MOORS OF THE HIGHLANDS ....MY RACE IS ROYAL Gaelic - TopicsExpress



          

MOORS OF THE HIGHLANDS ....MY RACE IS ROYAL Gaelic Name: MacGrioghair Motto: ‘S rioghal mo dhream (My Race is Royal) Muir, Mures, Moor, More, Mohr, Mor, Moore, Morris, Mu, Muur, Moray, Murray, Moesia… No matter how you say it (or spell it), IT’s A Moor! While at the library, I had to write my so-called name to view a video on the Vikings*. I crossed out the pre-printed NAME: on the paper and wrote in TITLE: (denoting my Heritage). We all know a Name is a Christian appellation. (sui juris, is the Christian appellation or the legal name of a US Citizen.) As I wrote my I AM, I customarily place MOOR in brackets, just to ensure we are all clear on Who and What I AM. However, this time my hand wrote, MUIR. I didn’t think much of it as I know it is another variation of Moor. However a week later I was still wondering why did I write it in such a style.(*Sidenote: I am currently researching Viking History and Moorish Mystery.) The Discovery: a quick search and I was able to find some quite impressive things. Note: Terms such as Myth, Mystery, Ancient, Gaelic, Ancient/ Old Celtic, MAN (as in the Isle of Mann), Earls, Knights, Stewart, Stuart… are talking about the Moor’s of the North, Highlands of Scotland, as well as Ireland. Historical Note: The Gaelic people;ethno-linquistic group (Ethnology) traditionally predominant in Ireland, the Scottish Highlands, and the Isle of Man. Ancient Origins of Scotland: The ancient origins of Scotland is attributed to a story that says the ancient scoti (scot) people moved from Egypt with a Egyptian Princess named Scota, to whom the name is derived (as well as Nova Scotia). They moved from Spain*, to Ireland than Scotland; formed the Gaelic Kingdom of Dal Riata, known as a small group of elites denoting their royal heritage, who traveled with a powerful army. WALTER Bower wrote his compendium of Scottish history, Scotichronicon, in the 1440s. According to Bower, the Scottish people were not an amalgam of Picts, Scots and other European peoples, but were in fact Egyptians, who could trace their ancestry directly back to a pharaoh’s daughter and her husband, an Ancient Greek King. (Sidenote: Remember, Ancient Greeks were, in fact, the Etruscans. There is debate whether Greek History, as taught in Universities, ever existed. See information on Martin Barnal and his work, Black Athena.) The Queen’s name was Scota – from where comes the name Scotland. The Greek King is said to be Gaythelos – hence Gaelic, and their son was known as Hiber – which gives us Hibernia. Bower was not the first to propose this lineage for the Scots. The story goes back further and was even included in The Declaration of Arbroath. This seminal document – written in 1320 by the Barons and noblemen of Scotland – was a letter imploring the Pope to intervene on their behalf during the Wars of Independence. The text refers to “the ancients” who “journeyed from Greater Scythia … and the Pillars of Hercules … to their home in the west where they still live today”. According to tradition, this royal family was expelled from Egypt during a time of great uprising. They sailed west, settling initially in Spain before travelling to Ireland and then on to the west coast of Scotland. This same race of people eventually battled and triumphed over the Picts to become the Scots – the people who united this country. Egyptian influence was found in Tara, Ireland, when an ancient stone-age burial chamber, known as the ‘Mound of Hostages’ was excavated in 1955. The mound itself is Neolithic (c.3000B.C.), the remains of a much later Bronze Age inhumation were discovered, and turned out to be that of an 18-year-old youth who was buried wearing a necklace of Egyptian ‘Faience’ beads. These beads were found to be of genuine Egyptian origin, and unknown in Northern Europe. The skeleton was carbon dated to c. 1350 B.C; around the time that Scota and her husband are supposed to have fled Egypt. (*These Ancient Scots brought with them the Celtic (Gaelic) language. There are also regions in France and other parts of Europe (before the complete removal) of people called the Ancient Gauls; that spoke Celtic languages and lived a Celtic ways of life. Nowadays, the popular nickname Gaulois, “Gaulish people”, is very often used to mean ‘French-Stock people’ to make the difference with the descendants of foreigners in France.) The Scottish Declaration of Independence: Declaration of Arbroath: The Declaration of Arbroath The Declaration of Arbroath was sent to the Pope in 1320, six years after the battle of Bannockburn. King Edward II had refused to make peace with Scotland and the Pope had not recognised Robert the Bruce as King of Scotland. This letter (which later became the Scottish Declaration) asserts that the Scots who had the “Stone of Destiny” (“Lia Fail”) were connected with the ancient people Egypt. Robert the Bruce, outline the Scots history and royal bloodline, claim ancestry to ancient egypt. Tells of the royal ancient Egyptians who dwelt in Spain for a time (during an exodus); who eventually settled the Islands (Scotland, Ireland, Ise of Mann, Hibernia) and have remained in those parts (and expand North) through an unbroken lineage. youtube/watch?v=t-FWzSoG-i4
Posted on: Wed, 22 Oct 2014 18:45:58 +0000

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