he Celts or Western Aryans had already occupied.
These latter had in the mean time gone out from the Asiatic cradle
of the race, and following the course of the Indus to Hindostan and
Persia, had, under the name of Chaldeans, overrun Armenia, Syria,
Arabia, Egypt and North Africa, which latter they found inhabited by
certain negro races, whereas in Egypt they discovered red-skins or
Atlantides; which latter, by the way, form also our own aborigines.
The intermixture of the Celts with these primitive races just named
produced the Jews and Semitic people. At the time of the Celtic
invasion Western Europe and Northern Africa were occupied by the race
of the Atlantides, while the Mongolians, including also the Lapps,
Finns and Huns, peopled the north of Europe and of Asia. The Celts
pushed in between these two races, and only very much later the German
people, driven out of China by the Turks, as we have said, arrived in
Europe.
When, therefore, did these Cainist invasions of Germany take place?
Obermueller says that the date must have been toward the epoch of
the Roman conquests. Gallia was then inhabited in the south by the
primitive Atlantid race of Ligurians and by the Greek colony of
Massilia; in the centre by the Gaelags (Celts) or Gauls, who, pouring
northward from Spain, had conquered it fifteen hundred years before
the Christian era; and in the north by the Belgic Cimbrians, who had
come from Germany, and who were designated under the name of Germans
(_Ghermann_) or border-men, and who, though called _Germani_ by Caesar
and Tacitus, were yet not of the Cainist stock, but Celts. However,
these Germans, whom the Romans encountered to their cost on the Rhine
and Danube, were of the genuine Oriental Cainist stock, and these,
after centuries of fierce struggle, they failed to conquer, though the
Celts of Britain, Gaul and Spain, as well as all the old empires of
the East, had fallen an easy prey to their victorious eagles.
It only remains to add that this invasion of Germany by Cain's progeny
was accomplished in three streams. The Ases (Sachsons) directed
themselves to the Elbe and Danube, and thence to the north; the Suevi,
or Swabians, chose the centre and south of Germany; while the Goths
did not rest till they had overrun Italy, Southern France and Spain.
But each of these three main streams was composed of many tribes,
whom the old writers catalogue without system, mixing both Celtic and
Teutonic tribes under t
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