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  • Still one of my favorite videos!!

  • @Nemeton212

    Thank you x

  • The Culdees initially lived in caves or beehive cells. They were Gnostics, teachers and healers and practised meditation.

    They are alleged to be Essenes, who escaped from threats to their way of life in the Middle East. They carried with them secret, sacred knowledge, which they passed on to their members. Like the Druids, they believed in reincarnation and an evolving soul. They moved through Europe (some settling in France), into Ireland and from there to Scotland

  • @Taranis223 Excellent commnet....I have friends from the old hauting grounds of the silures......curly haired and dark also slightly tanned skin some of them although more mixing over years

  • Certainly not on the female/maternal line.

    Odysesseus and the sea peoples on google books explains it a bit.

  • "It’s surprising to learn that the highest level of Rh- in any region of the world is in the Karaites people of Iraq with 53 per cent of the Rh-negative Cde complex. 50% of the Basque population is Rh-negative. The next highest levels are in Wales and Scotland. The Karaites are actually a Jewish sect that rarely inter marry outside their own blood lines".

  • @greenmagoos This makes a lot of sense, when you consider Scythian and Galaecian links to the Celts and the Picts, the last part I'm not sure about but I have a lot of reading to do concerning Jews and the Indo-Europeans :)

  • @KhanOmizu

    "I was sent only to the lost sheep of the house of Israel." (Matthew 15:24)

    The Culdees in Scotland

    Records tell of a form of Christianity in the location now known as Scotland from around 37AD. The Culdees, who date from 37AD, appear to have settled in, or close to, an existing holy/power site. Many Mediaeval chapel locations often coincide with older Culdee church sites which themselves were built on earlier Druidic/pagan sites.

    

  • pTYDRl-UkmA

  • Historical & Spiritual Destiny of British Isles

    watch?v=oVPmT6jbR3k

    watch?v=YUlLo5Jxo_0

  • @greenmagoos LOL I have a wikipedia account; I could rewrite that whole page on Huns if you like ? I have no idea what you are babbling about regarding celtic dna

  • @greenmagoos You appear to be confusing the terms 'attack' 'subjugate' and 'empire' with the term 'settle' - That isn't wise. The Huns over-ran Europe and they settled some of the lands nearest to them, ie slavic Russia where you can clearly see the Asian influence. However, they didn't 'settle' Germany. In fact Germany became home to many Nordic refugees such as the Alans and ultimately it was the Germans who took Europe back from the huns after Atillas death.

  • @TheHyperboreanzenith

    I know its not predominately nordic but I'm also aware that are a lot of stupid racists out there that still have an idiotic notion about nordic nazi superiority-

    Look at some of the numbskulls on here that uploaded videos after Tuts supposed dna result.

    One of them then uploaded a video about anglo-saxons butchering red indians. What a hun moron

  • Comment removed

  • @Eadailteach

    What outrageous opinion? Not a great deal of experience. I spent a few days in Callanish staying at my mates house in the village. What exactly is the problem? . I don't speak Gaelic. I was raised in Glasgow. My mother is from Islay. Spent plenty of time there.

  • Comment removed

  • @Eadailteach

    What sweeping statement? Do you come fropm Lewis? Have you been on Islay?

    I'm from the east end of glasgow and like noising nazis up. I've seen plenty of war memorials all over Scotland. Another good friend on mine came from Lewis,

  • @Eadailteach

    When did I ever say people on Lewis were nazi's? Is that what you implying?

  • Yes I was able to find quite a few articles there googleling 'Hyperborean nazi' and 'Madame Blavatsky nazi' which suggested both the concept of Hyperborean and Madame Blavatsky were influences on Nazi occultism.

  • @TheHyperboreanzenith

    Adolf chief of the nazi huns was a fan of Madame Blavatsky as well

  • @TheHyperboreanzenith

    Yes I read where it originated from. I also clocked the name Madame Blavatsky and decided it was the sort of rubbish the nazis believed in.

  • @greenmagoos You didn't also 'clock' the notion that Callanish is the fabled Hyperborea ?

  • @nags2bitches

    Is it? What just the isle of Lewis?

  • @nags2bitches

    I've still to clock you admitting the 'huns' invaded and settled what is now modern Germany in the same approx time frame as the anglo-saxons-lol

  • @greenmagoos Because they didn't

  • @nags2bitches

    Clock this- Hunting the Hun.

    watch?v=JOVNr9cn-Q8

    Wherever did they get the idea of referring to Germans as huns from?

  • @greenmagoos Because they over-ran Europe as a horde, just as the Asian Huns had done. Genetically they are not related.

  • Comment removed

  • @TheHyperboreanzenith

    I'm not saying you are wrong or correct . I am merely pointing out that perhaps you are creating 'scenarios' to explain legends because you have got involved with debating Afro-centrics.

