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SOME REVELATIONS ABOUT AMERICAN COLONIZATION BY DR. BARRY FELL OF HARVARD UNIVERSITY Please CLICK on highlighted areas for further detail: An interview by
Thomas Fleming with Dr. Barry Fell of Harvard University appeared in The Reader’s Digest in 1977. In this article Fleming stated that
although most Americans believe that their history began with Christopher
Columbus, historians have lately discovered hard evidence that Leif Ericson
and his fellow Norsemen were exploring Canada and the northern tier of the
United States as earl as 1000 A.D.
However, before that date the history of the New World above the Rio
Grande had been a virtual vacuum, inhibited by scattered Indian legends. Now the genius of
Dr Fell has caused a mind-boggling change in attitude on the subject of
American colonization. In his
published book, America B.C., New
Zealand-born Barry Fell, a marine biologist at Harvard, offered astonishing
evidence that there were men and women from Europe, not merely exploring but
living in North America as early as 800 B.C.
This was followed by additional books in 1982, 1983, 1985 and 1989
where the dates of such colonization were pushed back to as early as 1700
B.C. (See Bronze) These early
settlers worked as miners, tanners and trappers, and shipped their products
back to Europe. In temples in the
rugged hills of New Hampshire and Vermont (Sce
Photos-1 & Photos-2) and in river valleys in
Iowa and Oklahoma they sang hymns and performed sacred rituals to honor their
gods. When their kings or chiefs
died, they buried them beneath huge mounds of earth in which they left steles—written
testimony of their grief carved on stone. Some of these
steles had been discovered as early as the 19th Century, and
people had puzzled over strange incscriptions carved on cliffs from the Maine
coast to the Rio Grande and west to Nevada and California, or on stones that
lay in obscure museums. But
archeologists could not read the ancient writings and dismissed these
mysteries as forgeries or accidents of nature. Dr. Fell’s exepertise in this field known as epigraphy, which
requires many of the gifts intelligent persons bring to code-cracking, is the
tool which has enabled him to add a thousand years or more to America’s
past. Fell first became interested in
ancient languages while a student at the University of Edinburgh. He learned Gaelic, and began to
investigate Celtic tombs and ruins in Scotland. Then, in a study of the marine biology of Polynesia, he found
hundreds of unreadable inscriptions engraved on rocks and painted on cavern
walls. Intrigued, Fell came to Harvard in 1964 and spent the next eight years exploring the Widener Library’s unique collection of texts on obscure languages and writing systems. In the course of this effort he acquired a working knowledge of several ancient alphabets, including the hieroglyphics of the Egyptians = Punic); the script of the Carthaginians and Ogam, an almost forgotten script used by the pre-Christian Norse (often erroneously referred to as Celts—See Celts). Fell finally
proved to his satisfaction that the Polynesian inscriptions were written in
the native language, Maori. But its vocabulary was a mixture of Greek
and Egyptian that was once spoken in Libya after Alexander the Great
conquered Egypt. The alphabet was
derived from Carthage. The most remarkable of these Libyan
texts was found in a huge cave in New Guinea. There a navigator named Maui left drawings of ancient but sophisticated
astronomical and navigational instruments, as well as a depiction of a solar
eclipse that enabled Fell, with the help of Harvard astronomers, to identify
the year of the drawings as 232 B.C. If these were
Libyans visiting Polynesia at that time, Fell reasoned perhaps they sailed on
to South America. He soon accumulated
evidence for such landfalls and began lecturing on it at Harvard. His talks attracted the attention of a
group of investigators led by James P. Wittall II, an archeologist, who had
noted the similarity between numerous crude stone buildings in New England
which farmers often called root cellars, and similar ruins in Spain and
Portugal. The European buildings had
been identified as creations of Celts who ruled that part of Europe during
the Bronze Age, the period of prehistory, which dates roughly from 3500 B.C. Whittall asked Fell
to take a look at the Bourne stone, which had been discovered near Bourne,
Massachusetts around 1680. (Scan Photos) No one had ever been
able to make any sense of the writing on it.
Now, Dr. Fell was able to read it.
The letters were a variation of the Punic alphabet, found in ancient
Spain, for which Fell had coined the word “Iberic.” It recorded the annexation of a large portion of present-day
Massachusetts by Hanno, a prince of Carthage. Fell joined in a search for additional inscriptions at one of
their favorite sites, Mystery Hill in North Salem, N.H.. (Scan Photos) This site consists of a series of
slabstone buildings, variously attributed to Norsemen, wandering Irish monks,
and a vanished tribe of Indians.
Studying the inscribed triangular stones, which had previously been
found at the site, Fell found a dedication to the Phoenician god Baal, written in Iberic. Then promptly other people began to See
hitherto unnoticed inscriptions in the area.
