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Rare Ancient Manuscript Revealed by

Cambridge University Could Be Oldest Book

Known - Part One

A team of international scholars affiliated with the Association of Theological Colleges are examining an ancient religious book from a previously unrecorded civilization. The preserved maple wood binded book written on parchment has been suppressed in England since the 13th Century. The "holy book" is mentioned in the recently discovered Nurubi Fragments and is titled "The Book of Gates." Carbon 14 tests are being conducted in the basement laboratory of the Highmore Rare Book & Manuscript Library, London to prove authenticity. The manuscript could challenge the current theory of human history, which would have originated some 130,000 to 90,000 years ago. A rare ancient Caspian gospel in which an Eemian prophet named 'Izal' is believed to proclaim the coming of the First Gods to Earth has been revealed by academic scholars. Theological experts have now begun a study of the 100,000 year old book, which scholars have referred to as the Gospels of Izal, that has been preserved by the Cambridge University Library since the late 13th century. The book, also identified as the 'Book of Gates' is written in an undisclosed "dead language" and contains "forbidden" histories that have been compared to major religious and scientific speculations on the accepted stories of Creation. A Find of Revelations : The ancient Caspian bible written by an ancient prophet named Izal has been discovered to be nearly 100,000 years old, according to theologians. Mystery Gospel : The maple wood bound tome, composed on parchment, had been secretly hidden by Cambridge University in England since it being found in 1288 AD. New Scripture : Experts believe the book may detail the lost histories of an ancient continent mentioned in the British Museum's Nurubi Fragments. Bound by maple wood, as large as a Gutenberg Bible and written on parchment, the book is one of seven copies known to exist in the possession of silent private collectors and universities throughout the world. Knowledge of the Book of Gates was highly suppressed until 2017, prompting philologists to speculate that they were actually the surviving collection of codices written by the Eemian Prophet mentioned in the recently discovered Nurubi Fragments. The book was brought in 1288 AD from France and stored in a secret vault for antiquated manuscript collections when the Bishop of Ely, Hugh Balsham founded the Peterhouse, Cambridge's first college, after being granted its charter by King Edward I. The book has been reported to have remained there inaccessible until now. Initial Carbon-14 dating indicates that some of the pages have authenticated the book's age as roughly 100,000 years old. The Book of Gates is X-rayed at the Highmore Rare Book and Manuscript Library in London. A technician has placed the codex in the CT scanner, left, as the monitor previews the digital image, right. New scanning technology enables a micron-by-micron penetration of ancient documents, scrolls and tablets compiling digital images of individual pages and letterings. A technician begins producing the ancient text after three weeks of archiving sessions. The pages are assigned their correct positions in a digital replica of the Book of Gates for study. The Book of Gates was then reconstructed using modern materials for study. The original remains in the Cambridge University curation vaults to preserve the tome from elements. The text was abridged by the famous Englishman Jebidiah Ethan Smith, the 19th Century Oxford professor and occultist, who according to contemporary accounts received it by the ancient prophet Izal, thus producing his most famous work 'A Commentary on the Book of Gates". The abridgement took place in the quiet English town of Abingdon where Jebidiah Smith is said to have had his spirit communication after procuring the Tilbost House in October 21, 1863 AD. Arran Ellingsworth, Highmore's Head Conservator, in Kimbolton says he has found the out of print 'A Commentary on the Book of Gates' is just as highly prized as well by the most elusive manuscript collectors. Since May 2016 Ellingsworth has supervised their intricate authentication with Cambridge University and several British Museums have provided technical experts for the process. But several international theologists have voiced their concerns of the announcement, cautioning strongly that the book could be an elaborate hoax. The Nurubi Fragments were unearthed by archaeologist Austen Henry Layard and Layard's assistant Hormuzd Rassam of the British Museum at the Assyrian archaeological site of Kouyunjik, where the tablets were intermixed with the 22,000 tablets and writing boards corresponding with relics discovered in the ancient capital of Nineveh. Jebidiah Smith's manuscript researches brought attention to the mysterious tablets in the Nineveh library collection, and the "A Commentary of the Book of Gates" mentions their unique connection to his copy of the Book of Gates. The experts now determined their discovery suggested that the tablets were stored there since the 7th century BC. "When we consider the fragile condition of the pages and ornamentation and the immense age in which the book was discovered and handed down, we have an unexplained scientific mystery on how the artifact has survived to the modern world", remarked Ellingsworth in his official report. "But we are cautious about the integrity and preservation of the artifact and are employing specialized forensic methods." "With new techniques for reading ancient scrolls that are too brittle to unwrap special fine tuned scanners have now provided models of the paper surfaces for study (i.e., translation). "This allows new methods of opening the book without destroying it, revealing the underlining characters of the text and etchings that suggest an origin preceding the Mesopotamians". The scanned codex images were delivered to the Association of Theological Colleges by Cambridge University for authentication. The Tilbost House in Abingdon, England where the famous occultist and professor Jebidiah Smith composed his abridgement of the ancient tome called "A Commentary on the Book of Gates". The only known Ambrotype photo of Jebidiah Smith. The "A Commentary on the Book of Gates" First Edition, the 1868 title page details the ritual called The Circle of Eternity. The work is highly praised by institutions and museums around the world. Courtesy Oxford Press. The Museum Conservation Artifact Center in Brussels recently released their findings on the book's constructive materials and has verified their origin indicates the Caspian Sea region some 130,000 to 90,000 years ago. Ellingsworth remarked the Book of Gates could be considered a religious artifact, as the Nurubi Fragment's writer Vol Holm chronicles, having been composed during the final days of the ancient Corean civilization - as archaeology and historical analysis has suggested. Ancient Scroll : A reproduced section of the Book of Gates pages, showing natural colors and parchment reconstruction. The black handwritten ink is written in the forgotten Dlothian language.