  • @TheHyperboreanzenith

    I have no idea. He is reporting on the legend that black men sailed into Callnish with high priests and erected the stones up there. There are several aricles on line that repeat the legend and another author proposed that if it wasn't actually black skinned men it could be possibly black haired irishmen

  • @TheHyperboreanzenith

    There is nothing you are claiming that is making any sense to me apart from you appear to have got yourself involved with arguing with Afro-centrics. The comparison that author made was with Quetzalcoatl. A character from the other side of the atlantic. Nothing to do with Egypt or blue dye paints.

  • @TheHyperboreanzenith

    But the legend doesn't state anything whatsoever about people painting themselves blue or it might possibly have said 'blue men' sailed in.

  • @greenmagoos and yet 'pict' means painted/tatooed from the habit of using woad- a blue dye.

  • @nags2bitches

    Did the romans describe the picts as being 'black men' because they used a blue dye?

  • @greenmagoos .Eer heard of the Blue Men of the Minch, that haunted the dangerous waters?

  • @TheHyperboreanzenith

    But you are now proposing things that could be total nonesense to try and explain a legend that clearly states 'black men'. The only other explanation I've seen for the term 'black men' is tribes came from Ireland with 'black hair' to erect them and that again disputes what you just claimed that white skinned irishmen with fair hair put them up.

  • @TheHyperboreanzenith

    "The priests wore cloaks of colored feathers and the chief priest always appeared with wrens flying by him. (Otta Swire, The Outer Hebrides and Their Legends.) This story makes one think of those surrounding Quetzalcoatl, the god-priest of the Toltecs, whose name means "feathered serpent," serpent being a universal symbol for a wise one or initiate."

  • @TheHyperboreanzenith

    "Who were the builders? History has no answer. Legend has it that the stones were brought to Lewis in many ships. They were accompanied by a great priest-king, lesser priests, and a gang of "black men" who set up the stones. When the building was complete the "black men" and some of the priests sailed away, while the great priest and his remaining assistants established a cult at the stones."

  • @greenmagoos .Dark-haired men from the west of Europe. Iberians. Megalithic culture flowed up the Atlantic seaboard. hence the huge amounts of Y-dna R1b from there through Britain/Ireland. Also on Lewis there is a big cluster of mtdna T2 (the female side) with signature 304, probably seaborn and neolithic, arriving from the same western coasts but with an roots in northen Italy and originally from Mesopotamia.

  • @TheHyperboreanzenith

    Well according to legend 'black men' raised Callanish and they sailed in with a high priest who wore a multicoloured garment and had a flock of birds following him around.

    Black men could either mean black skin or hair according to experts.

  • @TheHyperboreanzenith

    Who described them? Romans? According to them they were battleling with red haired folk with long limbs Scots.

    Thats the only description we have of picts or caledonni.

  • @TheHyperboreanzenith

    According to wiki-

    35% of basques are rhesus negative- 65% are rh+ with 60% with the recessive gene.

    Other europeans- 16% rh- , 84% rh+ , 40% have the recessive gene

    Ireland has 47% group 0+ , 8% 0- with another 8% rh- a,b,ab

    UK- 37% 0+, 7% 0- , another 10% rh- a,b,ab

  • @TheHyperboreanzenith

    Well percentage wise among a select group of people it was supposedly a sect of iraqi jews who had the highest concentration because they refused to marry outside their clan. A lot of europeans have traces of the blood because its a recessive gene and positive is more dominant. The more east you go among asian populations the more it tails off.

  • @TheHyperboreanzenith

    Blood type O or Zero means none of the major blood group antigens A and B are attached to the surface of the red blood cell.

    "Mayans, Incas and Auracanians are all virtually 100% group O, with 5-20% of the population being rhesus negative."

    You may as well argue that the rh- blood came from Central/South America not from white europeans.

  • @TheHyperboreanzenith

    Are mayans,incas and peruvian indians who are almost all blood type O or zero-which mean no antigens A OR B attached to the surface of the red blood cells with 5 to 20 % being rhesus negative European or white people?

  • @TheHyperboreanzenith

    Yes its supposedly in its highest concentrations among basques and berbers and scots,irish and welsh.

    What white people? If 80 to 90% of europeans are rh+ and you can find the blood groups a,b,ab and o in apes,chimps and gorillas its not really got anything to do with the majority of white people unless rh- is classed as a rare blood type among some europeans. Its not an exclusively white blood type.

  • @greenmagoos blood group ab does not exist in apes. O is extremely rare .

  • @TheHyperboreanzenith

    Or perhaps rhesus negative has to do with the book of Enoch and Genesis? My masonic friend has rh- blood, celtic toes and believes he has the blood of YAHWEH

  • @TheHyperboreanzenith

    Whats a true berber? Whats a true caucasian?

