
She^mSA W t lf rA X W
rio^timiu^ Getd his'Sonias" flaiti by his:BrotEfet':Garaeai&dn;tfae
A^rn^iof;pfiki wEb afterwards:inatrraed Bkfikrm*
^ p fo a fpE|iteijWi%'Qf:4 raer.ajl pjl
bdfcllH^bnt'wsQ fudceedeft by P^liogMdlus •;
^^f||ie#tfedi3aedteWin BAtaittO>tiMdcrinuf fuclMdedihim’. ■
Heliagabalus, the fuppofed Son of BajfionW) took uponWm; the
jl^radof^^OTaj1.'1 1
T hpr-p it4 StbfeFtOdifis, rt®ti^beiC©ltei®k)iiuficifcjb«E^ '«eimi
pleat, TrefefThe Reader to the ^uttsl | .
I c fFhefe are the mdLrfetharkable g i^ntHpaities felating to this
•ffl&hd dMihgrthei?o«M;^ovemmenty what: People! pieleded
Hinted bbfqre, is^videntdfodih :thefd.Mluwing
dlirids, .(which if \^ tdhfider dhe Remate0efs c£thel)laees)£rpih
■each other) idla^-©iineeifb Ins^ thatsthfiiMjfotMdr,: befbmPSe
Greeks and Romans came hither, had difeovered the wholedflanqj.
and fixed in it" various Colonies. For the i :cltearitg',o£l Ihis
Head I flikll'ifegtffl -with the‘»oft; NoMheracBartKof Bnia&i,
and thehce: briefly procee'dto the ldnds End Of England^ in doling
® Which11»dft ailitde Feeapifulate.' rv
||j |H|fe|-fhd moft Northern Part,of Britain) H a Phoenician Word
l®gftif^i%ifii -that Language fyom&he 'Shadows
of their Trees^ or the Shortneft ^tkdip;diXa^c^'<ftdhiI&w&
the Latins called -Drci^ifjfiafadthe^cofe); 'n6W?0rIo^C!..dFlmto$H^
■TMle was the Qrcades is evident,from Sfrofoy 'firice, as: was before
qbfetved,' hei /mentions dPhiile Rtitanicdr which! cduld be
no other Place.
% Kent) - the' Marne of a great River near Lancafter, in. the' Armenian
Tongue fignifies a great Rineri f$a.:
Burn the Name o f a confiderahleRiver near the famePlace^
in the Armenian Tonguefigniffes.the-Moonij x
BeUiJfama1 the Name of:a Riven ;near Brefbon.in Lanca/hire, in
■ the Phoenician Language fignifiesah?i Modn ot tbe,Groddefs$f, Pleaven,
whom the Britain*) as well as the Phoenicians) itile ■Ahdrafie^ and
7 7 L4 N c A)SfHiR-E,}q h :e fSiH/ir
'4fa*W^mz- % ^Inv'ocatipn'
i&adicia
rwhidr, was v sin the, foilowin^vMan|ier^paAndra4eK I being a
Woman fintyocate th^^ Woman^ ^
- d ¥ ¥ x ^ 'f h e * Name pf0fhejCai^e^Ri^ .in.fhe Armenian
^ongi^?j^gnifiesT%f1w.fi>„ ,,f
Branch-1 |/he.fa^^iyef,*‘\nfy$jb ^ P h ^ iaM b
Rivulet. .
Gaer, the primitive idd' 2>j£3M
MiuU uL
' -Fad, [frorri, whenqe. London* is moft probably denonunated,!
is Hebrew, fignifying in that Language Lydi^ >a p o e tr y
,jng toP^eniflf.
jAdd-,(to_thefe thCj Qounti'e^ of Camwall md t)emnMire. which
gp this E )^ fin their Language retain many • PbcenjcianWords
and Idioms,/ asqMr. in his Brifania ^informs usl as like?
^ifeT,^r|flap>d|' ofSjSjf; which Ob^^Ons;. rightly we^hW'1
mak^^ a-clear Temonftration] that the Phoenicians had-failed
quite round the lfland,- and in all Parts’r'of, it fixe^"iheir'Co-
Monies,, 4 f;
-ja I fhalk ^ut produce .oneclnftancerhore, (an,d pot further tranf*
grels upqnrthe Readers Ratiencp, that is the; Method .the Bri-
tjins had ip numbring-their Days,and Nights.-a,Way only parti. -
cular to them and the;Eafterp-Natiqns, ^iz.r tQjn\a.te‘the_(I)ay
fp |qllow thq Night, apd nptthe)N|ght the Day, as the Germans
and Romans did,, as,Cee£dr in .ht^pqmmentartesiajfrures usf; Which
particular Inftance, in my Opinion, indices, it'as.Delias thNe
Lights,they. numbred, that-thi|x I^l^nd was chiefly inhabited
from the Eaftern Nations, this Cuftom being exactly confor-
[ v ] , cmable •