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Homs, Krakatoa

Homs, Syria and the ‘Hamath-Zobah’ ​Cre que​ fort systems it upheld
dominated the field of “techne” as a fascination cult for over a
century while Rome ignored its constituency as evidenced in the
records of melkite bishops from the rule of Septimus Severus 145-211
to Basileus Contantius ​I​ ​otherwise known as ​Marcus Flavius Valerius
Constantius Herculius Augustus from ​March c. 250 – 25 July 306 in the
work of bishop Eusebius of Emesa​ ​[ca. 300 – ca. 360] prefigured in
bishop Silvanus, deacon Luke and reader Mocius [312 AD].

Walhain or Walhayn which is uncertainly referenced in the Selby


Documents from 1228 yet ascribed in the ​toren​ cult in continental ​wal
lon​, mention this “​poorly devized​” 1 ‘hillock’ site as near a marsh,
suited for canalization, in regards to a considerable behest upon the
death of a transfer from knowledgeable partnership that had stemmed
from the efforts of canonic clerkship stemming from Auxerre to less
certain offing.

Brictun or bri, or brilliant or bric as in collage represented an


agency that had derived its existence from a ‘confabulation’
accountancy. As such, legal heirs were pointed toward devolution as a
stratagem gaming against emotive and tonal transfers. As such, the
practice became encrypted and was inculcated as a rule, especially in
continental zones where practice or talionis had became habit or
custom.

The language group share in place names was substantial in that


documentation that had received notary clerk office attention had
become a vehicle for reform, transfer, dependant upon a discursive use
of language calculated to rule and to dispossess.

Talionis of this cryptic sort generated a ‘Tel aigon’ viewpoint


which has meant ​move​ or ​long duration​ signalled an end to Roman
patronage along an otherwise greco-roman trade group system along the
‘borealis’ straits--it’s settlement pattern was distinctive in the
trade arts, representative of a refinement of “techne” arts which must
have included the use explosives.

This enabled a ‘greek fire’ cultic workmanship to be driven via


the works Lactantius [250 – c.325], Eucherius [380 – c. 449] promoted
through Fulgentius Rusp [462 - 533], Sozomenus [400 – c. 450],
Philoxenus Mabburg [d. 523] Martianus Capella [410–420], Priscian [fl.
500], Boethius [480–524 AD], Colombanus [543-615], Sedulius [fl. 435]
and Erigena [815 – c. 877].
Centers of Greek Techne emanated from the mons or monastic
systems at Old Glossop ​Ardotalia​, at Armagh established in 457 AD, at
Rheims established in 496 AD, Vedaast at Arras or ​Atrebatum​ “nemedik”​
established in 499 AD, Clonmacnoise in 544 AD.

This system continued through Liege of Wandre “​liudik​”​ which had


been established as an episcopate in 558 AD and Wandron, established
in 634 AD via a capella system at Martin Capelli at Traichtem,
Utrecht, established in 634 AD. This system of extended ‘​ware​’ had
been overtaken via Bangor established in 584 AD, and Luxeuil
established in 590 AD; Bobbio established in 614 AD, Gallen in 646 AD
and Dordrecht “​de Thure​” as early as 100 AD.

Krakatoa, a volcanic island situated in the Sunda Strait between


the islands of Java and Sumatra in the Indonesian province of Lampung.
It is best known for massive explosions over August 26–27, 1883. Lucas
Janszoon Waghenaer labelled the island "​Pulo Carcata​" ​pulo​ which is
the Sundanese word for "​island​" in a 1611 map he had surveyed.

Wouter Schouten passed by "the high tree-covered island of


Krakatau" noted in his ship’s log in October 1658. About two dozen
variants have been found, including ​Crackatouw, Cracatoa,​ and ​Krakatao
in an older Portuguese-based spelling.

Krakatau​ is denoted as ‘​Krak a Thouar,​’ an Emesan Homs Syriac St.


John patronage emanating from Latin crusader usage. "​Krakula​" is
referenced in ​Kadlubek Chronicle​ ​a pre-Slavic word or trade variant
Prolabian usage meaning judge's staff.

