Navan Fort.
Ancient seat of
kings.
Copyright © 1998
JAH.
All rights reserved.
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More than 2,500 years ago, in the sixth century
B.C., Navan was the Palace of Nuadh of the
Silver Hand, king of Ulster.
Nuadh was called Nuadh of the Silver Hand because he had one of his
hands cut off by Sreng at the first Battle of Moytura, fought in the
West, and he had an artificial-hand made out of silver, by Diancecht
the physician, with which he could hold a weapon. After the Battle of
Moytura he was obliged, under the laws of Ulster, to name a regent,
because no-one who was disfigured could rule and lead an army into
battle.
Nuadh elected Bressail mac Elatha, the eldest son of Elatha who was
king of Cornwall, as his regent for seven years, but Bres was greedy
and selfish and taxed the people so heavily that they became poor and
miserable.
This was common in Ireland, which was divided into many little
kingdoms, with the local kings fighting each other for supremacy and
taxing their subjects very heavily to pay for their soldiers and to
keep themselves in relative luxury. The subjects were also expected
to fight and were being maimed or killed and their lives were an
absolute misery (as it has been in recent-times under the
para-military groups).
After the destruction of Jerusalem and Solomon's Temple in 588 B.C.
by Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon, Jeremiah the Bible Prophet brought the
daughter of king Zedekiah of Jerusalem, from the line of David, who
was from the Pharez branch of Judah, to Ireland in 583 B.C., via
Gibraltar. Jeremiah also brought Jacob's Pillar Stone (Bethel), which
became the Throne of David - the Lia Fail Stone (of
Destiny), which is today called the
Stone of Scone,
along with The "Lost"
Ark of The Covenant.
The Lia Fail / Stone of
Destiny.
At Tara Zedekiah's daughter queen Teia Tephi
married Eochaidh the High-king of Tara, who was descended from
Pharez's twin brother Zarah of the "Red Hand" branch of the line of Judah (Genesis 38:28-30*), on the 21st June
583 B.C., thereby sealing the breach that was caused by the twins'
birth, hundreds of years earlier. This marriage united the two royal
lines of the primordial twins; Pharez and Zarah; that sprang from
Jacob/Israel's fourth of his twelve sons, who was called Judah. That
is why there is a "Red Hand" (Eochaidh/Zarah) mounted on the "Star of David" (Teia
Tephi/Pharez) under a single royal crown on the Ulster flag and the knights
descended from Judah/Zarah were called the "Red Branch Knights."
*Genesis 38:28 And it came to pass, when
she travailed, that [the one] put out [his] hand: and the midwife
took and bound upon his hand a
scarlet thread, saying, This came out first.
38:29 And it came to pass, as he drew back his hand, that, behold,
his brother came out: and she said, How hast thou broken forth? Why
has thou made [this] breach against thee?
Therefore his name was called Pharez
(Breach).
38:30 And afterward came out his brother, that had the
scarlet thread upon his hand: and his name was
called Zarah (Scarlet).
The Ulster
flag.
Teia Tephi landed at Howth on 18th June 583 B.C.,
with the Lia Fail Stone, three days before marrying Eochaidh, but
Jeremiah had sailed off into the night with his ships containing
The Ark of The Covenant and is said, in the Legends of Ulster, to have landed at
Carrickfergus before travelling to Tara in Royal Meath, after the
Battle of Unna, fought at Slane.
Jeremiah died on the 21st of September in 581 B.C., after hiding The
Ark of The Covenant in a secret tomb at Tara and he was buried in
what is now called Cairn T, at Loughcrew, nr. Oldcastle, Co. Meath,
as is confirmed by the hieroglyphics on the stones inside it and
about which I have written an explanatory booklet, similar to this
one.
Jeremiah's Tomb,
Cairn T at Loughcrew, Co. Meath
As a boy Eochaidh the High-king had been warned in
a vision that he must not marry, even if he reached middle-age, until
his queen came from the East. So when Teia came from Jerusalem,
Eochaidh knew that this was the fulfillment of his vision. The couple
fell in love, at first site, and were married three days later, at
Tara, on the Inauguration Mound, where they gave their pledges over
the Lia Fail Stone (the Stone of Destiny
[above], that went from Ireland to Scotland in 500 A.D.; from Scotland to England in 1296 A.D. and then back to Scotland again in 1950.