    "Rh Negative is short for Rhesus Factor Negative. Virtually 90% of Europe is Rh Positive..which means their genes include a specific chain of dna from a Rhesus Monkey. The Rh-negative means the 10% of the population that is NOT descended from the Rhesus Monkey."

  • @greenmagoos OH MY GOD !!!! You think rhesus postive means descended from a rhesus monkey ? Have you any idea how ridiculous that is ?

  • @nags2bitches

    I'm not sure if it means ancestory or the same dna. The rhesus antigen was dicovered in rhesus monkey blood. Its an antigen that is attached to the surface of the red blood cell. Rhesus negatives don't have it.

  • @TheHyperboreanzenith

    "Mayans, Incas and Auracanians are all virtually 100% group O, with 5-20% of the population being rhesus negative. This was the blood type of the original Europeans The races that possess this blood type are races of the Americas, the Canary Islands, the Berbers, the Basques, and Gaelic Kelts."

  • @TheHyperboreanzenith

    We can find that dna among people in Briton. Its in Celts.-

    Basques and Berbers and people with dark African skin and that video of my friend is proof of that.

    Maybe he did get it from caucasians. Maybe he didn't?

  • @TheHyperboreanzenith

    No I'm a white skinned red haired green eyed Irish Scot with gypsy tinker blue blood.

  • @greenmagoos Gypsy tinker blue blood ? You gotta be joking !

  • @nags2bitches

    Queen Liz is a tinker blood.

  • @nags2bitches

    Gypsies were allowed to stay at Rosslyn Glen next to the famous Da Vinci Code chapel in the past and many of them took the name Sinclair from the St.Clair family which became Tinker in gaelic Irish as far as I remember

  • @greenmagoos Tinker means what it says, someone who works tin, and its a gadjo word. No way on earth would a pavee or rom call themselves Tinker.

  • @nags2bitches

    "The knights were founded in 1118 to protect pilgrims in the Holy Land. In order to sustain their battle-readiness they needed a retinue of metalworkers and ironsmiths to forge and maintain their weaponry. The knights often used indigenous eastern workers - Egyptians -- who may have returned to France with them after the Crusades ended."

  • @nags2bitches

    "Sinclair takes this further by suggesting that when the Templars escaped to Scotland they took these metalworkers with them. At some point these Egyptians became known colloquially as gypsies. Then in the 16th century the gypsies adopted the surname of Sinclair, which translated into Gaelic became tinkler which gave rise to their secondary naming as tinkers"

  • @greenmagoos Like I said, Tinker is a gadjo word . Gypsy comes from ' Little Egypt' they are not egyptians DNA and language analysis proves they are from India.

  • @nags2bitches

    Queen Liz has tinker blood. Just like gypsies who were allowed to specifically stay on Rosslyn glen by the St-Clair family and were held in high esteem

  • @TheHyperboreanzenith

    Its not negro or caucasian dna. Its blue blood.

  • @TheHyperboreanzenith

    Well whoever raised them had that rare blood type so if you find it among dark skins in West Africa there's a much chance they were actually referring to africans with dark skin.

  • @greenmagoos what rare blood type ? O positive is the most common blood type across the planet

  • @nags2bitches

    Try giving somebody who is rhesus negative O , rhesus positive O blood and see how long it takes before they are at deaths door

    How the Body Works : The Rh Factor

    watch?v=7OWp8d8WKkg

  • @greenmagoos I AM rhesus negative, I know plenty about it.

  • @nags2bitches

    Good for you. So am I and one of the first things I did when I started researching it was to find out what races had it. Basques, sami, celts, berbers, my black friend Roger and his rhesus negative o equally as black skinned cousin

    Amazing. Who'd have guessed that it wasn't to be found in such high numbers among blue eyed blond haired nordic types-lol

  • @greenmagoos Whoever said it was ? You are starting to sound racist.

  • @nags2bitches

    Not at all. I hate nazis.

  • @nags2bitches

    What tribes of people are known to have settled what is now modern Germany in the 4th and 5 th centiury? You can answer that before you accuse me of anything Mrs.

    It rhymes with buns

  • @greenmagoos What rare blood type ? The fact is the Stones of Callanish are on the isle of Lewis and the Stones are FROM Lewis, so any stories about black men ferrying them in are clearly just stories.

  • @nags2bitches

    Rhesus negative blood types is rare. o,a,b and ab groups. Blood transfusion services are always looking for it especially rh- o because it can be given to anybody.

    Yes I know the stones came from Lewis. Maybe black men rowed in and carved them out of Lewis and raised them? Somebody did.

  • @TheHyperboreanzenith

    Maybe they thought it was one of the blue blood dark skins that had raised the standing stones?-lol

    I would need to see that roman tale first to believe it I'm afraid. Not that I'm doubting a Roman account with the picts.

  • Here's a wee song we can all enjoy while we deny that Kenneth the Niger could have been anything but a black skinned pict and the legend that black men had rowed in and raised the complex of stones up at Callanish is pure stupidity just like my friend Rogers west african atlantis blue blood type.

