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the ga(e)lilean culdee gael pict passion of the 5,000 year old fortingall pontius pilate yew tree

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Uploaded by on Apr 5, 2010

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galilee

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaelic

http://www.weirdasianews.com/2009/05/06/china%e2%80%99s-celtic-mummies-ancien...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oVPmT6jbR3k

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YUlLo5Jxo_0

http://www.sacredconnections.co.uk/holyland/EarthEnergies.htm

http://www.sacredconnections.co.uk/holyland/rosatemplum.htm

http://www.sacredconnections.co.uk/holyland/motherchurch.htm

http://www.sacredconnections.co.uk/holyland/jesusvisitscotland.htm

http://www.sacredconnections.co.uk/holyland/scotlandegypt.htm

http://www.sacredconnections.co.uk/Egypt/07.html

http://www.sacredconnections.co.uk/holyland/johannine.htm

http://www.sacredconnections.co.uk/holyland/iona.htm

http://www.sacredconnections.co.uk/holyland/sacredbritain.htm

http://www.sacredconnections.co.uk/holyland/celtohimalayan.htm

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culdee

In the Middle Ages, the Culdees[1], anglicised form of Céli Dé (plural of Céile Dé, lit. "client/companion of God"), were ascetic monastic communities with settlements in Ireland, Scotland and England. The Irish term Céile Dé was Latinized to Coli dei, leading to Boece's culdei, which term seems to have been applied generally to monks and hermits. If and to what extent the rise of these communities should be explained in terms of a religious and social movement of reform is a matter of some debate.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ireland

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scottish_islands

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scottish_highlands

http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn8600-medieval-irish-warlord-boasts-thre...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niall_of_the_Nine_Hostages

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hibernia

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caledonia

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Picts

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celts


http://www.sacredconnections.co.uk/holyland/schiehallion.htm

http://www.sacredconnections.co.uk/holyland/fortingallyew.htm

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Essenes

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Druids

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Uploader Comments (greenmagoos)

  • 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

  • Certainly not on the female/maternal line.

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

see all

All Comments (312)

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  • @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.

  • @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.

  • @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

  • @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 :)

  • @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 :)

  • @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 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

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