The owner of Mystery Hill, Bob Stone found another table in an
adjacent drystone wall. When Fell
brushed away the adhering soil, he was able to read a line of Ogam script
that read “Dedicated to Bel.” Students of ancient
mythology had long suspected that the Celtic sun god Bel and the
Carthaginian-Phoenician god Ball were identical. Here, for the first time, there was evidence not only of this
fact, but of a Celtic-Carthaginian partnership in exploration and settlement
on a scale previously never even imagined. In the following
days Other Ogam inscriptions were located at another site in central Vermont (Scan Photos). Fell noted that it became clear that
ancient Celts had build these stone chambers as religious shrines, and the
Carthaginian mariners were visitors who were permitted to worship at them and
make dedications in their own language to their own gods. Then Whittall
showed Fell a photograph of an inscription engraved on a cliff above Mount
Hope Bay, in Bristol, Rhode Island, which was discovered and recorded in
1780. Because of vandalization, it
was necessary to work from the photograph.
Fell soon translated a single line, which was written in Punic: “Voyagers
from Tarshish this stone proclaims.” Tarshish was a
Biblical city on the southern coast of Spain, and its citizens were among the
boldest sailors of antiquity, famous for the size of their ships. In 533 B.C., the Carthaginians and their
trade taken over by these ambitious, daring sailors destroyed Tarshish. Here was evidence of how the partnership
between Celts and the Carthaginians began. On Monhegan Island,
12 miles off the coast of Maine, another inscription was brought to Dr.
Fell’s attention. It was written in
Celtic Ogam and read, “Cargo platforms for
ships from Phoenicia.” [(Also scan Photos) Data from America
now began to multiply. Most important
was Fell’s translation of the Davenport stele, which some people compare to
the translation of the Rosetta stone—the 19th-Century breakthrough
that enabled a reading of hieroglyphics and to grasp the awesome sweep of
Egyptian history. On this
inscription, which was found in a burial mound near Davenport, Iowa in 1874,
Dr. Fell was able to read three kinds of writing. At the top were Egyptian hieroglyphics. Below them was the Iberic form of Punic
writing found in Spain. The third
line was in Libyan script. This mean
that there were Egyptians, Libyans and Celtic Iberians living together in a
colony in Iowa in 900 B.C. It also
means that we have to revise a lot of our ideas about American history in
general and the culture of the Amerindians in particular. Paying closer
attention to native Amerindian languages, Barry Fell next reasoned that if these
pre-Christian visitors actually colonized parts of America, they mush have
left behind them a deep impression on the language and beliefs of the people
they encountered. He soon found
abundant evidence to support this conclusion. One of Fell’s
colleagues brought him a book from Harvard’s Widener Library that was written
by a missionary priest and published din 1866. It contained a document titled “The Lord’s Prayer in Micmac Hieroglyphics.” Fell saw that at least half of these
hieroglyphics were Egyptian. He was
able to prove from the written testimony of other priests that the Micmacs
were using this writing when the first missionaries arrived. In fact, all the Northern Algonquians, the
family of tribes to which the Micmacs belonged, apparently used it, having
acquired this language from Libyan mariners and preserved it for over 1000
years. As Fell began to
study the Algonquian language, he found hundreds of Egyptian words in the
dialects of the Northeastern Algonquians.
The verb na,
to See, is the same in both
languages. So is nauw, which means to be weak, and neechnw, which
means child. Celtic is also plentiful. The names of many New England rivers, one
thought to be Amerindian, turn out to be Celtic. Merrimack,
for instance, means “deep fishing”
in Algonquian. It is too close for
coincidence to the Gaelic Mor-riomach, meaning “of great depth.” Barry Fell’s
suggestion that Egypt might have had intense contact with North America is
strongly supported by the huge boats, which were discovered in 1950 adjacent
to Khufu’s great pyramid. They were
buried between 2589 and 2566 B.C..
One has been restored and it shows considerable wear as if it had gone
on long journeys. Its length is 43.63
meters, width 5.66 meters (See Egyptian Boat). This ship was perfectly capable of
crossing the Atlantic. The other
boats wree left intact, awaiting additional funding to rebuild them as well. An excellent article about these boats may
be found in the April/May 2004 issue of Ancient
Egypt Magazine.
------------------------------------------------ References: Fleming, Thomas.
1977. Harvard scholar feels
America discovered as early as 800 B.C.
The Reader’s Digest Assoc., Inc., Pleasantville, NY. Fell,
Barry. 1974. Life,
Space and Time: A course in
Environmental Biology.
Harper & Row, NY. 417 p. Fell,
Barry. 1976. America
BC. Ancient Settlers in the New World. Pocket Books, NY. 312 p. Fell,
Barry. 1982.
Bronze Age America. Little, Brown and Co., Boston,
Toronto. 304 p. Fell, Barry.
1983. Saga America.
A Startling New Theory on the Old World Settlement of America before Columbus. Times Book, NY. 392 p. Fell, Barry.
1985. Ancient Punctuation and
the Los Lunas text. The Epigraphic
Society. p. 35-43. Fell, Barry.
1989. America BC: Ancient Settlers in the New World. Pocket Books, NY. (revised ed.) |