{"id":10001,"date":"2021-10-17T17:54:44","date_gmt":"2021-10-17T17:54:44","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/WWW.St-AndrewsOCC.org\/?p=10001"},"modified":"2022-04-19T05:11:16","modified_gmt":"2022-04-19T05:11:16","slug":"dardanus-of-troy-to-france-from-ambassador-college-thesis-of-herman-l-hoeh","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/watchman.news\/uk\/2021\/10\/dardanus-of-troy-to-france-from-ambassador-college-thesis-of-herman-l-hoeh\/","title":{"rendered":"Dardanus&#8217; line (of Troy) to France, from Ambassador College Thesis of Herman L Hoeh"},"content":{"rendered":"<table border=\"0\" width=\"100%\" cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"3\">\n<tbody>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"100%\">\n<div>\n<h3><span class=\"font_text\"><b>Ambassador College Thesis<\/b><\/span><\/h3>\n<h3><span class=\"font_text\"><b>Compendium of World History &#8211; Volume 2<\/b><\/span><\/h3>\n<p><span class=\"font_text\"><b><a href=\"https:\/\/www.hwalibrary.com\/cgi-bin\/get\/hwa.cgi?action=get_acthesis&amp;InfoID=1351892459\">Chapter XII A<\/a>:<\/b><\/span><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/www.hwalibrary.com\/cgi-bin\/get\/hwa.cgi?action=get_acthesis&amp;InfoID=1351892459\"><span class=\"font_text\"><strong>FURTHER MIGRATIONS TO FRANCE<\/strong><\/span><\/a><\/p>\n<p><span class=\"font_text\">\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0The old Trojan House, of the line of Dardanus, was restored to power after the Greek defeat at Troy in 1149. The Greeks did not preserve the history of this restoration for two reasons. One, they did not want to recall their defeat in 1149. Second, their writers deliberately confused the history of Troy to make it appear that only one great war occurred between the victorious Greek states and the Trojans. This corruption of Trojan history was the direct result of trying to make Greek history conform to a distorted account of Egyptian history.<br \/>\nThe full story of the royal Trojan House that returned to power in Troy has been preserved \u2014 of all places \u2014 in the records of the Spanish Hapsburgs! The reason? The Hapsburgs were in fact lineal descendants of the House of Troy!<br \/>\nA complete list of Trojan rulers after the fall of Troy in 1181 may be found in the original Spanish work by Bartholome Gutierrez entitled: &#8220;Historia del estado presente y antiguo, de la mui noble y mui leal ciudad de Xerez de la Frontera.&#8221; It was published in Xerez, Spain in 1886.<br \/>\nA son of Priam, during that fateful 10-year war which ended in 1181, was named Helenus (See &#8220;Lempriere&#8217;s Classical Dictionary,&#8221; art. &#8220;Helenus&#8221;.) Through him the royal line was preserved in the Near East. Helenus was given, by the Greeks, a part of Epirus. After 1149 his descendants captured control of Troy from the Greeks and the Jewish House of Dardanus was once again restored to Troy. The Spanish history records the following names of his descendants who governed Troy until the Third Trojan War which ended the city in 677.<\/span><\/p>\n<p>1.<a href=\"https:\/\/www.hwalibrary.com\/media\/acthesis\/images\/CompendiumImg\/Vol2page182.jpg\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Click here<\/a>\u00a0to view figure 1 placed here.<br \/>\n2.<a href=\"https:\/\/www.hwalibrary.com\/media\/acthesis\/images\/CompendiumImg\/Vol2page183.jpg\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Click here<\/a>\u00a0to view figure 2 placed here.<br \/>\n3.<a href=\"https:\/\/www.hwalibrary.com\/media\/acthesis\/images\/CompendiumImg\/Vol2page184.jpg\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Click here<\/a>\u00a0to view figure 3 placed here.<br \/>\n4.<a href=\"https:\/\/www.hwalibrary.com\/media\/acthesis\/images\/CompendiumImg\/Vol2page185.jpg\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Click here<\/a>\u00a0to view figure 4 placed here.<\/p>\n<p>Princes of Troy (with the common Latin endings)<\/p>\n<pre>  \r\n  1. Zenter, son of Helenus           9. Zaberian   \r\n      and grandson of Priam.   \r\n  \r\n  2. Francus                         10. Plaserius II   \r\n  \r\n  3. Esdron                          11. Antenor I   \r\n  \r\n  4. Zelius                          12. Trianus or Priam II   \r\n  \r\n  5. Basavelian I                    13. Helenus II   \r\n  \r\n  6. Plaserius I                     14. Plesron II   \r\n  \r\n  7. Plesron I                       15. Basavelian II   \r\n  \r\n  8. Eliacor<\/pre>\n<p><span class=\"font_text\">16. Alexander \u2014 the Paris of the last war against Troy. There were about 17 generations (including Helenus) in somewhat over five centuries or approximately 30 years per generation during this period. Members of the Trojan royal family and most of the population fled to the northern shores of the Black Sea in eastern Europe after 677.<br \/>\nFor the next two and a third centuries after 677 (the date of the final fall of Troy in a third war) there were the following 12 generations \u2014 averaging about 21 years between generations. None of these men were kings in the strict sense until Antenor, who died in 445. The genealogy of the Jewish Trojan House continues as follows:<\/span><\/p>\n<pre>  \r\n  1. Priam III, son of                8. Marcomir   \r\n      Alexander or Paris.   \r\n  \r\n  2. Gentilanor                       9. Priam IV   \r\n  \r\n  3. Almadius                        10. Helenus IV   \r\n  \r\n  4. Dilulius                        11. Antenor II, who assumed   \r\n                                         kingly power among the   \r\n  5. Helenus III                         refugees from Troy in   \r\n                                         Southeastern Europe   \r\n  6. Plasserius III   \r\n  \r\n  7. Dilulius II                     12. Marcomir<\/pre>\n<p><span class=\"font_text\">\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0But, before we continue with Marcomir, the son of Antenor, another part of the story should be told. The 8th century anonymous &#8220;Frankish Chronicle&#8221; (De Rebus Francorum) states that after the fall of Troy in 1181 about 12,000 Trojans fled by ship across the Black Sea to the mouth of the Tanais. From there they spread to the Maeotic Swamps and as far as the borders of Pannonia.