    Germawi Kedamawi Haile Selassie-Man of the century

    watch?v=n2I9kh_EoHo

    A negative blood-Blacks-Rajas and Mama

    watch?v=qQ9fOaxjq2E

  • @TheHyperboreanzenith

    Right on bro. Spoken like a total madskull scot-lol

  • @TheHyperboreanzenith

    Cheers my friend. Sorry if I was being a wee bit agressive earlier. Your friend is on the right track.

  • @TheHyperboreanzenith

    No thats not what I'm implying at all. Wherever it came from has biblical connections is what I believe.

  • @TheHyperboreanzenith

    A rare blood type.

  • @TheHyperboreanzenith

    Thank you.

    However! How can you trust any source from 1,000 years ago that describes their appearance when Kenneth the Niger/Dubh or 'black man' or 'sons of the blacks' is contentious if its linked WITH anything to do with black skinned North Africans even when there might be a provable link with dna?

  • @TheHyperboreanzenith

    Well I've been told by a researcher - a bit of an expert on standing stones, ley lines, and blood types- that the tribes on Briton and Ireland had been mixed skin colours and I trust his expertise so finding out a pictish King may have been a dark skinned North African isn't a suprise. Perhaps they changed the pictures of his sons from dark skinned to white for nefarious purposes. Where they painted when they were alive or afterwards?

  • @TheHyperboreanzenith

    Yes. I wouldn't trust much about whats put down on record about Scottish History especially when its been destroyed and changed so I am just as happy to accept a black skinned King Kenneth as I would be if his skin more Basque type. Matters not a jot to me

  • @TheHyperboreanzenith

    My friend Roger the rhesus negative west african type- no huns from mongolia blood in him- definitely looks black skinned and I'm sure hes proud of it and so he should be.

  • @TheHyperboreanzenith

    I don't doubt anything when Scottish history has been ransacked and destroyed by raids and English Kings. Quite obviously he couldn't have been getting a dark skin from Scottish weather so he must have came from sunnier climes so he may just have been a dark skinned North African negro berber just as easily as being a sallow skinned basque type.

  • You are the one who first called me presumptious & idiotic for my opinion, I am merely replying in kind - ie using your words. You keep saying you have been researching this for a year. I've been researching it my entire life & I'm nearly 50. I know there were black aborigines in Britain long before the Celts who came from Iberia (Platos Atlantis is off the coast of Iberia ) but if you want to be taken seriously you need to be more discerning & less gullible with your research.

  • @nags2bitches

    You know there was black aborigines in Britain long before the celts. So why is it idiotic to even associate Kenneth of Niger with black skin instead of hair?

    If you've been researching this all your life why haven't you made a connection between anglo-saxon jutes with huns who were maurading through europe and settled Germany in roughly the same time frame?

  • @nags2bitches

    So where are the black aborigines who were here before the celts if celts didn't in fact descend from these people independent of a celtic migration from europe? Are these aborigines the reason why Scots, Irish and Welsh peoples have 2nd toes the same length as the great toe? Is that why blood group o is prevelant and the rhesus antigen isn't on celtic red blood cells or is that do with the basques and North Africa?

  • @greenmagoos Celts we know descended from Iberian stock and before them there were people who could be called Turkic and before them siberians. This is in the myths (Milesians and Trojans) & backed up by DNA but take a look at Aus or America if you want to know what happened to the natives! Hyperborean seems to be explaing it better than me regarding 'black'. The O neg blood and dark hair and toes are all present in Basques - Iberians.

  • @nags2bitches

    Siberians? I've read a theory that rh- blood came from the caucasus mountians and went west. I'm aware that is present in Basques,Celts and Berbers. Hyperborean- aye well if my brain had fallen out of my skull and I wanted to believe in blond haired blue eyed mongol hun scandanavian supermen nazis.

    My friend Roger is rh- negative. West African - I doubt he'd develop a skin colour like that in the Arctic circle

    A negative blood-Blacks-Rajas and Mama

    watch?v=qQ9fOaxjq2E

  • @nags2bitches

    I've read that rh- blood is more commonly found in carrot top northern europeans- red hair- with green,blue,hazel eyes - frequently two toned- typical scots and irish people. Its also to be found in basques and berbers that could go from sallow skinned to gypsy types to really dark skin.

    They discovered the antigen in 1939 and I bet thats one of the reasons why the nazis went to such great lengths to try and wipe the romani gypsys out.

    watch?v=veovCg6Bd-I

  • @nags2bitches

    There you go. Queen Liz rolling out the red carpet for HIM Haile Selassie. Obviously not a nordic scandanavian the Ethiopian Lion of Judah and her Majesty takes those royal blue blood lines seriously

    The Queen greets Haile Selassie 1954

    watch?v=OXSl3G1mYCE

  • @greenmagoos My mother went to school with Haille Selassies daughter but ... I don't know what you are getting at with this ? Do you think I don't like blacks or don't think blacks cant be Royalty just because i say Kenneth wasn't a negro ? If so you're getting muddled. Had you also forgotten that HRH is a Saxe-Coburg x Hanoverian ?