WHO WAS THE PROPHET

IZAL?

The character forms the central theme of the Caspian gospel story in the "Nurubi Fragments." Having been born in what is now known as Eemian Comoria (modern Armenia), Izal was a pagan priest who later became the prophet of the First Gods and transcribed ancient stone tablets into the modernly revealed Book of Gates. He was known for many miracles in the Corean era described in the Nurubi Fragments and Jebidiah Smith mentions him in his 'A Commentary on the Book of Gates'. Smith wrote one of the Book of Gates was delivered to him by a spiritual Izal at his home in Abingdon, England in 1862. Nothing more is known of the prophet other than has been discovered in the Nineveh mound of Kouyunjik. In 2017, ruins of an unknown Caspian civilization dating from the Pleistocene were found as far west as Turkey, Azerbaijan, to northern Iran and southeast to Turkmenistan. Archaeologists believe these could be proof of the Corean accounts recorded by the ancient author of the Nurubi Fragments.
PAGE ONE
I
Oldest prophet in the Caspian Sea area is examined in Nurubi Fragments Eemian Tablets said by London Museum may be over 100,000 years old
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© bOURNE uNIVERSITY 2021

Rare Ancient Manuscript Revealed by

Cambridge University Could Be Oldest Book

Known - Part One

A team of international scholars affiliated with the Association of Theological Colleges are examining an ancient religious book from a previously unrecorded civilization. The preserved maple wood binded book written on parchment has been suppressed in England since the 13th Century. The "holy book" is mentioned in the recently discovered Nurubi Fragments and is titled "The Book of Gates." Carbon 14 tests are being conducted in the basement laboratory of the Highmore Rare Book & Manuscript Library, London to prove authenticity. The manuscript could challenge the current theory of human history, which would have originated some 130,000 to 90,000 years ago. A rare ancient Caspian gospel in which an Eemian prophet named 'Izal' is believed to proclaim the coming of the First Gods to Earth has been revealed by academic scholars. Theological experts have now begun a study of the 100,000 year old book, which scholars have referred to as the Gospels of Izal, that has been preserved by the Cambridge University Library since the late 13th century. The book, also identified as the 'Book of Gates' is written in an undisclosed "dead language" and contains "forbidden" histories that have been compared to major religious and scientific speculations on the accepted stories of Creation. A Find of Revelations : The ancient Caspian bible written by an ancient prophet named Izal has been discovered to be nearly 100,000 years old, according to theologians. Mystery Gospel : The maple wood bound tome, composed on parchment, had been secretly hidden by Cambridge University in England since it being found in 1288 AD. New Scripture : Experts believe the book may detail the lost histories of an ancient continent mentioned in the British Museum's Nurubi Fragments. Bound by maple wood, as large as a Gutenberg Bible and written on parchment, the book is one of seven copies known to exist in the possession of silent private collectors and universities throughout the world. Knowledge of the Book of Gates was highly suppressed until 2017, prompting philologists to speculate that they were actually the surviving collection of codices written by the Eemian Prophet mentioned in the recently discovered Nurubi Fragments. The book was brought in 1288 AD from France and stored in a secret vault for antiquated manuscript collections when the Bishop of Ely, Hugh Balsham founded the Peterhouse, Cambridge's first college, after being granted its charter by King Edward I. The book has been reported to have remained there inaccessible until now. Initial Carbon-14 dating indicates that some of the pages have authenticated the book's age as roughly 100,000 years old. The Book of Gates is X-rayed at the Highmore Rare Book and Manuscript Library in London. A technician has placed the codex in the CT scanner, left, as the monitor previews the digital image, right. New scanning