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  • While much has been written on the arrival of the Danes, Angles, Saxons and Normans to

  • the British Isles, few have explored the origins

  • of the people who occupied the land before them.

  • Just where did the Celts come from?

  • After the decline of the Roman Empire, around 410 AD the Angles and Saxons began moving

  • from mainland Europe and settling all across England and lower parts of Scotland.

  • By the 9th Century the Danes started building settlements around the British Isles and in

  • the early part of the 11th Century, in 1066, the Normans invaded.

  • Long before all of this, the Celts were living in the British Isles, they had arrived centuries

  • before even the Romans were established in Europe.

  • If you visit the British Isles today you may well come across a Celtic revival as the

  • National Curriculum in Wales requires all students to learn the Welsh language.

  • This ancient language is a branch of the wider Celtic languages spoken along the western

  • isles of Scotland, Ireland, Cornwall and Brittany.

  • Historians have traditionally seen the Celts as just another Germanic tribe that migrated

  • west from central Europe but a relatively new scientific study has found genealogical

  • evidence to the contrary.

  • Dr. Mark Jobling from the Department of Genetics at the University of Leicester published a

  • journal on the Y-chromosomal lineage of the Celts.

  • In this journal the lineage of European male Y chromosomes were tested and analysed with

  • DNA evidence strongly supporting the theory that Celtic men "spread from a single source

  • from the Near East" or Middle East as it is more commonly called.

  • What is fascinating about the findings in this journal is that the route in which the

  • migration occurred is entirely mappable.

  • Moving through modern day Turkey, across Europe and in particular, around the Mediterranean

  • coastline and the Iberian peninsula, through the Gibraltar straights and up along the coast

  • of Western Europe into the British Isles, is a clearly defined path.

  • The "increases in frequency and [reduction] in diversity from east to west" of the Y-Chromosome

  • supports a "rapid expansion" as a fading trail of the chromosome shows the path of

  • migration from the Middle East to the region where the Celtic people reside today.

  • The study estimates that the timeframe of expansion was approximately over a period

  • of 4,500 years and that this likely happened from 7,000 BC until as recently as 2,500 BC

  • but regardless of the accuracy of their dating methods, the migration did occur and there

  • is a corroborating historical document that I would like to cross examine with the scientific

  • research which may suggest a more recent date for the migration.

  • Written in 1320 by Scottish Barons and nobles and submitted to Pope John the 22nd, the Declaration

  • of Arbroath is Scotland's claim for independence.

  • The document describes the sovereignty of its people and supports Jobling's claim

  • by describing how they came to settle in the British Isles.

  • "...we know and from the chronicles and books of the ancients we find that among other

  • famous nations our own, the Scots, has been graced with widespread renown.

  • It journeyed from Greater Scythia by way of the Tyrrhenian Sea and the Pillars of Hercules,

  • and dwelt for a long course of time in Spain among the most savage peoples.... Thence

  • it came, twelve hundred years after the people of Israel crossed the Red Sea, to its home

  • in the west where it still lives today."

  • These nobles firmly believed that their ancestors migrated from East to West following the exact

  • pattern as described in the journal on the Celtic Y Chromosome.

  • These men share the DNA evidence that corroborates their historical records.

  • For more information on the history and origins of the British people please read our free

  • booklet called The United States and Great Britain in Prophecy.

  • I am Jonathan Riley for Tomorrow's World Viewpoint.

  • Since the research and production of this video took place it has come to our attention

  • that Dr. Mark Jobling released a second journal in 2015 which proposed a much more recent

  • migration.

  • The new estimated time frame now sits between 2000 to 4000 years ago.

  • This now agrees with the corroborating evidence found in the Declaration of Arbroath.

  • The links to both journals can be found in the description below.

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  • To access articles, telecasts and booklets from Tomorrow's World visit our website

  • TWCanada.org.

  • Few things seem to work some scientists into a frenzy more than the words Intelligent Design.

  • Why isn't Intelligent Design science?

While much has been written on the arrival of the Danes, Angles, Saxons and Normans to

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凱爾特人從哪裡來? (Where Did the Celts Come from?)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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