  • @nags2bitches

    Well its my understanding that some of the tribes who had raised the standing stones on Briton and Ireland were small dark skinned people a bit like Haile Selassie I'd imagine and perhaps King Kenneth the niger pict?

    Tinker gypsy jews- not a great deal of nordic types among them - lol

  • @greenmagoos Why dyou keep going on about Nordics? I really don't get what the hell youre on about The 'small dark skinned' people you keep talking about were probably what we now call fairies. they built small mud & stone huts & also burial chambers lined with stone After the mud washes away you end up with a small circle or 'fairy ring' not to be confused with henges like stonehenge & callanish which were built by later peoples - Google hut circle They also made 'elf bolts'-stone arrow heads

  • @nags2bitches

    lol- I keep going on about nordics because I cannot stand nazi filth who rounded up innocent women and children in concentration camps before murdering them because they stupidly believed in rubbish like an arctic atlantis and they were superior to everybody else.

    One of legends about callanish is that black men rowed in with high priests in tow and raised them- google it

    Rhesus negative black men like my friend Roger from West Africa

  • @greenmagoos Nordics and nazis have nothing to do with this conversation and just because you have a black friend called Roger doesnt mean King Kenneth was black rh- is a recessive gene. A person with both parents being RH+ can be rh-

  • @nags2bitches

    Yes I know all the facts about rhesus blood. A white european baby could have both parents as rh+ and still be rh+ because neither parent carried the recessive gene which is just as likely.

  • @nags2bitches

    Well pardon me. When I went and looked at the term Hyperborean I was reminded of nordic nazi's for some strange reason.

    I brought Roger into this as a reminder that blue blood isn't restricted to one race and as a possible example of somebody who may have sailed up from Africa and settled among the picts.

    Roger has been intriqued by his ancestory as well because of his blood type so it may be connected.

  • @nags2bitches

    I know all about Callanish. I made sure I went and visited very one of the twenty or so sites they've found up there so far. Very impressive work. That definitely couldn't have been faeries who raised them.

    watch?v=Y7zm8yvTHBM

  • @greenmagoos Pict is a word meaning Celt. Are you suggesting celts are black ?

  • @nags2bitches

    I said 'some' of the 'tribes' who were on Briton and Ireland who raised the standing stones were small in stature and dark skinned.

  • @nags2bitches

    I always thought pict was a description the Romans gave for painted or tatooed tribes in Scotland who were generally kicking their arses for them and making legions disappear

  • Scottish history, kilts, tartans, language, clans and culture- Alba

    "Whether Dubh meant black or dark, as in north-African / southern-European, we may never know for sure. But the story captures a curious fact about the Gaels from Gallicia - some were dark and have left many traces in Irish, Welsh and Scots clans"

  • By Kenneth of Niger do you mean Lady McBeths grandfather ? Funny, no mention ever of her being mulatto ! 'Black' means black haired not negro . Get a grip ! Do some REAL research!

  • @nags2bitches

    I'm afraid I have been looking into this for the past year and was told by a well informed Scottish researcher that some of the tribes who raised the standing stones had been dark skinned - that would include the story that black men had raised callanish. I don't have a problem with that.

    Seems some black people do in fact have atlantis blue blood. What a pity it didn't come from anglo-saxon mongol huns-lol

    A negative blood-Blacks-Rajas and Mama

    watch?v=qQ9fOaxjq2E

  • @nags2bitches

    I don't know if that was Lady Macbeths grandfather. I googled Kenneth The Niger and found an article about a black skinned pict King just like I googled and found the stories about black men raising Callanish

  • @nags2bitches

    Maybe Shakespeare was a mongol hun racist baboon and didn't fancy including the information that Kenneth had been a negro from Africa?. Maybe it wasn't considered important enough because everybody knew he was black skinned at the time? How should I know just like how would you know that black didn't mean skin it meant dark hair? Thats rather presumptuous and idiotic

  • @greenmagoos Its presumptious and idiotic to think Connor was a Negro just because he has the word black in his nick name...You have to take these things in context and know the language and mannerisms of the times. Would you assume Erik the Red was actually red ? When you google you tend to come up with drivel written by idiots; like I said do REAL research.

  • @nags2bitches

    Why is it idiotic to think he wasn't a black man when type 'o' blood found in high incidences among the native irish,scots and welsh, is also to be found in North Africa which is exactly why I included that quote from Kingdom of the Ark?

    Yes idiots are the sort of people who ignore historical facts that huns from mongolia settled what is now modern Germany.

    .

