دانلود کتاب The Five Races of Europe
by PILE, George
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عنوان فارسی: پنج مسابقه از اروپا |
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جزییات کتاب
This is PDF version 2, scanned from a reprint by Sons of Liberty, Hollywood, Calif., [196-?].
See also HARVEY, John Hooper: The Heritage of Britain (1940).
"In another line of tradition, namely the more familiar Genesis of the Old Testament, Ar-Thor--or Adar as he is also named in the Edda--and his queen Gun-Ifo (Gweneva) and his son Gan or Kan who succeeded him as the second Sumerian emperor, are known to us as Adam, Eve and Cain. There the serpent cult which Adam-Thor suppressed appears in the person of Satan, and it is significant that the British bard Cadmon, probably aware of the Edda version, rewrote Genesis in which he depicted Adam as killing the snake.
Nowhere in all these parallel versions except in Genesis is Abel a brother of Cain. On the contrary, he is the mortal enemy of the Goths, and the leader of the human-sacrificing serpent-worshippers, and the successor of his father Satan or Wotan. Abel is Loki in the Eddas, the Green Man of the Arthurian Legend and the Baal or Bal of the primitive religions. All versions agree as to the killing of Bal by Cain, and the name Tu-Bal-Cain means Cain-killer-of-Bal. Our rediscovered history identifies Tu-Bal-Cain with Cain and with Gan, the second Sumerian king. It shows his killing of Bal as the final act in establishing the ascendancy of Adam-Tor and his Goths over the serpent worshipping, human-sacrificing aborigines of Chaldea. And again, nowhere outside the Biblical version is this act depicted as murder but as taking place in open battle."
--p43