Prolabian or Old Prussians included eastern parts of Pomerelia


some parts of the region east of the Vistula River. The language might
have also been spoken much further east and south in what became
Polesia​ and part of ​Podlasie​, with the conquests by Rus and Poles
starting in the 10th century and the German colonisation of the area
that began in the 12th century.

APPENDIX

1. Chronicles at Durham, ​Decreta cum glossâ Bartholomei Brexensis;


2° folio, naturalem. Decretales Gregoriani cum glossâ Ber'; 2 °
folio, so. Liber sextus cum glosâ Johannis.

Diffusion Terms [Dutch]


“vaak” “iedereen” “een” “elk” “weinig” “paar” “stimme” “gaaf”

Cultic Canadensis

Aleut uvanga, ivvit, una; uvaguk, uvagut, ilitsik, ilitsi, ukua


Algic i, ja, wo, wu; ni, na, yo, wa
Iroquoian i, wa, se, ha; i,​ yo, ro Siouan wa; ako
Catawban de, ye, awer, awoka; dowa, wewer, agerap
Salishan ens, nu, tiwa; nima, newiap, niawit
Haida hl, dang, hal; t’alang, dalang, tl’
na-Dene nin, din, hwo;​ k, ke, kai
W. Fries do, du, hy, sy, it; wy, jimme, jo, hja
Hollandic u, hij, zij, het; wij, jullie, zij, ze

“Neerlandia” Ontario, 1300

Breton Mi, te, en, hi; ni, c’hwi, int


Moose cree niya, kiya; niyanán, kiyánaw, kiyawáw
Galician Eu ti el ela; nos, vos, eles, elas
Swamp Cree ni [a], ki [a], o [a]; ni [inam], ki [iwaw], o [iwaw-a]
Odawa Keen, kin; Ne-naw-wind, Ke-naw-wind, We-naw-waw
Cornish My, Te, ty, Jy, ev, hi; ny, vy, i
Algonquin niin, giin, wiin; niinawind, giinawind, wiinawaa
Silurian Yr, chi, ef, hi, yn; ri, maent
Oji niin, giin, wiin; niinawind, giinawaa, wiinawaa
Luxb’g du, hie[n], si, hatt [et]; mir, dir, si

Linguistic Map of Ontario

Franc ge, jou, ele; nus, vos, eles


Norman French jo, tu, il, el; no, vo, ils, els
Occitan French ieu, tu, el, ela; nosautres, vosautres, eles, elas
Picardy j’, te, il, ell; nos, vos, ils, ells
Anglo Saxon ic, thu, he, heo, hit; we, ge, hie
Old dutch ik, thu, hie, hiro, hit; wi, uuie, gi, sia
West Fries ik, do, du, hy, sy, it; wy, jimme, hja
Dutch ik, jij, u, hij, zij, het; wij, jullie, zij, ze
Algonquin- n-, g-, w-; niy-, giy-, ?
Potawotami- nin, gin, win; ninanan, ginanan, ginawa, winawa
Cree- niya, kiya, wiya; Niyanán, kiyánaw, wiyawáw
Ojibway- niin, giin, wiin; niinawind, giinawin, wiinawaa

Haplo Categories

Haplo A [minus M168] East Eurasian Native American


Haplo B [minus M168] East Eurasian Native American
Haplo C [M168] East Eurasian Native American
Haplo D [M168] East Eurasian Native American [X]
Haplo E [M168] East Eurasian
Haplo F [x M168] East Eurasian
Haplo G [x M168] East Eurasian [Y, Z] Siberian
Haplo H [x M168] West Eurasian [T, U, V, W, X]
Haplo IJK [x M168] [x L15] [L16] West Eurasian
Haplo K [x M9] West Eurasian
Haplo L [x M9] African
Haplo LT [x M9] African
Haplo M [x M526] Ethiopian, Indian, Somalian
Haplo N [x M526] R West and R East Eurasian
Haplo P [x M526] Australo-Melanesian
Haplo Q [x M526] Australo-Melanesian
Haplo R [x M526] Arabia ‘transmigratory’
Haplo S [x M526] Australo-Melanesian

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