Nostradamus the sixteenth-century French prophet says it will return
to Ireland very soon - please "CLICK HERE" for a detailed
history of The Lia Fail Stone).
The Inauguration Mound at
Tara.
(centre-left of picture, below The Mound of
The Hostages)
Teia and Eochaidh then abolished the unjust laws
and taxes of the regional kings/warlords and instituted The Torah
(God's Law) as the sole legislation for ALL of Ireland, which brought
peace;
prosperity and
unity to the
whole of Ireland
for the very first time. However, this was not before many of the
regional kings/warlords led by Bressail; who had been removed as
regent because of his injustice; rebelled against Teia Tephi queen of
Tara.
Teia Tephi was the War Queen of
Ireland with the Olive Twig from Jerusalem and
the Trident
(taken from Neptune's Porch - Gibraltar, on her way to Ireland); who became immortalised in the
form of the national emblem, Britannia.
Picture of Britannia.
Nuadh of the Silver Hand, king of Ulster, who was
a just king, sided with The Torah (God's Law); Teia Tephi; Eochaidh
and Lughaidh* "Samildanach" against Bressail (who was later buried at
Dowth, Co. Meath), leader of the rebel kings and Nuadh held a
war-council at "Fair Emain", which is known today as Navan Fort.
* Levi.
Lughaidh
"Samildanach" (man of all crafts) came
with Teia Tephi to visit Nuadh's Court at Navan and played a joke on
the guards at the entrance to the Palace. This joke has been passed
down in Irish folk-lore and has survived the many centuries, intact,
as Lughaidh prophesied and it is quoted below, from the "Book of
Tephi Queen of Tara and Gibraltar":-
And the next day (we) drew unto Emain (Navan) riding thither full
fast
Before our people, and Lughaidh swore that a jest TO LAST
Should be in our coming thither. So went he afoot to the hall,
His brightness veiled by a cloak. Now there stood two guardians
tall
And haughty by Nuadh's threshold, and these men bade him to stay
Until his errand was told them. Then said he humbly, "I pray,
Doth Nuadh require a wheelwright?" and the porters answered him
"Nay,
We have Luchta, the son of Lomhaid." Then asked he again, "I pray
Your favour, wants he a smith," and the porters again said "Nay,
Our smith is the thrice-skilled Colum." Then bolder he spoke, "I
pray
Lack ye here for a champion?" and loudly the men cried "Nay,
Great Ogma cometh and Ethdan." Then sweetly he sung, "I pray,
Want ye my songs as a harper?" and proudly they answered "Nay,
For Ethan comes oft to our tables." So, solemn, he asked, "I
pray,
Have ye preachers and pious amongst you," and scornful they spake
him, "Ay,
The wisdom of Sri, the preaching of Mathgen." So laughed he, "I
pray,
Are cupbearer's near to your lord?" They answered in mocking,
"Ay,
Dathi leads twelve clad in crimson?" Then, formal, he questioned,
"Pray,
Be there scribes or recorders with them?" Whereupon they answered
him, "Ay,
Many scribes under En son of Eschmun." So, last he said, "I
beseech
Your mercy in asking, hath Nuadh provided a skilful leech?"
One laughed and the other yawned. "The chief of that craft have
we,
With son and daughter beside him, wellnigh as skilful as he."
Then Lughaidh cast cloak, and shouted, "Go, Kamal the son of
Knees
And Hamal son of Formality, ask thy master, of these
Which man may do every service?" Right swiftly these lackeys sped
At his chiding, and Nuadh heard them, and came to the gate and
led
The "man of all crafts"* to his table, where laughter and mirth was
found
To greet us upon our coming, whilst gaily that jest went round.
* "Samildanach," a title of Lughaidh's who
may have picked up his oriental terms of abuse (Gamul Mac Figol and
Chamal Mac Rhiagild) in his wanderings, or learned them of the folk
whom he is reported to have sent as far as the Persian court for
steel weapons, probably unobtainable further West at that period -
the sixth century B.C.