  • @greenmagoos Its idiotic because we know who his parents and grandparents were and they weren't negros.

  • @nags2bitches

    Well I don't know how you can't say they weren't dark skinned going on your assumption that 'black man' means hair and not skin. One thing they most certainly weren't was english,german or anything to do with huns or Romans because we generally sorted those immigrants to Alba out during that period in history.

  • @greenmagoos Is it true that bones of the "Picts" have been found in the Orkney Islands and shetlands, and that many of these bones were small in stature?.

  • @Taurus9252

    The researcher who I spoke to and gave me lots of good leads stated that some of the tribes who raised the standing stones had been dark skinned and small in stature.

    That could be them.

  • @greenmagoos Just found a website. What could be the bones of the Picts ( i believe) could be small in stature due to a genetic defect, reflected in a group of "very homogeneous" people.

  • @Taurus9252

    Send me the link please Marie!

  • @greenmagoos I will dig it out! Also mentions "recent" DNA testing that has been done on Celtic populations.

    Does also make claims.. that the Picts were Iberian/Basque.

  • @Taurus9252

    Sorry Marie. Didn't realise that was you replying there x.

    Yes please send me the link x

  • @nags2bitches

    I have been researching the origins of the native peoples on Briton and Ireland for over a year now . I'd probably assume that the peoples that were here had predominately blood type o and the type a and b groups and rhesus antigen didn't appear among the population in significant ratios until at least the anglo-saxon hun invasion in the 6 th century. Type a is higher among germans than o. In the uk type o is higher than a.

    85% of Germany is rh+ . In the UK its 83%.

  • @nags2bitches

    That information about Kenneth the Niger was taken from a Scottish historical site on its page about Alba, not some radical Afro-centrist black panther page. If they don't have a problem mentioning a black skinned King of the picts I don't see why you should be referring to it as idiotic. Do you have some racial or bigotry issues?

  • Kenneth was the last king of Scotland to succeed to the throne through the tanistry system, whereby the succession was shared between two family lines and the dying king named his successor from the other family line. This system led to constant struggle between the ruling families and was abandoned. Kenneth and his son Giric were both killed at Monzievaird, Tayside in 1005.

  • Niger Val Dubh lived and reigned over certain black divisions in Scotland, and some histories state that a race known as 'the sons of the blacks' succeeded him. (e.g. see JA Rogers, Sex and Race).

    Kenneth III was king of Scotland from 997 to 1005. He was the son of King Dubh (Dub mac Mail Choluim - 962-967), fourth cousin of the previous king Constantine III, and first cousin of his successor Malcolm II.

  • The Black Scots

    A curious aspect of this early history concerns various stories around Kenneth.

    King Kenneth was also known as 'Kenneth the Niger' or Kenneth Dubh, a surname which means 'the black man'. It is a matter of history that many seafaring warriors were North African, travelled via Iberia into Europe, and joined in many cultures and held power and position.

  • Historical & Spiritual Destiny of British Isles

    watch?v=oVPmT6jbR3k

    watch?v=YUlLo5Jxo_0

  • celtics arent 5000 years old 

  • @kingbigdawg9

    The trees supposed to be 5,000 years old. I refer to my standing stone raising ancestors as 'celts'. They have been on Briton and Ireland for thousands of years before English anglo-saxon hun barbarians invaded in the late AD500's.

    The English are Germans The Welsh are real Britons

    watch?v=j617mImHVvk

  • @greenmagoos You are so wrong. The English are proven by DNA to be the same stock as the Welsh, only thier language was changed and funnily enough, they don't speak German ! The invasions were a drop in the ocean and the gene pool of Britain remains predominantly celtic, which is shown by genetic research to be Spanish, just as the mythology claims.

  • @nags2bitches

    Go and look up the 'huns' in wikipedia. They didn't invade Celtic Briton and Ireland and huns became anglo-saxon whos invaded Britian 200 years after the huns took over most of middle central europe.

  • @greenmagoos and your point is ? Fact is whatever elite ruling class decided to take power, the PEOPLE remained celtic.

  • @greenmagoos You said german, huns are not german.

  • @nags2bitches

    Huns are germans because the huns marched right into most of Germany in the 4 th centrury ad and settled that land. They didn't come anywhere near Briton and Ireland-

    wikio- huns- The Huns were a group of nomadic people who, appearing from beyond the Volga, migrated into Europe c. AD 370 and built up an enormous empire in Europe.

    The Western Hunnic Empire stretched from the steppes of Central Asia into modern Germany, and from the Black Sea to the Baltic Sea.

  • @nags2bitches

    "During World War II, a discovery was made that only recently has received meticulous research. A couple of doctors in medical centers in England noticed that there was a feature of Scots and Welsh soldiers wounded in battle that was not present with English, Germans, and other nationalities. The former frequently had a big toe (or great toe) that was the same length as the next toe; all others had great toes markedly longer"

  • @greenmagoos In my family it's called a 'witches toe' and all my family have it...I'm English btw with Welsh ancestry but... What the hell has this got to do with modern DNA research which proves the English are just as Celtic as the Welsh ?