technology enables a micron-by-micron penetration of ancient documents, scrolls and tablets compiling digital images of individual pages and letterings. A technician begins producing the ancient text after three weeks of archiving sessions. The pages are assigned their correct positions in a digital replica of the Book of Gates for study. The Book of Gates was then reconstructed using modern materials for study. The original remains in the Cambridge University curation vaults to preserve the tome from elements. The text was abridged by the famous Englishman Jebidiah Ethan Smith, the 19th Century Oxford professor and occultist, who according to contemporary accounts received it by the ancient prophet Izal, thus producing his most famous work 'A Commentary on the Book of Gates". The abridgement took place in the quiet English town of Abingdon where Jebidiah Smith is said to have had his spirit communication after procuring the Tilbost House in October 21, 1863 AD. Arran Ellingsworth, Highmore's Head Conservator, in Kimbolton says he has found the out of print 'A Commentary on the Book of Gates' is just as highly prized as well by the most elusive manuscript collectors. Since May 2016 Ellingsworth has supervised their intricate authentication with Cambridge University and several British Museums have provided technical experts for the process. But several international theologists have voiced their concerns of the announcement, cautioning strongly that the book could be an elaborate hoax. The Nurubi Fragments were unearthed by archaeologist Austen Henry Layard and Layard's assistant Hormuzd Rassam of the British Museum at the Assyrian archaeological site of Kouyunjik, where the tablets were intermixed with the 22,000 tablets and writing boards corresponding with relics discovered in the ancient capital of Nineveh. Jebidiah Smith's manuscript researches brought attention to the mysterious tablets in the Nineveh library collection, and the "A Commentary of the Book of Gates" mentions their unique connection to his copy of the Book of Gates. The experts now determined their discovery suggested that the tablets were stored there since the 7th century BC. "When we consider the fragile condition of the pages and ornamentation and the immense age in which the book was discovered and handed down, we have an unexplained scientific mystery on how the artifact has survived to the modern world", remarked Ellingsworth in his official report. "But we are cautious about the integrity and preservation of the artifact and are employing specialized forensic methods." "With new techniques for reading ancient scrolls that are too brittle to unwrap special fine tuned scanners have now provided models of the paper surfaces for study (i.e., translation). "This allows new methods of opening the book without destroying it, revealing the underlining characters of the text and etchings that suggest an origin preceding the Mesopotamians". The scanned codex images were delivered to the Association of Theological Colleges by Cambridge University for authentication. The Tilbost House in Abingdon, England where the famous occultist and professor Jebidiah Smith composed his abridgement of the ancient tome called "A Commentary on the Book of Gates". The only known Ambrotype photo of Jebidiah Smith. The "A Commentary on the Book of Gates" First Edition, the 1868 title page details the ritual called The Circle of Eternity. The work is highly praised by institutions and museums around the world. Courtesy Oxford Press. The Museum Conservation Artifact Center in Brussels recently released their findings on the book's constructive materials and has verified their origin indicates the Caspian Sea region some 130,000 to 90,000 years ago. Ellingsworth remarked the Book of Gates could be considered a religious artifact, as the Nurubi Fragment's writer Vol Holm chronicles, having been composed during the final days of the ancient Corean civilization - as archaeology and historical analysis has suggested. Ancient Scroll : A reproduced section of the Book of Gates pages, showing natural colors and parchment reconstruction. The black handwritten ink is written in the forgotten Dlothian language.

