Are you ready to solve a mystery? One that disproves accepted archeology and history? Then you need to get Celtic Mysteries in New England by Philip Imbrogno and Marianne Horrigan. You see, there are over sixty-five mysterious small buildings throughout New England. Archeologists dismiss them as root cellars from colonial times. But if they are just root cellars, why are there no records of them being made by the colonists? Why is it that in one record a colonist - who found one already made and on his property - was told by a priest to avoid it? Why is it that many are aligned to certain stars that are associated with the ancient Druids? Why do some have intricate carvings on the walls? In order to answer these and many more questions, the authors start on a journey of discovery, and take you along on a wild ride that threatens to shake the very foundations of history! You will go along with them as they discover factual evidence of European explorers visiting the Americas nearly 1,000 years before Columbus. You will learn how the Druids came over and built these constructions as part of their religion. In Europe, such constructions are known to appear along lines of energy and power. So are these. You will discover how they are frequently the center for the appearance of odd lights and UFOs. Scientific evidence shows them to be centered on weird, magnetic field anomalies. If you are ready to discover the Celtic past of the Americas, you need to get this book. It will also intrigue and thrill archeologists, paranormalists, and people who just want to know the truth.
134 ) , whilst the centrality of the rose symbol within the eponymous collection published in 1893 testified to Yeats's increased use of occult symbols as a complement to Celticism . For while the rose had been a poetic symbol of ...
The Celts
The Children's Fire: Heart Song of a People
A Celtic tale about King Gwyddno, and his kingdom of golden cities built with a high wall to keep the sea out.
A collection of Celtic folk tales interwoven with factual information on Celtic art, religion, storytellers and archaeology.
Danebury
A scholarly, but readable, presentation of the origins and history of more than one thousand Irish and Scottish families.