The Discovery of the Ark of the Covenant: Based on the Works Of Baram Blackett and Alan Wilson, from Their Thirty Years of Researches into Authentic British History by Alan Wilson & Barum Blackett

The Discovery of the Ark of the Covenant: Based on the Works Of Baram Blackett and Alan Wilson, from Their Thirty Years of Researches into Authentic British History by Alan Wilson & Barum Blackett

Author:Alan Wilson & Barum Blackett
Language: eng
Format: mobi
ISBN: 9781490786292
Publisher: Trafford Publishing
Published: 2007-08-29T07:00:00+00:00


South of Aber Gwaun—Fishguard in the place where the Star Maps made of mounds should position Auriga the Good Shepherd in Llys y Defaid for The Court of the Shepherd. Below this place is the stream of Nant y Bugail and that means The Stream of the Shepherd. There is more than one word for shepherd as for many other things and possibly the difference was required to define what animals the shepherd was caring for. Just south of The Court of the Shepherd is Tygrug-fawr or the House of the Great Heap / Mound and on the hill above are very large earthworks. These are possibly the remains of the Court of the Good Shepherd and there is a quarry immediately below and south of this place.

To the north and close to the incongruously named Fishguard is Pen y Bryn farm that used to belong to Ernest Evens and his wife Lilian, and Uncle Ernie was a cousin of Alan’s mother. It is a long story but a German bomb struck Alan’s grandmother’s house in Cardiff and so Mary Williams went off to stay with Ernie and Lillian. Ernie had actually lived as a foster son with Mary Williams in Cardiff, and as a foster-brother to Alan’s mother when he was a teenager, before going off to become a seaman. So when another German bomb damaged drains several people became ill and Alan’s mother was hospitalised with diphtheria. This made life difficult for Alan’s father Luke, who as a steelworker in the middle of World War II, was working long hours seven days a week. So Luke put Owen aged 9 and Alan age 7, and Ewan age 2, onto a train and sent them off to Fishguard, and they arrived there after a tortuous journey of late trains, Swansea station in chaos after bombing, changing trains and so on they finally arrived. So Alan Wilson and his brothers stayed for a while with their grandmother and Ernie and Lillian and their five sons and one daughter at Pen y Bryn Farm before departing to live at Cwm Dewi in Dinas Cross with their Uncle David Roberts known as Dai Cwm Dewi.

In the field on the south side next to the farmhouse at Pen y Bryn is an enormous pile of very large stones and clear signs of a large pit under these stones. Raymond Evans told Alan Wilson that his grandfather had dynamited many of these stones to use them as the foundation of the farmhouse that he built. How many he dynamited is not known but there are still a huge number remaining. These stones are apparently not local, and they are believed to have been brought to this place from rocks some ten miles away, presumably from somewhere on the Prescelli Mountains. As kids they were all told to keep away from the stones as the place was considered to be dangerous.

The obvious point is the question of why anyone would dig out a huge hole



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