Teia Tephi also stated, in her "Book of
Tephi Queen of Tara and Gibraltar", that the Gadite Israelite people of
Gibraltar; referred to by Jeoffry
Keating, in his "General History of Ireland", as
Gadelians
(the Eighth tribe of Israel -
Gad was the eighth of Jacob/Israel's twelve
sons); traded with the people of the
"outer deep" in many things, including apes, and archaeologists have
found the remains of a Barbary
Ape, which is native to Gibraltar, at
Navan Fort and have dated it to the Iron-Age, which is the period of
Queen Teia Tephi.
Picture of Gibraltar and
Ape.
Nuadh king of Ulster fought for Teia
Tephi, and to institute The Torah (God's Law) to Ireland, at the
Battle of Unna (Destruction) where he bravely rode against Balor of
the Mighty Blows (and Evil-eye) but was slain by Balor. After missing
Balor with his first two spears Nuadh rode against him with his third
spear but as he passed one of Balor's soldiers, the soldier struck
his horse's heels causing it to rear-up and fall. Balor from the
Western Isles leapt from his chariot and slew Nuadh with an iron
craisech (a broad heavy spear with a blunt point).
Picture of a craisech.
There were 6,668 men killed at the
Battle of Unna and they were buried in the Boyne Valley. Knowth was
the tomb of the men of high rank, which is probably where Nuadh was
buried; unless he was returned to Navan for burial; and its many
satellite graves are where those of lesser rank were buried.
Perhaps in the near future archaeologists will find the silver hand
of Nuadh in Knowth or perhaps here in "Fair Emain", Navan, the
Ancient Capital of Ulster.
There is another Navan in Ireland in nearby Co. Meath which is where
Nuadh used to stay when he went to the "Meetings of the kings" at the
Rath of the Synods (Assemblies) on the Hill of Tara, known at that
time as Cathair Crofinn.
Picture of The Rath of The
Synods.
(shown above The Mound of The
Hostages)
It is even possible that, being closer
to the Battle of Unna battle-site, Nuadh could have been buried at
Navan, Co. Meath in the Domain of Teffia as she loved old Nuadh and
would probably have liked to have him buried near to her.
In the "Book of Tephi Queen of Tara and
Gibraltar" God prophesied that the people
of Ireland would forget Teia and His Torah (Law) that brought peace
and prosperity to Ireland and that, because of that, people would
again make up their own laws and taxes and Ireland would become
divided; the people become impoverished and the country war-torn,
where "Brother slayeth his
brother", until Teia Tephi is removed from
her secret tomb in the Hill of Tara and shown to ALL of the people of Ireland,
along with The Torah.
When this is completed and the people know their true history; identity and
heritage and return to and keep The Eternal Covenant, that
all of their
fore-fathers made with God at Horeb in Sinai, binding on their children
in perpetuity,
God has promised to bring peace; prosperity and unity once again to
Ireland. This will take the "ire" out of Ireland for ever and
make it become Peaceland, and nothing else will, because
He says so.
Knowth -
Cnogba "Nut Lamentation."
Knowth
is the English name for Cnogba "Nut Lamentation".
Magh Macha has a wood, rich in nut-clusters, in the western part,
where the all-pervading aroma of the nuts used to excite the animals.
Emain Macha - Navan Fort was Nuadh's home. As Nuadh was the much
loved brave and honourable king of Ulster who lived at Emain Macha -
Navan; Knowth is probably Nuadh's Grave, where he was buried after he
fell at the Battle of Unna (Destruction) opposing Bressail "Bodibal"
mac Elatha and the people lamented his death. The tomb
entrance-passage faces the entrance of Dowth so that Nuadh and
Bressail would face and oppose each other forever. Around the tomb
are many satellite graves which would be the graves of the soldiers
of lesser rank that fell with Nuadh during the battle, whilst
defending Teia Tephi, who was later wrongfully deified as the goddess
Bovinda (Heifer), or Bo for short. The Battle of Destruction was fought
nearby, at Slane.
Legend has it that Lughaidh "Lamhfhada" (long-hand) also known as
"Crom Dubh" (the one bowed to the black haired heifer - Teia Tephi), the
son of the great Ith Cian, the king of Spain, buried his wife at
Knowth.
Above left, the ground-plan of Knowth and
above right,
the ground-plan of Dowth.
