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The Kolbrin Bible or The Bronzebook of Britain is a secular anthology that purports to have been originally written by Ancient Egyptian priests. The earliest copy is said to date from 1184.[1] No original source text has yet to be located, and it may be a pious fraud. The work comprises 11 separate volumes.
The word bible is used in the sense of "a collection", since the modern version contains information from several different manuscripts, including works on Celtic folklore. It has only minimal connection to the Hebrew Bible.
History
editThe actual text is said to date from 1184, when it was supposedly rescued from a great fire at Glastonbury Abbey. Several monastic buildings were destroyed and the text was one of several salvaged from the flames.[2] Why the name "Kolbrin" was applied to the work is not known.
Content
editThe main or center text was supposedly a collection of Egyptian folklore assembled by Egyptian priests after Moses' Crossing the Red Sea, in an attempt to understand it. How the text reached Britain is not explained.
Other texts added after the fire include the "Coelbook", a collation of ancient Celtic and Druid folklore, philosophy and mysticism. [2]
Editions
edit- 1992 Hope Trust ed.
- Culdean Trust version in New Zealand ISBN 0958-33-1332
- The Kolbrin Bible: 21st Century Master Edition by Janice Manning ISBN 1597720054 [1]
In other media
edit- The Nostradamus Effect "Doomsday Hieroglyphs"[3]
References
edit- ^ "TheKolbrin.com > The Culdian Trust Kolbrin Manuscripts". 2003. Retrieved 13 March 2010.
- ^ a b Kimball, Glenn (July 12, 2006). "The Kolbrin Bible". UFOdigest. Retrieved 13 March 2010.
- ^ Episode:4 - The Nostradamus Effect - History Television
- Kathy Cordova (6 August 2015). "Know Your Neighbor: Jodie Slack". The Taos News. p. C005. Retrieved 17 February 2020 – via newspapers.com.
External links
edit- Yvonne Whiteman (17 October 2015). "Guide to the Kolbrin". Graham Hancock Official Website. Retrieved 17 February 2020.
- The Kolbrin Bible at the Internet Archive