<br \/>\nThis account agrees very well with the report of Dionysius of Halicarnassus in his &#8220;Roman Antiquities,&#8221; I, 46, 47, who states that after the fall of Troy &#8220;&#8230; a larger number escaped than were taken prisoner &#8230; the Achaeans, intent on capturing the citadel, were giving no thought to the pursuit of the multitude who were escaping from the city &#8230;. Aeneas abandoned the palace; and opening the gates he marched forth with the rest of the fugitives in good order &#8230; they were joined not only by the inhabitants of Dardanus &#8230; but by the whole populace of Ophyrnium &#8230;. this force of the Trojans became a very large one.&#8221; In other words, a large number of people escaped.<br \/>\nDionysius goes on to state that they obtained permission from the Greeks to travel about unmolested in order to find a new country in which to settle. Aeneas headed to the Greek coast near Thessalonika, and from there southwards to the Mediterranean and Italy. But others took a different route. &#8220;&#8230; Ascanius, his eldest son, with some of the allies, chiefly Phrygians, (went) to the country of Dascylitis (near the Bosphorus) &#8230;. But Ascanius did not tarry there for any length of time &#8230;.&#8221; He returned to the site of Troy and tried to reestablish the city.<br \/>\nHere Dionysius breaks off the account about Ascanius. We know, however, that Ascanius did not remain at the site of Troy, for Virgil and others report him as being with his father Aeneas in Italy shortly afterwards.<br \/>\nBut what of the Phrygian army that was with Ascanius? It did not go with him to Italy. This could be, however, the army of 12,000 which according to the &#8220;Chronicle&#8221; settled at the mouth of the Danube. Fredegarius Scholasticus, claiming Jerome as his authority, says that the Trojans fled, some to Macedonia, some to the Danube under a king Friga. Greek historians, like Strabo, generally confirm this exodus to Macedonia, but are silent about Friga. Since this name can mean, in Greek, simply &#8220;the Phrygian&#8221;, this just indicates that the Phrygians, under some obscure Phrygian leader, crossed over to the European shore and settled in Macedonia, Pannonia and near the mouth of the Danube. Fredegarius, the &#8220;Frankish Chronicle&#8221; and Hugo of St. Victor all agree with &#8220;Smith&#8217;s Dictionary&#8221; in stating that the Phrygians settled in that general area of the Balkans. The Macedonians, according to the latter, called the Phrygians Bryges. Gregory of Tours also states that the Franks were originally in Pannonia.<br \/>\nFrom the lower Danube and Pannonia the Trojan Phrygians moved on into Europe. Fredegarius and the later &#8220;K&#8221;nigschronik&#8221; both claim that they moved under a king Franko or Francio to the mouth of the Rhine where they built New Troy at Xanten (a rivulet named after Xanthus, the river of Phrygia). That a New Troy was built at Xanten is attested to by the Romans, who called the town of Xanten Troia Nova. (See &#8220;Der Grosse Brockhaus,&#8221; article &#8220;Troia Nova&#8221;.) In the same way Julius Caesar called the Londoners Trinovantes in reference to their city having been founded as New Troy by Brutus.<br \/>\nThe original settling of the Franks at the mouth of the Rhine is supported by Procopius: &#8220;&#8230; the Rhine empties into the ocean &#8230; and this is where the Germans lived of old &#8230; who are now called Franks&#8221; (Procopius of Caesarea, &#8220;History of the Wars,&#8221; V, xii, 7, 8). Holland, in other words, was the first home of the Franks in Western Europe.<br \/>\nIt is in the region of Scythia Minor that Hunibald, the Frankish chronicler, begins his history. According to him the Trojans, having dwelt in this region for a number of years after the fall of Troy, are finally involved in a series of wars with the Goths from Scandinavia. In 445 B.C. their leader Antenor falls in battle against the Goths. From this point in history begins Hunibald&#8217;s list of Frankish kings.<br \/>\nThe Trojans who left Troy in 677 after the Third Trojan War went to the area of the Black Sea where they joined the group that had been led there by Ascanius after the First Trojan War in 1181. Both were Trojans, both went to the northern shores of the Black Sea but, at different times. Both record the same kings as they proceed across Europe.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><strong>SICAMBRIAN KINGS<\/strong><\/p>\n<pre>  Kings                          Length of Reign       Dates   \r\n  \r\n  1. Antenor: a king over   \r\n      Trojan settlers on the   \r\n      Black Sea, himself of royal   \r\n      Trojan blood. Died in 445.   \r\n  \r\n  2. Marcomirus I: king of the        28             444- 416   \r\n      Sicambri (from the German   \r\n      Cimbri in whose ancient   \r\n      territory they settled).   \r\n      In 441 he brought the people   \r\n      out of Scythia and seated   \r\n      them on the Danube. During   \r\n      a council he was told by a   \r\n      pagan priest to go west where   \r\n      Brutus of Troy had previously   \r\n      gone. A pagan prophecy   \r\n      promises him victory over the   \r\n      Gauls and the Romans. Sends   \r\n      embassy to Saxons and asks   \r\n      for land in which to settle.   \r\n      In April 439 B.C. they leave   \r\n      the lower Danube and move   \r\n      overland, first north, then   \r\n      west, to the mouth of the   \r\n      Rhine. A total of 489,360   \r\n      persons (including 175,658   \r\n      warriors but not including   \r\n      slaves and servants) take   \r\n      part. Marcomirus had   \r\n      brothers Priam, Panthenor   \r\n      and Sunno. They settled the   \r\n      country now called West   \r\n      Friesland, Gelders and   \r\n      Holland. Marcomirus crossed   \r\n      the Rhine and conquered part   \r\n      of Gaul. One of his brothers   \r\n      was made governor. Then the   \r\n      conquest of all Gaul was   \r\n      gradually completed.   \r\n      Marcomirus, according to the   \r\n      \"Chronicle of Hunibald\", dies   \r\n      926 years before the death of   \r\n      the first Christian king of   \r\n      the Franks, Clovis, in 511.   \r\n  \r\n  3. Antenor I marries Cambra,        30             416- 386   \r\n      the beautiful daughter of   \r\n      Belinus, king of Britain.   \r\n      She introduces worship of   \r\n      Janus, establishes herself   \r\n      as prophetess and priestess   \r\n      of Diana. From Cambra the   \r\n      Scythian Trojans begin to   \r\n      call themselves Sicambri.   \r\n      Antenor's nephew, Grun,   \r\n      builds Gr\"ningen in 386 B.C.   \r\n      Antenor conquered Phrygia \u2014   \r\n      the original Trojan homeland   \r\n      \u2014 and slew all the males.   \r\n      (This recalls Judah's punishment   \r\n      of the Edomites, many   \r\n      of whom were now living in   \r\n      Phrygia.) He died in 386   \r\n      when Artaxerxes Mnemon, king   \r\n      of Persia, having finished   \r\n      the Cyprian War, led an army   \r\n      of 300,000 men against the   \r\n      Cadusians.   \r\n  \r\n  4. Priamus: under him Sicambrians   26             386- 360   \r\n      adopt Saxon language,   \r\n      Greek being retained only by   \r\n      priests for purposes of religious   \r\n      worship. Neumagen, near   \r\n      the mouth of the Rhine, becomes   \r\n      seat of Jupiter worship   \r\n      established by Cambra.   \r\n  \r\n  5. Helenus I: he erected an         19             360- 341   \r\n      oratory to Pallas, whom he   \r\n      worshipped by sacrificing   \r\n      to her captive children.   \r\n      In 353 he slew 16,000   \r\n      Gauls (Chaldeans) in battle   \r\n      in the land of the Tungri.   \r\n  \r\n  6. Diocles: he has wars with        39             341- 302   \r\n      both the Gauls and the Goths.   \r\n      In 331 B.C. Goths from Scania   \r\n      attack Saxons, but are   \r\n      repelled by a combined   \r\n      Sicambro-Saxon force. He   \r\n      aided the Saxons against the   \r\n      Goths in 327. In his absence   \r\n      the Gauls invaded his kingdom.   \r\n      By the valour of his officers   \r\n      they were expelled, losing   \r\n      78,000 men, besides captives   \r\n      and children.   \r\n  \r\n  7. Helenus II: an effeminate        14             302- 288   \r\n      individual, unable to ward   \r\n      off attacks of Gauls. He   \r\n      was deposed in 288, after   \r\n      which 8 years of government   \r\n      under priestly rule followed.   \r\n  \r\n  8. Bassanus Magnus: the warlike     36             288- 252   \r\n      brother of Helenus, liked to   \r\n      present an image of self-   \r\n      righteousness. So very   \r\n      severe in his laws that he   \r\n      executed his own son for   \r\n      adultery and put away his   \r\n      wife for reviling him for it,   \r\n      and sent her to her father.   \r\n      In his eighth year he built   \r\n      many forts against incursions   \r\n      of the Gauls and finally   \r\n      obtained the full kingship in   \r\n      his possession. In his   \r\n      sixteenth year built the city   \r\n      Bassanburg, where many of his   \r\n      successors had their residence.   \r\n      Trithemius calls this Aix la   \r\n      Chapelle). In 285 B.C, is   \r\n      attacked by father-in-law,   \r\n      king of the Orkneys, but repells   \r\n      him. In 264 B.C. takes over   \r\n      duties as priest of Jupiter,   \r\n      which leads to his ultimate   \r\n      deification as \"Theobasan.\"   \r\n      In 257 B.C. leads a successful   \r\n      campaign as far south as   \r\n      Koblenz. At this time   \r\n      Heligastus, the great prophet   \r\n      of the Sicambri, flourished.   \r\n      Bassanus later conquered   \r\n      from the Saxons all the   \r\n      country from the entrance of   \r\n      the Rhine to Mentz. In   \r\n      year 29 he slew Thaborinus,   \r\n      king of the Togazani (now   \r\n      Westphalians). He put his   \r\n      son on the throne in 252   \r\n      and then disappeared.   \r\n  \r\n  9. Clodomir I: in his third         18             252- 234   \r\n      year the Gauls demanded   \r\n      restitution of their lands.   \r\n      Clodomir overcame them   \r\n      by the aid of the king   \r\n      of Thuringia and Saxony.   \r\n  \r\n10. Nicanor: married                  34             234- 200   \r\n      Constantina, daughter of   \r\n      king of Britain. In his   \r\n      first year he aided the   \r\n      Saxons against the Slavs   \r\n      and Goths and returned   \r\n      with much spoil. In his   \r\n      third year he aided his   \r\n      father-in-law against the   \r\n      king of the Orcades. In   \r\n      222 B.C. Sicambrians,   \r\n      Saxons and Thuringians   \r\n      defeat the Goths. In year   \r\n      15 he was defeated by the   \r\n      Goths from Scandinavia, but   \r\n      afterwards expelled them.   \r\n      In 215 B.C. he aided the   \r\n      king of Britain in a war   \r\n      against the Orkneys, but   \r\n      was unsuccessful because   \r\n      of lack of experience in   \r\n      warfare on the sea.   \r\n  \r\n11. Marcomirus II: successfully       28             200- 172   \r\n      attacked the Romans,   \r\n      Gauls, Goths in his first   \r\n      year. In his fifth year   \r\n      he commanded the acts of   \r\n      the Gauls to be written in   \r\n      rhyme and sung by the bards.   \r\n  \r\n12. Clodius I: in his tenth           11             172- 161   \r\n      year the Romans and Gauls   \r\n      wasted his country.   \r\n      Being next year aided by   \r\n      the Saxons, he defeated   \r\n      them, but fell himself in   \r\n      the battle.   \r\n  \r\n13. Antenor II: he concluded          16             161- 145   \r\n      a peace with the Gauls   \r\n      for ten years and abolished   \r\n      the Trojan custom of   \r\n      sacrificing his enemies'   \r\n      children.   \r\n  \r\n14. Clodomirus II: in his             20             145- 125   \r\n      tenth year the Gauls   \r\n      broke the peace. They   \r\n      were overcome in 125, the   \r\n      last year of his reign.   \r\n  \r\n15. Merodachus: in his fifth          28             125-  97   \r\n      year he levied an army   \r\n      of 220,000 of his own   \r\n      people with Saxons and   \r\n      Germans and entered Italy   \r\n      as far as Ravenna. In   \r\n      his fifteenth year,   \r\n      because of several   \r\n      inundations of the sea and the   \r\n      Rhine, the Sicambri and   \r\n      Cimbri were forced to   \r\n      transplant themselves to   \r\n      the interior \u2014 the   \r\n      Hercynian Forest \u2014 about   \r\n      modern Bohemia. In his   \r\n      twentieth year the Romans   \r\n      and Gauls invaded their   \r\n      territories and set the   \r\n      Goths and Slavs on the   \r\n      Saxons that they might not   \r\n      aid the Sicambri. In year   \r\n      23 (102-101) the Sicambri   \r\n      joined the Cimbri in a war   \r\n      against Rome. They were   \r\n      all defeated by Marius.   \r\n      After this defeat Merodachus,   \r\n      with a fresh army,   \r\n      marched against the Gauls,   \r\n      gave them a great defeat   \r\n      and settled again in their   \r\n      old country.   \r\n  \r\n16. Cassander: in his second          21              97-  76   \r\n      year the Romans and Gauls   \r\n      entered his kingdom. In   \r\n      his ninth year he aided   \r\n      Arabius, king of the Saxons,   \r\n      against Berobista, king of   \r\n      the Goths, who after five   \r\n      years again invaded Germany.   \r\n      Cassander, aided by Damercus   \r\n      king of the Thuringi,   \r\n      expelled the Goths.   \r\n  \r\n17. Antharius: in his                 35              76-  41   \r\n      twentieth year some of   \r\n      Caesar's soldiers   \r\n      revolted to the   \r\n      Sicambri, who refused   \r\n      to deliver them up at   \r\n      Caesar's demand.   \r\n      Caesar, in revenge,   \r\n      entered their country   \r\n      and marched all the way   \r\n      to Britain 55-54. In 41   \r\n      Antharius and 2000 of his   \r\n      men were slain by the   \r\n      Gauls. He was the last   \r\n      \"King of the Sicambri\".   \r\n      Hereafter the Sicambri   \r\n      were called Franks or   \r\n      Franconians after the   \r\n      name of his son and   \r\n      successor, Francus.<\/pre>\n<p><span class=\"font_text\"><strong>THE KINGS OF THE FRANKS<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n<pre>  \r\n18. Francus marries a pagan        28                 41-  13   \r\n      priestess, daughter of   \r\n      king of Thuringia. In his   \r\n      third year the Goths   \r\n      encroached upon the country   \r\n      and remained there for ten   \r\n      years, after which Francus   \r\n      expelled them. In the   \r\n      fourth year the name of   \r\n      Sicambri was changed to   \r\n      Franci by an edict at the   \r\n      people's request. The   \r\n      next year, being at war   \r\n      with the Goths, the Gauls   \r\n      wasted his dominions. As   \r\n      punishment he levied an   \r\n      army of 300,000 men and   \r\n      invading their country took   \r\n      much spoil and killed   \r\n      200,000 people of all sexes   \r\n      and ages. The Romans hearing   \r\n      of this victory sent Lollius   \r\n      with forces into Germany.   \r\n      A long struggle with Rome   \r\n      followed. He made a league   \r\n      with the Germans and Saxons   \r\n      after their Roman allies   \r\n      were defeated.   \r\n  \r\n19. Clodius II or Clogio:             30         B.C. 13-  18 A.D.   \r\n      an astronomer and diviner.   \r\n      This king of the   \r\n      Franconians fought the   \r\n      Romans in his second year.   \r\n  \r\n20. Herimerus: he was slain           12              18-  30   \r\n      in battle by Romans and   \r\n      Gauls.   \r\n  \r\n21. Marcomirus III: a                 18              30-  48   \r\n      brother of Herimerus.   \r\n      Phrysius, a brother of   \r\n      Marcomirus was governor   \r\n      of Frisia.   \r\n  \r\n22. Clodomirus III: <a class=\"vcVerseLink\" href=\"http:\/\/av1611.com\/verseclick\/gobible.php?p=he_12.48\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">he                12              48<\/a>-  60   \r\n      devastated northern Gaul   \r\n      in 55 A.D. He recovered   \r\n      all that his predecessors   \r\n      had lost and fought with   \r\n      the Romans near Mentz and   \r\n      wasted the country of Triers.   \r\n  \r\n23. Antenor III: he drowns in          6              60-  66   \r\n      the Rhine with much of his   \r\n      army while retreating from   \r\n      Gaul.   \r\n  \r\n24. Ratherius: he renewed             21              66-  87   \r\n      the league with the Germans   \r\n      and Saxons in 74. He   \r\n      founded Rotterdam and   \r\n      was buried there.   \r\n  \r\n25. Richimerus I: he was              24              87- 111   \r\n      strongly religious   \r\n      and even became a pagan   \r\n      high priest. In 97 he   \r\n      repelled a Gothic attack   \r\n      on Saxony. He sent 18,000   \r\n      settlers under son Sunno   \r\n      into Saxony to secure it   \r\n      against Goths. He fought   \r\n      with the Romans and Gauls   \r\n      near Basana (now Aix-la-   \r\n      Chapelle) in 99. He   \r\n      received aid of Winderchind,   \r\n      king of the Saxons, and   \r\n      Verminfrid, king of the   \r\n      Thuringi, in 101. He   \r\n      opposed the Goths who   \r\n      invaded Germany. The Franks,   \r\n      Germans and Saxons planted   \r\n      colonies in that part of   \r\n      Germany, which is now called   \r\n      Brandenburg, in 106.   \r\n   \r\n26. Odomar: made a league with        14             111- 125   \r\n      the Romans and Gauls.   \r\n      Founder of Utrecht and   \r\n      builder of Odemarsheim in   \r\n      117.   \r\n  \r\n27. Marcomirus IV:marries             21             125- 146   \r\n      Athilde, daughter of the   \r\n      king of Britain His son,   \r\n      Frank, builds Helenopolis   \r\n      (Frankfort), another son   \r\n      becomes pagan priest. He   \r\n      rebuilt Marburg in the   \r\n      Landgraviate of Hesse.   \r\n  \r\n28. Clodomirus IV:marries             17             146- 163   \r\n      Hasilda, daughter of the   \r\n      king of Rugen.   \r\n  \r\n29. Farabertus: he renewed the        20             163- 183   \r\n      ancient league with the   \r\n      Germans. In his reign the   \r\n      Dutch (Niederl\"nder) are   \r\n      first mentioned.   \r\n  \r\n30. Sunno or Hunno:warred             28             183- 211   \r\n      with the Romans and Gauls.   \r\n      Upon the death of the   \r\n      Emperor Severus, in 211, he   \r\n      entered Gaul and wasted it   \r\n      with fire and sword.   \r\n  \r\n31. Hildericus: he built a            40             211- 251   \r\n      castle on an isle in the   \r\n      Rhine and called it   \r\n      Hildeburg, 214. Introduced   \r\n      a period of cultural and   \r\n      architectural expansion.   \r\n  \r\n32. Bartherus: the Franks             18             251- 269   \r\n      attacked in 256 \u2014 the   \r\n      year the last Odin   \r\n      invaded Saxony and led   \r\n      many of the tribes of   \r\n      Israel to northwestern   \r\n      Europe. Raids of Franks,   \r\n      Thuringians and Bavarians   \r\n      continue to 259 in Gaul   \r\n      and Italy. In 262 Franks   \r\n      and Saxons carry a raid   \r\n      as far south as Tarragona,   \r\n      which they besiege. They   \r\n      spoiled Italy, as far as   \r\n      Ravenna, 264 and razed   \r\n      the town of Aragon to the   \r\n      ground, 267.   \r\n  \r\n33. Clodius III or Clogio:            27             269- 296   \r\n      in 283 he entered Gaul,   \r\n      and having slain many   \r\n      Romans, recovered some   \r\n      of that which he had   \r\n      formerly lost. But, the   \r\n      Romans again expelled   \r\n      him in 289.   \r\n  \r\n34. Walter                             8             296- 304   \r\n  \r\n35. Dagobertus I                      11             304- 315   \r\n  \r\n36. Clodius IV or Clogio:              2             315- 317   \r\n      the Romans and Gauls   \r\n      invaded Franconia in 317.   \r\n      Clogio was slain in battle.   \r\n  \r\n37. Clodomirus V: brother of          18             317- 335   \r\n      Clogio IV. Sends in 322   \r\n      A.D. 30,000 colonists to   \r\n      river Main and establishes   \r\n      Dukedom of Franconia which   \r\n      survives under 21 Dukes   \r\n      till Pepin the Short. He   \r\n      aided the Sarmata against   \r\n      the Romans, of whom he slew   \r\n      36,000 in 321. The Franks   \r\n      were now permitted to   \r\n      resettle themselves where   \r\n      Holland, Utrecht, Gelders,   \r\n      part of Friesia, Westphalia   \r\n      and Brabant now lie. The   \r\n      Franks now split, the East   \r\n      Franks settling in Germany.   \r\n      Their dukes are listed later.   \r\n  \r\n38. Richimir II: opposed              13             335- 348   \r\n      Constantius with 200,000   \r\n      men in 342. He fought   \r\n      with the Romans and was   \r\n      slain in battle in 348.   \r\n  \r\n39. Theodomirus: makes Tongres        10             348- 358   \r\n      his capital, attacks and   \r\n      burns Trier. Was taken by   \r\n      the Emperor Julian, who   \r\n      slew him and his mother.   \r\n  \r\n40. Clodius V or Clogio: to           18             358- 376   \r\n      revenge his father's death   \r\n      he took Cambray, slew   \r\n      many Romans, entered Gaul   \r\n      and annexed much of it (as   \r\n      far as the Sagon River) to   \r\n      his dominions. In 369   \r\n      Valentinian I defeats him   \r\n      by surprise attack. Pepin   \r\n      and Charlemagne are   \r\n      descended from this king's   \r\n      third son, Hector.   \r\n  \r\n41. Marcomirus V: the last            15             376- 391   \r\n      \"King of the Franks\" until   \r\n      reign of Pharamund. He   \r\n      obtained a great victory   \r\n      over the Romans at Cologne   \r\n      in 382 and recovered all   \r\n      that the Emperor had   \r\n      possessed, except Armorica or   \r\n      Little Brittany, in 390.   \r\n      He was slain in battle in   \r\n      391. The Romans overpowered   \r\n      the Franks, commanded them   \r\n      to elect no more kings but   \r\n      dukes, in the reign of   \r\n      Theodosius the Great.   \r\n  \r\n42. Dagobert II: appointed             5             391- 396   \r\n      governor (not king) after   \r\n      the death of Marcomirus,   \r\n      refuses Romans tribute.   \r\n      Valentinian II admires   \r\n      courage of Franks, is   \r\n      unable to retaliate   \r\n      because otherwise occupied   \r\n      and finally killed   \r\n      by Arbogast a Frank.   \r\n  \r\n43. Genebaldus: also a mere           21             396- 417   \r\n      governor, dies without   \r\n      heir.   \r\n  \r\n44. Pharamundus: he is the             7             417- 424   \r\n      5th duke of Franconia and   \r\n      was elected king.   \r\n  \r\n45. Clodius VI: teaches Franks        20             424- 444   \r\n      to wear hair long to   \r\n      distinguish them from   \r\n      Gauls.   \r\n  \r\n46. Meroveus: after whom              12             444- 456   \r\n      Franks were called   \r\n      Merovingians Takes Trier,   \r\n      makes great gains in Gaul.   \r\n  \r\n47. Hildericus II: this                1             455- 456   \r\n      appears to have been a   \r\n      joint year with Meroveus,   \r\n      his father. At death of   \r\n      Meroveus the son was deposed   \r\n      by Egidius and rebellious   \r\n      nobles. Hildericus II flees   \r\n      to Thuringia.   \r\n  \r\n      Egidius: a Roman, set up         3             456- 459   \r\n      by nobles in place of   \r\n      Hildericus. He was deposed.   \r\n  \r\n      Hildericus: reinstated.         22             459- 481   \r\n  \r\n48. Clodoveus or Clovis:              30             481- 511   \r\n      accepts Roman Catholic   \r\n      religion. Baptized in 496 A.D.<\/pre>\n<p><span class=\"font_text\"><strong>DUKES OF THE EAST FRANKS<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n<pre>  \r\nDuke                            Length of Reign       Dates   \r\n  \r\n  1. Genebald I: brother of           30             322- 352   \r\n      Clodomlr IV, migrated   \r\n      with East Franks to the   \r\n      upper Rhine and became   \r\n      their first duke.   \r\n  \r\n  2. Marcomer                         21             352- 373   \r\n  \r\n  3. Claudius                         10             373- 383   \r\n  \r\n  4. Marcomer II                      16             383- 399   \r\n  \r\n  5. Pharamund became king of         15             399- 414   \r\n      the West Franks in 417.   \r\n      He is reckoned by early   \r\n      historians as the first king of   \r\n      France. In 424 the succession   \r\n      passed to Clodion who founded   \r\n      the Merovingian Dynasty. Its   \r\n      kings all wore long hair.   \r\n      They kept their kingly office   \r\n      until the Pope suggested to   \r\n      the East Franks (Germans)   \r\n      that they could gain the   \r\n      power over the Merovingians   \r\n      by cutting the king's hair.   \r\n      The last Merovingian was   \r\n      accordingly tonsured. The   \r\n      government thereafter passed   \r\n      to Pippin, father of the   \r\n      German king Charlemagne, who   \r\n      restored the Roman Empire in   \r\n      the west in 800. The history   \r\n      of the Merovingians, who   \r\n      descended from the Trojan   \r\n      line and the house of Judah,   \r\n      is made especially interesting   \r\n      in a book entitled   \r\n      \"The Long-haired Kings,\" by   \r\n      J. M. Wallace-Hadrill. (See   \r\n      especially chapter 7.)   \r\n      The Merovingians   \r\n      recognized that though they   \r\n      came from Judah, they   \r\n      were not of the throne   \r\n      of David and would hold   \r\n      their power only so long   \r\n      as they kept a Nazarite   \r\n      tradition \u2014 long hair \u2014   \r\n      symbolizing their   \r\n      subjection to a Higher Power   \r\n      \u2014 God \u2014 who rules   \r\n      supreme among men. (See   \r\n      Numbers 6.)   \r\n  \r\n  6. Marcomer III: Pharamund          14 with        414- 428   \r\n      ruled in Franconia or           Pharamund   \r\n      East Frankland 399-414;   \r\n      he ruled all France from         4 sole reign  428- 432   \r\n      417 till 424. Marcomer   \r\n      III, Pharamund's brother,   \r\n      ruled in Franconia until   \r\n      Pharamund died in 428   \r\n      (see \"Mirror of History\").   \r\n  \r\n  7. Priamus                          12             432- 444   \r\n  \r\n  8. Genebaldt II                     20             444- 464   \r\n  \r\n  9. Sunno                            23             464- 487   \r\n  \r\n10. Clodius II: a West Frank,         16             487- 503   \r\n      became duke of the   \r\n      East Franks (Germans).   \r\n  \r\n11. Clodomir                          21             503- 524   \r\n  \r\n12. Hugbald                           26             524- 550   \r\n  \r\n13. Helenus                           30             550- 580   \r\n  \r\n14. Gottfried                         24             580- 604   \r\n  \r\n15. Genebaldt III                     20             604- 624   \r\n  \r\n16. Clodomir II                       23             624- 647   \r\n  \r\n17. Heribert                          30             647- 677   \r\n  \r\n18. Clodoueus III                     12             677- 689   \r\n  \r\n19. Grosswert                         26             689- 715   \r\n  \r\n20. Gosspert                          14             715- 729   \r\n  \r\n21. Hetan                             20             729- 749   \r\n  \r\n      Interregnum under Pepin         12             749- 761<\/pre>\n<p><span class=\"font_text\">\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0The succeeding history of the Franks is so well known and thoroughly documented as to be everywhere available.<br \/>\nHunibald&#8217;s chronicle helps clear up misunderstandings about the Franks presented by the incomplete accounts of other medieval writers. Tyro Prosper (Augustine&#8217;s friend), for instance, contradicts practically every other ancient historian by stating that the first king of the Franks was Priam, the father of Marcomir, Sunno and Genebald, who lived around 382 A.D. This Priam was none other than Dagobert II (391-396). Priam was another of Dagobert&#8217;s names. Dagobert had three sons Marcomir, Sunno and Genebald. He was the first governor (i.e. first ruler of lower rank than king) of the Franks. Tyro Prosper obviously did not have all his facts straight.<br \/>\nAnother great misconception about the Franks is an alleged migration from Pannonia in the days of emperor Valentinian. The &#8220;Frankish Chronicle&#8221; and Hugo of St. Victor both state that Caesar Valentinian attempted to exact tribute from the Franks living in Pannonia, after these had helped him defeat the Alani. The Franks, refusing to pay, were eventually forced to leave Pannonia and settle at the mouth of the Rhine.