Around 6000 BC a revolution took place on Orkney and the Western Isles of Scotland. An outstanding collection of stone circles, standing stones, round towers, and passage mounds appeared seemingly out of nowhere. And yet such monuments were not indigenous to Britain, but to regions of the Caspian Sea and the Mediterranean.
Their creators were equally mysterious. Traditions speak of ‘strangers from afar’ who were physically different, dressed in white tunics, and lived aside from the regular population. They were regarded as master astronomers with an uncanny ability to work with enormous stones. But where did these advanced ancient architects come from?
Scotland’s Hidden Sacred Past examines the Neolithic culture, Gaelic language, and sacred traditions of the Scottish Isles and finds a trail of evidence leading to Sardinia and the Armenian Highlands, and what prompted this misplaced civilization to migrate to the furthest reaches of Europe and recreate the masterworks of their original homeland, a plan that included the establishment of Ireland’s megalithic culture and divine bloodline.
Among the many topics covered:
- The true dating of Orkney’s sites, and their relationship to the Giza pyramids
- Armenian and Egyptian linguistic roots of sites and places in Orkney and the Hebrides
- Archaeo-astronomical connections with Orion
- The origin of the Papae, Peti, and Tuatha de Danaan
- Armenian and Scythian roots of Ireland’s prehistory
- Sardinian megalithic history and the origin of Scottish duns and brochs
- The connection between Armenia and Callanish
- Hidden geometric blueprints linking ancient sites in Orkney, Kilmartin, and Ireland
By Freddy Silva in Scotland’s Hidden Sacred Past
Read Also:
- Scotland’s Hidden Sacred Past includes the ancient secrets of Ireland, Armenia, and Sardinia
- In ancient Armenia they were called Peri. About Neolithic monument builders of Scotland
- Most ancient monuments on the Scottish western isles are based on Armenian or Egyptian language
- Armenia, Land of Ermenen in the mention of Thutmose III
- Dun Carloway, Armenian etymology of the name of a tower in Northern Scotland
- The migration of people from Scythia and the Armenian Highlands is a link between Sardinia and the Western Isles of Scotland
- How the ancient world was interconnected, Freddy Silva