  • @nags2bitches

    Well your English with Gael Celtic Welsh ancestory then not anglo-saxon hun.

    Not only do most celtic people have different toes to English, who are anglo-saxon huns their genetic make up is 'remarkably different'

    I know why mine is if you don't.-lol

    The English are Germans The Welsh are real Britons

    watch?v=j617mImHVvk

  • @greenmagoos Gael ? Erm... Sorry I guess you're not as educated as you think you are. The Welsh are not Gaels .

  • @nags2bitches

    lol- you are the one who doesn't know that Germans are anglo-saxon jute huns.

  • @nags2bitches

    I'm not welsh. I'm Scots/Irish.

  • @nags2bitches

    "Mayans, Incas and Auracanians are all virtually 100% group O, with 5-20% of the population being rhesus negative. This was the blood type of the original Europeans. The races that possess this blood type are races of the Americas, the Canary Islands, the Berbers, the Basques, and Gaelic Kelts."

  • @greenmagoos I'm rh- and I've read Kingdom of the Ark but I guess I just don't get what you are trying to say in your videos or what you are trying to say with your cryptic replies. The original people of Briton were not Celtic at all, the celts immigrated just as did everyone else and everyone (native)in Britain has celtic blood, tho the welsh less so in past times. The English are just as celtic as everyone else even if some of them do have a drop of Germanic blood too.

  • @nags2bitches

    What bit do you not understand about huns? Do you have something against what is quite clearly a historical fact? Huns invaded Germany. Anglo-saxons who are german huns (not celtic) invaded Briton 200 years later. There were peoples here who have been called celtic but they may have always been here and where not part of a celtic migration from celtic europe. There are blood groups a,b, ab and o split into rh+ and -

  • @nags2bitches

    Whatever part of Germany that had been celtic wasn't celtic anymore from approx 380 ad when the huns migrated into or invaded what it now modern Germany I think is what I'm trying to say. Just like when anglo-saxon huns from Germany invaded Briton 200 years later and took over what is now England and displaced the original peoples there whether or not you want to refer to them as celts is up to you. Celts and huns aren't the same. Huns came from the east.

  • @nags2bitches

    I didn't mention anything about rh- blood. I was making a cryptic joke about royalty. I quoted the passage from Kingdom of the Ark about the high incidences of blood group o among the 'natives' of Scotland, Ireland and Wales. Presumably Saxons be they huns or celts if you can't accpet the hunnish invasion of Germany for unknown reasons don't have high incidences of that blood group.

  • @nags2bitches

    I'm not sure I know what the difference is between celtic and germanic blood. Did you know that some of the natives here who had raised the standing stones had in fact been dark skinned in fact a king of the picts Kenneth of Niger was supposed to be such a native. Amazing eh? And the people who raised Callanish according to legend were supposed to have been 'black men'. Those black men with non-hunnish atlantis blue blood. Unbelievable!

  • @nags2bitches

    Well seeing as this video has clips of the Passion of the Christ through it I was sneakily trying to make a connection with the peoples that were here (who raised the standing stones and were giving the Roman Empire a terribly hard time approx the same period as the jewish uprisings in the middle east) and the biblical stories.

    There couldn't possibly be a connection between red haired green eyed gael/picts with the biblical descriptions of King David and Esau surely?-lol

  • @nags2bitches Do you actually know that Cornish (ENGLAND) is a Brythonic language ? I bet not, and it was spoken in Devon (England) too. The people of Brittany (France ) are a colony of Cornish and Devonian people and they too speak a Brythonic language. Up north (still England! ) they spoke cumbric, a dialect of Brythonic. All these people were Britons and Celts and still are and their language was Brythonic ie Britonic. DNA testing shows they are ALL celtic regardless of toe size !

  • @nags2bitches

    Yes oddly enough I had heard about cornish celts and the people on the Isle of Man as well as Scots, Irish and Welsh. Anglo-saxons mostly settled what is now England. Are you suggesting that anglo-saxons from Germany stayed apart from huns who settled most of that land?

    The Picts Of Scotland - Last Of The Free

    watch?v=029gSw0pZCc

  • Why do you keep talking about Huns ? Anglo Saxons were not Huns. Huns were Asian not Germanic. Once again I will repeat, DNA studies show that the English are Celtic and that the Anglo Saxon invasion didn't make much difference to the gene pool.

  • @nags2bitches

    I keep mentioning huns because its a historical fact that huns migrated into what is now Germany. Two hundred years later anglo-saxons from Germany invaded,booted out and killed the celts in what is now England and welsh celts dna is 'remarkably different' to Frisian huns according to that channel 4 news report.

