Friday, July 28, 2023

Did Irishman take Columbus to America?

Old World Florida, July 25, 2023; Pat Macpherson, Dhr. Seven (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly

The Hidden Irish History of Ancient America
(Old World Florida) Following the expulsion of the Moors [Black Africans] from Spain in 1492, Cristobal (Christopher) Columbus would set sail to the Americas on the most fateful of voyages.

While this narrative has been ridiculed, weaponized, and outright denied as propaganda, there is one aspect of the Columbus story that has never received the attention it deserves.

Is anyone aware of the fact that Columbus set sail with an Irish navigator? That’s right, it was an Irishman named Guillermo Herries, whom Columbus had met in Galway.
The identity of this man and the reasons for his presence on this voyage are just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the hidden Irish history of ancient America.

In explaining the significance of this lone Irishman, a connection will be established between the Irish and the Phoenicians of antiquity (the civilization most capable of pre-Columbian transatlantic travel).

Why is it that an Irishman was needed to go where men were said to have never gone before? What comes to light is that a multitude of so-called Native American tribes in fact share genetic and cultural affiliations with ancient Celts and Britons.

(This of course includes the infamous “red-headed giants” scattered throughout the Americas and across the entire earth).

As the Irish presence in the Americas did not begin with Columbus, it certainly did not end with him. No academic has ever been able to give a satisfactory explanation as to why there are only 5 million Irish people in Ireland, yet the ethnically Irish (diaspora) in the United States numbers over 36 million.

Five million Irish versus 36 million Irish Americans, something is not adding up. The ominous “they” would have us believe that this is simply the result of potato shortages and a recent mass-migration.

The Irish, strangers to colonization and the subjugation of others, have themselves been kicked around for a long time.

This presentation is dedicated to the Land of Iron, the Isle of Emerald, and the fairest daughter of Atlantis.

The views expressed in this video do not necessarily reflect the author's own.
  • 0:00 Intro
  • 3:50 Guillermo Herries
  • 8:13 Ancient Celts, Tribes
  • 14:33 Language, names, Duhar, deer
  • 23:28 USA discoveries, linguistics, NC, Ireland
  • 34:08 Ancient sites, mounds, Yamassee
  • 37:55 Discovery of America by the Irish, Septs, Georgia, and Carolinas
  • 47:18 Christmas cards in WY, runes
  • 51:22 Astro Ogham in Colorado
  • 56:43 Brendan's Voyage Part 1
  • 1:18:25 Petroglyphs, West Virginia, stones
  • 1:40:14 Christian navigation, Saint Brendan
  • 1:47:24 Irish Arrivals in South America
  • 1:53:35 Argentine, the Caribbean
  • 1:56:30 Jamaican-Irish accent
  • 2:01:04 Montserrat
  • 2:37:00 Brendan's Voyage Part 2
"The legend of Saint Brendan, an Irish monk from what is now County Kerry, involves a fantastical journey into the Atlantic Ocean in search of Paradise in the 6th century. Since the discovery of the New World, various authors have tried to link the St. Brendan legend with an early discovery of America. In 1977, the voyage was successfully recreated by Tim Severin using a replica of an ancient Irish currach.

"At Fort Mountain State Park in Georgia a plaque formerly mentioned a 19th-century interpretation of the ancient stone wall that gives the site its name. The plaque repeated a claim by Tennessee Governor John Sevier that Cherokees believed "a people called Welsh" had built a fort on the mountain long ago to repel Indian attacks. The plaque has been changed, leaving no reference to Madoc or the Welsh.

"Biologist and controversial amateur epigrapher Barry Fell claims that Irish Ogham writing has been found carved into stones in the Virginias. Linguist David H. Kelley has criticized some of Fell's work but nonetheless argued that genuine Celtic Ogham inscriptions have in fact been discovered in America. However, others have raised serious doubts about these claims."

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