucius), was king in Britain in the middle and towards the end of the 2nd century. He increased the Light that the first missionaries, the disciples of Christ, had brought, by sending emissaries to Eleutherius, Bishop of Rome, requesting him to send missionaries to Britain. The Welsh Triads tell us that Eleutherius, in response, sent Dyfan and Fagan, Medwy and Elfan,' all of them British names, in AD 167. [FOOTNOTE: Monkish historians say that Elfan was the second Bishop of London. (Theanus, who died AD 185, was the first Bishop of London.) The Latin Book of Llandaff says that he was consecrated Bishop at the time of his mission to Rome. Welsh authorities say that he presided over a congregation of Christians at Glastonbury (Ivide/I Rev. Rice Rees's
Glastonbury Abbey Gildas, the British historian (AD 516?570?) says Meanwhile, these islands receivedthe beams of light - that is, the Holy precepts of Christ, the true Sun http://www.ensignmessage.com/archives/glaston.html
Extractions: GLASTONBURY ABBEY G LASTONBURY ABBEY occupies what is believed to be the site of the first Christian Church building in the world. The original church was built of wattles, and its size was probably the same as the Tabernacle in the Wilderness. Eusebius (A.D. 260-340), Bishop of Caesarea and the Father of Church History after the sacred Canon closed, says: "The Apostles passed beyond the Ocean to, the Isles called the Britannic Isles." Gildas, the British historian (A.D. 516-570) says: " Meanwhile, these islands received the beams of light - that is, the Holy precepts of Christ, the true Sun - at the latter part, as we know, of the reign of Tiberius Caesar." 'As we know' seems to refer to a generally accepted knowledge. This date would be at the latest A.D. 37, some four years after the Crucifixion. This fits in with the decision of the Councils of Basle, Pisa and Constance that the British Bishops took precedence of the French and Spanish because Our Church was founded immediately after the Passion of Christ. There is an ancient MS. in the Vatican which states that St Joseph, Lazarus, Mary and Martha, and others were put into a boat off the Levant and that they landed at Marseilles in A.D. 35.
New Page 1 contemporary, Home, Sixth Century, TEXTS The ruin of Britain. c.516?570? Gildas. Preface. The History of Britain. ARTWORK (NONE).Site http://jrider.web.wesleyan.edu/wescourses/2001f/fren234/01/500.htm
General Resources: Virtual Libraries from memory; John Lawson, New Voyage to Carolina; Gildas (c 516?570?),On The Ruin of Britain (De Excidio Britanniae); Francis Parkman http://www.york.ac.uk/depts/hist/library/internet/general/virtual.shtml
Extractions: Richard de Bury (1287-1345) Philobiblon (Love of Books) Augsburg Confession, 1530 Thomas Huxley, Autobiography and Selected Essays Andrew Dickson White, Autobiography Benjamin Franklin, Autobiography Charles Darwin, Autobiography John of Damascus, Barlaam and Ioasaph Henry Ossian Flipper, The Colored Cadet at West Point.[autobiography] Arthur Ransome, The Crisis in Russia Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy In America Gerald of Wales, The Description of Wales
Elektroninen Kirjasto: G Gilbert, William S. The Complete Plays of Gilbert and Sullivan (txt; 1.2MB). Gildas (Gildius Viisas, n. 516?570?) The Ruin of Britain, n. 540. http://www.utu.fi/hum/historia/kirjasto/g.html
Weston Super Mare. Steep Holm. The Island In The Channel There is a link though with the monk and historian Gildas (aprox 516?570?) who issupposed to have stayed on two islands between the Welsh and English coasts. http://www.lala-land.fsnet.co.uk/westondatabase/menu/steepholm.htm
Extractions: And never go too fine."' Jeofail i.e. J'ai failli Lapsus sum I have failed), an omission or oversight in a law proceeding. There are several statutes of Jeofail for the remedy of slips or mistakes. Jeopardy (3 syl.). Hazard, danger. Tyrwhitt says it is the French jeu parti and Froissart uses the phrase, " " (vol. i. c. 234). Jeu parti is a game where the chances are exactly balanced, hence a critical state. Jereed A javelin with which the Easterns exercise. (Turkish and Arabic.) Jeremiad (4 syl.). A pitiful tale a tale of woe to produce compassion; so called from the "Lamentations" of the prophet Jeremiah. Jeremiah derived from "Cucumber." The joke is this: King Jeremiah = Jere'-king, contracted in Jer'-kin', or gher-kin, and gherkin is a young cucumber.
