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Key Facts |
| Original Name |
Ath Cliath Cuilliaéan |
| Year Founded |
3600 BCE |
| Founders |
Cuilliaéan (Druid Priest Kings of Ireland) |
| Location Function |
Trading city for foreigners (export of Gold, Tin and Copper) |
| Etymology |
Proto-Indo-Euro meaning Holly (Holy) Hurdled Ford. |
| Name Change |
Eblana |
| Year Changed |
2290 BCE, Exiled King Ibbi of Ebla. |
| Etymology |
Proto-Indo-Euro meaning "The New Ebla" |
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Dublin, located near the midpoint of Ireland's east coast, at the mouth of the River Liffey is one of the oldest cities of human history--whose real history has been systematically erased from public knowledge since the 10th Century CE. |
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Its Gaelic name today is falsely claimed to be Baile Átha Cliath ‘Town of the Hurdled Ford’, while even more confusing is the multitude of contradicting claiming for example the city was formed by the Vikings (when clear references still survive and exist for it being a proper city well prior to 140 CE). |
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Even the second name of the city "Eblana"known throughout the world around the time of Jesus is falsely claimed by Anglophile Irish historians as nothing more than a 10th century Viking name for an alleged "lake" called Dubh Linn used by the Vikings to moor their ships. |
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Sadly, the history of Dublin-- like all of Ireland --has been completely butchered and grossly distorted so that most references come from handful of forged documents of the 11th and 12th centuries. |
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The original leaders of Ireland |
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The first priests and mystics of Europe are variously regarded as the mysterious "druids" -- a family and class of people long forgotten in history. The word "druid" is a neither a proto-european word, nor original word of the gaelic language. Instead it is a title assigned to them millenia later in an attempt to hide their identity. |
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These most sacred of all priests belonged to a single family cast, known by the same title --therefore Cuilliaéan is arguably the earliest "family name" in history. Contrary to misinformation presented on the Druid class, a person could not be trained to become a Cuilliaéan, they had to be born into the Cuilliaéan. |
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The title also referred to the most sacred tree of the earliest pre-Celtic European religious beliefs- the Holly tree. Today, a substantial amount of disinformation exists concerning the importance of certain plants to the Druids (Cuilliaéan). The Oak was the sacred tree of Summer, but the Holly was the most sacred plant of all- the plant of winter. The Druid did not worship weeds such as Mistletoe -- a ridiculous myth designed the belittle ancient knowledge. |
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The origin of the actual word Holly comes from the 11th Century Old High German hulis and Old English holegn both meaning Holly. The word hulis originates from an even older proto-Germanic word khuli a shortened derivation of the ancient Gaelic cuilieann both meaning Holly. Today in Modern Gaelic, Holly is still known as cuileann. |
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The word "Celt" is also derived from Holly as a description of the earliest leaders of Ireland. Celt comes from the ancient Greek word 'keltoi'. |
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The founding of Ath Cliath Cuilliaéan as a colony for foreigners |
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It has been conclusively proven that amongst the very first gold artefacts of the Neolithic Age to be found throughout Europe and the Mediterranean come from gold extracted from Ireland. Amongst the first gold mines of history were found in the hills south of Dublin known properly as the Feara Cualann/Feara Cuilliaéan (Holly/Sacred Hills). Today, absolutely no reference is made to the Cuilliaéan. |
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By the mid 4th Millenia BCE, natural bronze was also being exported from Ireland to other parts of the ancient world --heralding the birth of the Bronze Age. Given the amount of activity, it is probable that the first settlement of the site now known as Dublin was a colony and port for foreign traders in exporting gold, tin and bronze. |
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Eblana and the birth of Ibbi-Éri or Ibiru (Ireland) |
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By 2800 BCE, the largest and most important trading partner with Ath Cliath Cuilliaéan was Ebla at the far east of the Mediterranean- the famed birthplace of the great patriarchs of Ebla including Ab-ra-mu (Abraham), E-sa-um (Esau) , Ish-ma-ilu (Ishmael), Is-ra-ilu (Israel), Da-'u'dum (David), Sa-'u-lum (Saul). |
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Ebla is also the home of Eblaite, the language from which all written languages of Europe and Asia may be traced. |
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However, in 2300/2290 Sargon the Great conquered Ebla and the last King Ibbi sought safe exile for his court at Ath Cliath Cuilliaéan. King Ibbi was granted the rights to the city of foreigners and it was renamed Eblana- or the "new Ebla" with the Irish becoming known as the Ibbi-Éri or Ibiru the “Land/Island of Ibbi”. By 1850 BCE, the Irish were then known as the Hibiru-- a term used by cultures such as the Egyptians to describe the "sea peoples" that also included the much younger culture of the Phoenicians. |
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Eblana fell into decline during the Irish tribal wars that lasted for nearly six hundred years until the arrival of Jeremiah and Princess Tamar Tephi around 593 BCE at Carrickfergus in the North-East of Ireland. After the founding of a new capital called Tara --from which the word Torah originates -- Eblana prospered under the new Celtic culture. |
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The destruction of Dublin 852 by the false High Kings |
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In 852 a Viking armada led by Ivar Ragnarsson and his brothers Halfdene and Ubbe moved their families to a new base near Oban in the lands of the Dál Riata on the West coast of Scotland. In the same year, the Vikings landed at Dublin Bay on the outskirts of the city to engage the forces of High King of Ireland Máel Sechnaill from the Clann Cholmáin of the Southern Uí Néill. |
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Contrary to the deliberate lie written by the scribed employed by the Uí Néill, the Vikings did not set fire to Dublin- the Uí Néill did as a means of escaping as cowards from Ivar and his brothers. Tens of thousands of innocent native Irish died through this historic treachery. Rather than stand by, the Vikings on seeing this evil, moved into the city and saved many of its inhabitants. |
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In an act that defies the ancient wrongs ascribed by generations of false history, the Vikings did not abandon the population -- instead remaining to assist in the rebuilding of Dublin, including stronger defences and more buildings of stone. |
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The 12th Century Norman Invasions |
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After the Norman invasion of Ireland, Dublin became the key centre of military and judicial power, with much of the power centering on Dublin Castle until independence. |
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From the 14th to late 16th centuries, English crown control over Ireland was limited to a section of territory, known as the Pale, which included Dublin at its southern end, and Dundalk at its northern extremity. |
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The Parliament was located in Drogheda for several centuries, but was switched permanently to Dublin after Henry VII conquered the County Kildare in 1504. |
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The sacking of Drogheda, and massacre of her citizens, by Oliver Cromwell, in 1649, resulted in Dublin becoming the dominant port city in Ireland. |
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By the end of the 17th Century, the Irish were reduced to stone age slaves while British gentry purchased title for lands throughout Ireland. During this period the city of Duiblin expanded rapidly, helped by the Wide Streets Commission. Georgian Dublin was, for a short time, the second city of the British Empire after London and the fifth largest European city. |
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Much of Dublin's most notable architecture dates from this time and is considered a "golden era" for the city. In 1749, the relocation of the Guinness brewery from Leixlip, to St.James Gate, resulted in a considerable economic impact for the city, which is felt to this day. For much of the time since its foundation, the Guinness Brewery was the largest employer in the city. |
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Under British rule, Dublin was deliberately isolated from benefitting from the Industrial Revolution. The Easter Rising of 1916 took place in several parts of the city, bringing much physical destruction to the city centre. |
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The Anglo-Irish War and Irish Civil War contributed even more destruction, leaving some of its finest buildings in ruins. The Irish Free State government rebuilt the city centre and located the Dáil (parliament) in Leinster House. |
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