WHO WAS THE PROPHET

IZAL?

The character forms the central theme of the Caspian gospel story in the "Nurubi Fragments." Having been born in what is now known as Eemian Comoria (modern Armenia), Izal was a pagan priest who later became the prophet of the First Gods and transcribed ancient stone tablets into the modernly revealed Book of Gates. He was known for many miracles in the Corean era described in the Nurubi Fragments and Jebidiah Smith mentions him in his 'A Commentary on the Book of Gates'. Smith wrote one of the Book of Gates was delivered to him by a spiritual Izal at his home in Abingdon, England in 1862. Nothing more is known of the prophet other than has been discovered in the Nineveh mound of Kouyunjik. In 2017, ruins of an unknown Caspian civilization dating from the Pleistocene were found as far west as Turkey, Azerbaijan, to northern Iran and southeast to Turkmenistan. Archaeologists believe these could be proof of the Corean accounts recorded by the ancient author of the Nurubi Fragments.
THE BOURNE JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGY
BOURNE UNIVERSITY
PAGE ONE
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Oldest prophet in the Caspian Sea area is examined in Nurubi Fragments Eemian Tablets said by London Museum may be over 100,000 years old
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Rare Ancient Manuscript Revealed by

Cambridge University Could Be Oldest

Book Known - Part One

A team of international scholars affiliated with the Association of Theological Colleges are examining an ancient religious book from a previously unrecorded civilization. The preserved maple wood binded book written on parchment has been suppressed in England since the 13th Century. The "holy book" is mentioned in the recently discovered Nurubi Fragments and is titled "The Book of Gates." Carbon 14 tests are being conducted in the basement laboratory of the Highmore Rare Book & Manuscript Library, London to prove authenticity. The manuscript could challenge the current theory of human history, which would have originated some 130,000 to 90,000 years ago. A rare ancient Caspian gospel in which an Eemian prophet named 'Izal' is believed to proclaim the coming of the First Gods to Earth has been revealed by academic scholars. Theological experts have now begun a study of the 100,000 year old book, which scholars have referred to as the Gospels of Izal, that has been preserved by the Cambridge University Library since the late 13th century. The book, also identified as the 'Book of Gates' is written in an undisclosed "dead language" and contains "forbidden" histories that have been compared to major religious and scientific speculations on the accepted stories of Creation. A Find of Revelations : The ancient Caspian bible written by an ancient prophet named Izal has been discovered to be nearly 100,000 years old, according to theologians. Mystery Gospel : The maple wood bound tome, composed on parchment, had been secretly hidden by Cambridge University in England since it being found in 1288 AD. New Scripture : Experts believe the book may detail the lost histories of an ancient continent mentioned in the British Museum's Nurubi Fragments. Bound by maple wood, as large as a Gutenberg Bible and written on parchment, the book is one of seven copies known to exist in the possession of silent private collectors and universities throughout the world. Knowledge of the Book of Gates was highly suppressed until 2017, prompting philologists to speculate that they were actually the surviving collection of codices written by the Eemian Prophet mentioned in the recently discovered Nurubi Fragments. The book was brought in 1288 AD from France and stored in a secret vault for antiquated manuscript collections when the Bishop of Ely, Hugh Balsham founded the Peterhouse, Cambridge's first college, after being granted its charter by King Edward I. The book has been reported to have remained there inaccessible until now. Initial Carbon-14 dating indicates that some of the pages have authenticated the book's age as roughly 100,000 years old. The Book of Gates is X-rayed at the Highmore Rare Book and Manuscript Library in London. A technician has placed the codex in the CT scanner, left, as the monitor previews the digital image, right. New scanning technology enables a micron-by-micron penetration of ancient documents, scrolls and tablets compiling digital images of individual pages and letterings. A technician begins producing the ancient text after three weeks of archiving sessions. The pages are assigned their correct positions in a digital replica of the Book of Gates for study. The Book of Gates was then reconstructed using modern materials for study. The original remains in the Cambridge University curation vaults to preserve the tome from elements. The