Chapter Jellyby to Jeremy Diddler Of J By Brewer's Readers Handbook Jeremiah (The British), Gildas, author of De Exidio Britanniæ, a book of lamentationsover the destruction of Britain. He is so called by Gibbon (516?570?). http://www.bibliomania.com/2/3/174/1120/14770/3.html
Extractions: Hamlet: O Jeptha, judge of Israel, what a treasure hadst thou! Polonius: What [ a ] treasure had he, my lord? Hamlet: Polonius: If you call me Jeptha, my lord, I have a daughter, that I love passing well. Hamlet: Nay, that follows not. Polonius: What follows then, my lord? Hamlet: As by lot, God wot Have you not heard these many years ago, Jepson Old Sir W. Scott: Redgauntlet (time, George III.). Jeremiah The British ), Gildas, author of , a book of lamentations over the destruction of Britain. He is so called by Gibbon (516-570). Jeremy Master Sir W. Scott: Peveril of the Peak (time, Charles II.). Jeremy Diddler Kenney: Raising the Wind Previous chapter page Back Home ... Discuss Next chapter FAQ for more details.
The Need Of The Anglo Israel Truth - By Dr. Mordecai F. Ham son, afforded His light, the knowledge of His precepts, to our Island in the lastyear of the reign of Tiberius Caesar. Gildas (516?570? AD) British Historian. http://www.truthinhistory.org/ham.htm
Extractions: INTRODUCTION D uring times of national turmoil, God always raises up men of equal strength and courage to meet the demands of the time. One such time was the first half of the 20 th century and one such man was Mordecai Fowler Ham. He was born on April 2, 1877 in Scottsville, Kentucky, into the home of a seventh generation Baptist preacher. He attended Ogden College in Bowling Green and took private tutoring lessons in law, but was too young to take the bar exam. After college he worked as a traveling salesman for a grocery company and a Chicago photo enlarging firm. Even as a young boy, he always had a consciousness of and a firm belief in the Lord Jesus Christ. While in business, he began to feel the call of God to preach the Gospel. In July 1900, just before he gave up his secular career and entered the ministry, he married Bessie Simmons. He preached his first sermon one week later. From his first revival at the Mt. Gilead Baptist Church in 1901, he entered an evangelistic ministry that would impact the lives of millions of Americans. Rev. Ham held revival meetings across the nation which were attended by thousands. He was well known for his boldness in the pulpit when preaching against both individual sins and public corruption. He would single out the most well known sinners in town for his personal evangelism. Throughout his preaching career he endured much opposition, receiving threats, bodily assaults and police arrests.
Keltic Trilogy / Cairn crossed from Brittany (Armoric) to Great Britain , as was recorded by eminent churchmens(ie Gildas III in De Excidio Britanniae AD 516?570?, Eusebius, Bishop http://users.skynet.be/keltic/edit03.html
Sherlock Holmes Pastiche Characters - G Trow) 188. Gildas (British Monk Historian, 516?570?) Sherlock Holmes The Devil's Grail (Barrie Roberts) 118. Giles, St. St. Giles http://www.schoolandholmes.com/charactersg.html
Extractions: G IN SHERLOCKIAN PASTICHES A B C D ... HOME A heading in Red indicates that the character appears in, or is important to, the story. Titles in regular type are those in which the character appears. Titles in italics indicate that the character is merely mentioned. Page numbers indicate the page on which the character appears or is mentioned. Where no page numbers are given it should be assumed that the character is present throughout the story. Click on these links for publication details of novels short stories , and children's stories indexed so far. G-, Monsieur
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Joseph Of Arimathea This was confirmed much earlier by the chronicler Gildas III (516?570?), whose DeExcidio Britanniae stated that the precepts of Christianity were carried to http://www.geocities.com/laverite_99/JosephofA1.htm