Dowth -
Dubad "Darkness"
Dowth -
Dubad "Darkness" is the tomb of Bressail "Bodibal" mac Elatha, the
son of Elatha ruler of Cornwall in the sixth century B.C. Bres was a
very handsome man, loved by the Irish women for his good looks but
hated by the menfolk for his greed and meanness.
Bres lived in Ireland for some years and was made the champion and
regent of Nuadh of the Silver Hand, king of Ulster, for seven years,
during which time he hoarded wealth and made the menfolk's lives a
misery. On receiving notice from Cornwall he went home to fetch and
escort Teia Tephi, the mother of Aengus who built
Newgrange, from Cornwall to Tara, years
before Aengus was born.
At Tara, after Tephi was inaugurated as queen of all Ireland, the
people complained to her about Bres, so she arranged an election in
which he was removed as regent. His laws and taxes were then
abolished and The
Torah put in their place. At that point a
number of kings and warlords in the already divided and war-torn
country of Ireland joined Bres and rebelled against Tephi, because
under The Real Law of The Torah, that she brought, they would have to
give back all the wealth that they had un-fairly stolen from the
people under their own laws and taxes that they had made up
themselves. A huge battle then transpired, known as the Battle of
Unna (Destruction), where all of the rebel kings and warlords and
their armies led by Bressail the son of Elatha of Cornwall, fought
against Teia Tephi and her army. As Teia Tephi was fighting for God
and His Laws, her army defeated all of the rebels in the battle which
was held at Slane, called the Battle of Unna (Destruction), which
commenced on 31st October of 583 B.C. and lasted for four days.
On the 27th October of 583 B.C., four days before the battle
commenced, there was a Lunar Eclipse in the Constellation of Taurus,
when the Moon would have looked blood-red and would have been
interpreted as an "Omen of Death" and defeat for the
Baal-worshippers, whose symbol is the bull. Taurus being the sign of
the bull. The Baal-worshippers led by Bressail mac Elatha
(known in legend as Bressail "Bodibal" -
"Bo destroyer") fought to destroy God's
Chosen, Teia Tephi (Bo) at the Battle of Destruction, but failed.
This Lunar Eclipse is shown in hieroglyphics in Jeremiah's Tomb, Cairn T at Loughcrew, nr. Oldcastle.
There was a total of six thousand six hundred and sixty-eight people
killed in the Battle of Unna. Five thousand and sixty-three of whom
were on Bressail's side including forty-two kings from various
regions of Ireland, and the rest of the British Isles. From Teia
Tephi's army, only sixteen hundred and five were killed, those of
rank from both sides that fell at the battle were buried at Knowth
and those of lower rank were buried in the many satellite graves
around Knowth and through-out the Boyne Valley.
Bressail, the leader of the rebels, although defeated, wasn't killed
in the battle and after swearing allegiance to Teia Tephi and The
Torah was sent out to help clear the sea of Fomorians (pirates). The
people never forgot his meanness and arrogance and when he died he
was buried in the tomb that was made to face the setting sun rather
than the sunrise and his tomb was named Dowth which is derived from
the old Gaelic word, Dubad, meaning darkness. He had fought for the
lord of Darkness against God the Lord of Light, attempting to defeat
and destroy God's Chosen, Teia Tephi and God's Perfect Law -
The Torah.
We hope you have enjoyed your visit to Navan Fort and that you will
tell your family and friends and that we will see you again to wish
you once again; as our cousins in the South say;
Cead mile failte, which means, in English, a
hundred thousand welcomes. JAH
When travelling through and visiting the Heritage
sites in beautiful Ulster and the Republic, PLEASE take only photographs and
leave only footprints.
Thank you.
Please CLICK on map to view in full
size.
Map of sites related to Jeremiah The
Prophet,
Teia Tephi, The Lia Fail Stone and
The Ark of The Covenant.
The autobiography of queen Teia Tephi,
that she wrote at Teltown, is
called the "Book of Tephi
Queen of Tara and Gibraltar". It is
absolutely full of ancient historical and prophetical information
including prophecies about the near future. It is a fascinating book
written in verse, like the famous Irish Metrical Dindsenchas, and
costs only £10.