text was abridged by the famous Englishman Jebidiah Ethan Smith, the 19th Century Oxford professor and occultist, who according to contemporary accounts received it by the ancient prophet Izal, thus producing his most famous work 'A Commentary on the Book of Gates". The abridgement took place in the quiet English town of Abingdon where Jebidiah Smith is said to have had his spirit communication after procuring the Tilbost House in October 21, 1863 AD. Arran Ellingsworth, Highmore's Head Conservator, in Kimbolton says he has found the out of print 'A Commentary on the Book of Gates' is just as highly prized as well by the most elusive manuscript collectors. Since May 2016 Ellingsworth has supervised their intricate authentication with Cambridge University and several British Museums have provided technical experts for the process. But several international theologists have voiced their concerns of the announcement, cautioning strongly that the book could be an elaborate hoax. The Nurubi Fragments were unearthed by archaeologist Austen Henry Layard and Layard's assistant Hormuzd Rassam of the British Museum at the Assyrian archaeological site of Kouyunjik, where the tablets were intermixed with the 22,000 tablets and writing boards corresponding with relics discovered in the ancient capital of Nineveh. Jebidiah Smith's manuscript researches brought attention to the mysterious tablets in the Nineveh library collection, and the "A Commentary of the Book of Gates" mentions their unique connection to his copy of the Book of Gates. The experts now determined their discovery suggested that the tablets were stored there since the 7th century BC. "When we consider the fragile condition of the pages and ornamentation and the immense age in which the book was discovered and handed down, we have an unexplained scientific mystery on how the artifact has survived to the modern world", remarked Ellingsworth in his official report. "But we are cautious about the integrity and preservation of the artifact and are employing specialized forensic methods." "With new techniques for reading ancient scrolls that are too brittle to unwrap special fine tuned scanners have now provided models of the paper surfaces for study (i.e., translation). "This allows new methods of opening the book without destroying it, revealing the underlining characters of the text and etchings that suggest an origin preceding the Mesopotamians". The scanned codex images were delivered to the Association of Theological Colleges by Cambridge University for authentication. The Tilbost House in Abingdon, England where the famous occultist and professor Jebidiah Smith composed his abridgement of the ancient tome called "A Commentary on the Book of Gates". The only known Ambrotype photo of Jebidiah Smith. The "A Commentary on the Book of Gates" First Edition, the 1868 title page details the ritual called The Circle of Eternity. The work is highly praised by institutions and museums around the world. Courtesy Oxford Press. The Museum Conservation Artifact Center in Brussels recently released their findings on the book's constructive materials and has verified their origin indicates the Caspian Sea region some 130,000 to 90,000 years ago. Ellingsworth remarked the Book of Gates could be considered a religious artifact, as the Nurubi Fragment's writer Vol Holm chronicles, having been composed during the final days of the ancient Corean civilization - as archaeology and historical analysis has suggested. Ancient Scroll : A reproduced section of the Book of Gates pages, showing natural colors and parchment reconstruction. The black handwritten ink is written in the forgotten Dlothian language.

WHO WAS THE PROPHET IZAL?

The character forms the central theme of the Caspian gospel story in the "Nurubi Fragments." Having been born in what is now known as Eemian Comoria (modern Armenia), Izal was a pagan priest who later became the prophet of the First Gods and transcribed ancient stone tablets into the modernly revealed Book of Gates. He was known for many miracles in the Corean era described in the Nurubi Fragments and Jebidiah Smith mentions him in his 'A Commentary on the Book of Gates'. Smith wrote one of the Book of Gates was delivered to him by a spiritual Izal at his home in Abingdon, England in 1862. Nothing more is known of the prophet other than has been discovered in the Nineveh mound of Kouyunjik. In 2017, ruins of an unknown Caspian civilization dating from the Pleistocene were found as far west as Turkey, Azerbaijan, to northern Iran and southeast to Turkmenistan. Archaeologists believe these could be proof of the Corean accounts recorded by the ancient author of the Nurubi Fragments.
BOURNE UNIVERSITY
THE BOURNE JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGY
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