    My red haired green eyed Irish/Scots dna is a lot rarer than most other Brits-lol

    Perhaps I'm related to Her Majesty?

  • @greenmagoos .If they killed all the celts (this would be about 200,000 saxons killing 2 million people btw) there would have to be archaeological evidence of an overwhelming nature. there's very little. The founds of the 'Saxon' dynasty of Wessex, Cerdic and Cynric both have Saxonised celtic names, too!

  • @sonofherne

    I'm interested in rhesus negative blood found in significant amounts in NW Ireland and the Hebrides to be honest with you.

  • @sonofherne

    "The highest percentage is found among some of the tribes still living in the Atlas Mountains of Morocco (40%). The next highest are the Basques, reported in different publications as having 25 and 32%, depending on location. The people of northwest Ireland, the Highland Scots and the western islanders of Norway all have between 16 and 25%, while the Lapps of Norway and Finland have between 5 and 7%."

  • @sonofherne

    "The people, jokingly called the Black Irish, have dark hair and eyes, wedge-shaped faces and look like Berbers and Basques. Their blood type proves that Berbers and Basques were originally closely related people, as many of them have Rh-negative blood. They are likely the descendants of the first settlers to Ireland and Scotland. This type of people is especially common in Conamara and Donegal of Ireland and on the Outer Hebrides of Scotland."

  • @greenmagoos

    What?

    are you kidding me? Raven Black hair along with Red Hair are hallmark and well known Celtic features.

    Just like Bleach blonde hair (not golden/dirty blonde) and dark blue eyes are Scandinavian

    Berbers are in no way related and basques are related to the Gaul and other "Latins" whome are of Continental Celts, like that of the Northern Italians and North spain and France up to Bavaria (R1B) Bretons/Cornish etc

    Swiss (Helvetti) the female personafication of the Swiss is Helvetia

  • @phr34kyy

    You need to go and do a bit of investigating into rhesus negative blood to realise tribes/people with that blood were related and kept themselves apart from rhesus positive blond haired blue eyed scandanvians for an exp

  • @phr34kyy

    rhesus negative blood is a bit unusual lets say and it doesn't mix well with positive

  • @phr34kyy berbers are famous for jet black hair....recent genetics research in University of York indicate possible genetic influence in godeilic people from bebers, this was further supported by cultural studies which shows a common cultural root for traditional dancing and music with the iberians, berbers, and old british culture. I am about as pro - celtic cultures as you can be so I am not trying to undermine anyone......whatever the truth is we should celebrate it

  • @phr34kyy the berbers are an ancient people of 50, 000 years there is nothing inherently foreign about their influence in the Irish (if so),,,,,greenmagoos is not saying the irish are pure berbers just influences.

    I live in North Wales(Gogledd Cymru) which was godeilic speaking when the saxons arrived (ironic looking at it now) due to migrants from Eire.NW wales is famous for its dark hair with tanned skin.....an english teacher we had in East Wales said he was surprised how iberian they looked

  • @phr34kyy even though most berbers are darkhaired, there are some with blonde hair or blonde streaks...could be a link....the most interesting research is trying to see if we can link the celts with the Hindu kush region/india and how direct the route was :)

  • @3tangle3

    Thats because they where part of the Ottoman Empire and like the rest of the filtty mongrels invaded European and took western women as sex slaves to breed with, and children as workers and also as sex slaves.

    Look how they operate today, yelling in Denmark on draw muhammed day chanting about waging war and I quote "We will take your women and children as war booty" look it up.

    They have genetic features of a mongrel descendent of a slave master thats why, all of em.

  • Why do you keep talking about Huns ? Anglo Saxons were not Huns. Huns were Asian not Germanic. Once again I will repeat, DNA studies show that the English are Celtic and that the Anglo Saxon invasion didn't make much difference to the gene pool. Maybe you're muddling the Celts with Ancient Britons who were NOT celtic

  • @nags2bitches

    Pardon me. Call me a red haired scots/irish gael pict then

    "We are now left with one final enigma. Very high frequencies of O blood, similar to those found in much of Wales, Scotland and Ireland, are rarely encountered. Apart from a few islands in the Aegean Sea and pockets in the western Caucasus" - Kingdom of the Ark

  • @nags2bitches

    Anglo-saxons are huns because there is no record that I'm aware of any other migration of peoples into Germany apart from the invasion of the huns 200 years before the anglo-saxons invaded Briton and Ireland. Different toes, different blood, different tribes. No huns in Briton and Ireland until the saxons.

  • @greenmagoos .Yes, I have the celtic toe myself but there hasn't been enough study of it to say what it's real origin is, because the one done years ago said it was NOT found on neolithic skeletons pre the celtic period. Now we know today that there was no celtic invasion to bring in this feature, and strong genetic continuity from post Ice Age, so technically those neolithic skeletons SHOULD have had the toe. Or maybe possibly it was just too small a sample