After the Flood - by Bill Cooper |
CHAPTER
I
CHAPTER II CHAPTER III CHAPTER IV CHAPTER V CHAPTER VI CHAPTER VII CHAPTER VIII CHAPTER IX CHAPTER X CHAPTER XI CHAPTER XII CHAPTER XIII |
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Europe traced back to Noah" |
My special thanks must go to Dr David and Joan Rosevear whose active
encouragement and support over the years in the face of bitter disappointments
and setbacks, have ensured that this book has reached completion and may
now, at long last, reach the public. My thanks must also go to Andrew Yeuille
of Reading, a CSM member whose freely offered skills produced the excellent
OHP slides without which my lectures on the Table of Nations would have
been that much less successful. To Dr Andrew Snelling who published articles
of mine on this subject in the Creation Ex Nihilo Technical Journal,
and
to Laurel Hemmings his very able assistant. To those numberless librarians
up and down the land whose burrowings produced so much material over the
years, and who freely opened their priceless archives to me. And finally,
but by no means least, to my wife Eileen, to whom this book is dedicated,
and whose patience and understanding over the years ensured my release
from all those domestic chores which otherwise would have diverted my time
away from my researches. Thank you all.
'When all men were of one language, some of them built a high tower, as if they would thereby ascend up to heaven; but the gods sent storms of wind and overthrew the tower, and gave everyone his peculiar language; and for this reason it was that the city was called Babylon....After this they were dispersed abroad, on account of their languages, and went out by colonies everywhere; and each colony took possession of that land which they lighted upon, and unto which God led them; so that the whole continent was filled with them, both the inland and maritime countries. There were some also who passed over the sea in ships, and inhabited the islands; and some of these nations do still retain the names which were given to them by their first founders; but some also have lost them ...'The Sybil (Josephus. Antiq. i. 5.)
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