<br \/>\nSome loopholes in this story are immediately evident. First of all, Roman history is silent about any dealings with the Franks or other Germans in Pannonia in the days of Valentinian. Secondly, Valentinian I was emperor in the West, and died in an expedition against the Quadi. He was never active in the East. The same is true for Valentinian II, in whose reign the co-emperor Theodosius defeated a league of Huns, Goths and Alans in Moesia. This incident may possibly be partly responsible for the story that the Franks helped Valentinian to defeat the Alans.<br \/>\nHunibald again comes to our aid. He informs us that both the Valentinians fought against the Franks in the West, not in Pannonia. Valentinian I fought against Clogio V in 369. It was Valentinian II, in the West, who tried to impose the tribute on the Franks in the reigns of Marcomirus V and Dagobert II. The chroniclers probably confused Priam (Dagobert II) and his sons Marcomir, Sunno and Genebald, with the original migration from Pannonia under Marcomir I and his brothers Priam, Panthenor and Sunno. As a result of this confusion, the migration was misplaced by some 700 years. Again, this just serves to demonstrate how valuable Hunibald&#8217;s account is in presenting us with the true picture.<br \/>\nThere is a bit of difficulty regarding the name Sicambri by which the Franks were for a while known. Hunibald states that it was derived from Cambra, the wife of Antenor I. The &#8220;Frankish Chronicle,&#8221; Hugo of St. Victor and Aethicus Hister maintain, on the other hand, that Sicambria was a city near the shore of the Black Sea and that from it the people were called Sicambri.<br \/>\nAethicus Hister, the Scythian geographer of c. 650 A.D., relates in his &#8220;Cosmographia&#8221; the interesting fact that Caracalla \u2014 whom he calls Romulus \u2014 encountered some Franks in the vicinity of Troy in 214 A.D. Aethicus states that after occupying the area of Troy (see also Dio&#8217;s &#8220;Roman History&#8221; 78.16.7) Caracalla &#8220;fought with Francus and Vassus, who were of royal descent, and they were defeated &#8230;. For Francus and Vassus had concluded an alliance with the Albani (Goths) and they were both moving their armies against Romulus (Caracalla); they crossed Histria (the region of Istria on the Dalmatian coast) &#8230;. After the most bloody encounter Romulus defeated them. When Francus and Vassus saw that their armies had been cut down they fled with a few who remained &#8230; the land was ruined, laid waste and reduced to desolation; they were driven from their own belongings and together with a few companions &#8230; entered Raetia and reached uninviting and deserted Germany &#8230;&#8221; Here we have a small group of Franks moving into Germany. Could this be where the chroniclers mentioned earlier got their idea of a migration under a Francus?<br \/>\nA little later Franks again appear on the lower Danube, but this time as settlers actually brought in from Germany by Probus (276-281). Zosimus relates in his History: &#8220;But the Franks having applied to the Emperor, and having a country given to them, a part of them afterwards revolted, and having collected a great number of ships, disturbed all Greece; from whence they proceeded into Sicily, to Syracuse, which they attacked, and killed many people there. At length they arrived in Africa, whence they were repulsed by a body of men from Carthage, yet they returned home (to the Rhine) without any great loss&#8221; (Book I). This adventurous excursion is also mentioned by Vopiscus and Capitolinus.<br \/>\nHunibald&#8217;s Chronicle is from Johannes Trittenheim, &#8220;Chronik von der Francken Ursprung,&#8221; Frankfurt, 1605.<\/span><strong>THE HAPSBURGS ENTER<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><span class=\"font_text\">\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0What connection have the Austrian Hapsburgs with the Trojan kings of the East Franks? Much more than historians today recognize. From Pharamond, king of the Franks, came a princely line of rulers who intermarried with Austrian royalty. This line is preserved in the &#8220;Historia de Xerez&#8221; by Gutierrez, From Pharamond descended:<\/span><\/p>\n<p>Clodion<\/p>\n<p>Merovius<\/p>\n<p>Childeric<\/p>\n<p>Clodovius<\/p>\n<p>Clotarius, whose son Sigibert became a king in Austria<\/p>\n<p>Sigibert<\/p>\n<p>Childubert, king of Austrasia and Burgundy<\/p>\n<p>Theodobert, king of Austrasia<\/p>\n<p>Ligibert, duke of Austrasia<\/p>\n<p>Othobert, count of Altemburg<\/p>\n<p>Amprinetus<\/p>\n<p>Hectobert<\/p>\n<p>Rampert<\/p>\n<p>Guntramus I<\/p>\n<p>Luiffridus I<\/p>\n<p>Luiffridus II<\/p>\n<p>Hundifridus<\/p>\n<p>Gumtramus II<\/p>\n<p>Bertus<\/p>\n<p>Rapatus, whose son became count of Hapsburg<\/p>\n<p>Werner, count of Hapsburg<\/p>\n<p>Otho<\/p>\n<p>Werner II<\/p>\n<p>Werner III<\/p>\n<p>Albert I<\/p>\n<p>Rudolf I<\/p>\n<p>Albert II<\/p>\n<p>Rudolf II: of Hapsburg, who became Holy Roman Emperor in 1273.<strong>THE DUKES OF GAUL<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><span class=\"font_text\">\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0At the end of the First Trojan War in 1181 still another group left Troy. These Trojans were led by Franco the son of Hector. The story of their migration to Gaul is extant. It is found in a medieval French chronicle \u2014 &#8220;Le Myreur d&#8217;Histoire&#8221; (&#8220;The Mirror of History&#8221;). This line of rulers is preserved from France to Clovis.<\/span><a href=\"https:\/\/www.hwalibrary.com\/media\/acthesis\/images\/CompendiumImg\/Vol2page192d.jpg\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Click here<\/a>\u00a0to view the figure placed here.<\/p>\n<pre>  \r\nRuler                           Length of Reign     Dates   \r\n  \r\n  1. Franco I: he left Troy           10            1181-1171   \r\n      with Aeneas and Antenor.   \r\n      They sailed to Sizille   \r\n      (probably Sicily). Franco   \r\n      traveled to Italy and   \r\n      North Africa. Then with   \r\n      3,000 of his followers he   \r\n      settled in southern Gaul.   \r\n      They called the area   \r\n      Franche. The people were sons   \r\n      of Franco or Franchois. After   \r\n      his death they were known as   \r\n      Gauls.   \r\n  \r\n  2. Melus: a son of Franco.          51            1171-1120   \r\n      He rebuilds Troy in 1145.   \r\n      His daughter, Odela, married   \r\n      Silvius the king of Italy.   \r\n  \r\n  3. Bosses: a son of Melus.          24            1120-1096   \r\n      He defeated Ascanius,   \r\n      king of Italy, in a   \r\n      battle. Bosses later   \r\n      married Grata the daughter   \r\n      of Ascanius. This may   \r\n      have settled the dispute   \r\n      between them.   \r\n  \r\n  4. Ector I: he was the              16            1096-1080   \r\n      grandson of Broncus.   \r\n      Broncus was a son of Silvius   \r\n      and Odela. Ector founded   \r\n      Troy in Burgogne.   \r\n  \r\n  5. Alemaine: son of Bosses.         22            1080-1058   \r\n      He conquered all Germany   \r\n      and fortified many cities.   \r\n      Allemania, a section of   \r\n      Germany, derives its name   \r\n      from him.   \r\n  \r\n  6. Castor: founds the city          30            1058-1028   \r\n      of Castre. Died in a fight   \r\n      with Silvius, king of   \r\n      Italy.   \r\n  \r\n  7. Ylion I                          40            1028- 988   \r\n  \r\n  8. Alienoir                         28             988- 960   \r\n  \r\n  9. Gossain                          12             960- 948   \r\n  \r\n10 Ector II                           19             948- 929   \r\n  \r\n11. Athanaise                         21             929- 908   \r\n  \r\n12. Franco II: married                10             908- 898   \r\n      Ydoneas the daughter of   \r\n      Agrippa king of the Latins.   \r\n  \r\n13. Yborus I: son of Franco II        15             898- 883   \r\n      and Ydoneas. He had a war   \r\n      with his cousin, the king   \r\n      of Italy. Founded Lutesse.   \r\n  \r\n14 Anthenoire I                       17             883- 866   \r\n  \r\n15. Yolens: he conquered              43             866- 823   \r\n      Cyprus.   \r\n  \r\n16. Prian I                           26             823- 797   \r\n  \r\n17. Yborus II: he repelled            22             797- 775   \r\n      two attacks on Gaul   \r\n      from Amulius king of the   \r\n      Latins. His daughter,   \r\n      Oderne, married Gaffre   \r\n      the king of Africa. After   \r\n      Yborus died Amulius married   \r\n      his widow.   \r\n  \r\n18. Ector III                         50             775- 725   \r\n  \r\n19. Ylion II: he founded              40             725- 685   \r\n      Limoges.   \r\n20. Nay: he founded Turnay.           34             685- 651   \r\n  \r\n21. Alymodes: he married the          74             651- 577   \r\n      daughter of a Roman senator.   \r\n      He was victorious in a war   \r\n      with the Roman king Priscus.   \r\n      One of his children, Aquitaine,   \r\n      gave his name to the region   \r\n      in France.   \r\n  \r\n22. Orlins (Aurelian): built          54             577- 523   \r\n      and gave his name to Orleans.   \r\n  \r\n23. Avrengnas: Auvergne               14             523- 509   \r\n      derives its name from this   \r\n      ruler.   \r\n  \r\n24. Yborus III                        40             509- 469   \r\n  \r\n25. Frisones: Frise in                28             469- 441   \r\n      Champagne is named after   \r\n      him.   \r\n  \r\n26. Flambo: the Gauls took            48             441- 393   \r\n      Rome as far as the capitol   \r\n      during his rule.   \r\n  \r\n27. Flandroc                          33             393- 360   \r\n  \r\n28. Turrus (Turnus): founded          59             360- 301   \r\n      Tours. That section of   \r\n      France called \"Touraine\"   \r\n      derives its name from him.   \r\n  \r\n29. Brugen: Bruges was                25             301- 276   \r\n founded by him. His   \r\n brother Amyrus founded   \r\n Amiens.   \r\n  \r\n30. Duanus (Duaynus)                  16             276- 260   \r\n  \r\n31. Camberacion: founded              55             260- 205   \r\n Cambray.   \r\n  \r\n32. Bretanges: Brittany <a class=\"vcVerseLink\" href=\"http:\/\/av1611.com\/verseclick\/gobible.php?p=is_10.205\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">is            10             205<\/a>- 195   \r\n named after him.   \r\n  \r\n33. Cletus                            22             195- 173   \r\n  \r\n34. Franco III: he joined the         53             173- 120   \r\n Flemish and Burgundians   \r\n against Rome. The Romans   \r\n under Scipio were defeated.   \r\n  \r\n35. Prians II                         56             120-  64   \r\n  \r\n36. Yborus IV: Julius Caesar          40              64-  24   \r\n invaded Gaul and took   \r\n Paris while he ruled.   \r\n  \r\n37. Franco IV                         28         B.C. 24-   5 A.D.   \r\n  \r\n38. Trojolus (Troielus) I             29               5-  34   \r\n  \r\n39. Cloberius (Cloveius)              45              34-  79   \r\n  \r\n40. Ector IV: he defeated the         47              79- 126   \r\n      Romans and captured   \r\n      Emperor Domitian.   \r\n  \r\n41. Franco V: he was made             25             126- 151   \r\n      duke of the Gauls by the   \r\n      Sicambrians.   \r\n  \r\n42. Anthenoir II: he was duke         31             151- 182   \r\n      of Gaul and count   \r\n      of Flanders.   \r\n  \r\n43. Ector V                            5             182- 187   \r\n  \r\n44. Franco VI                          8             187- 195   \r\n  \r\n45. Troiolus II                       27             195- 222   \r\n  \r\n46. Marcones I: wars were             44             222- 266   \r\n      fought in which the   \r\n      Romans lost nearly 30,000   \r\n      soldiers.   \r\n  \r\n47. Ector VI; the Germans             16             266- 282   \r\n      held Paris for a short   \r\n      time.   \r\n  \r\n48. Porus: Diocletian was             19             282- 301   \r\n      defeated by the dukes of   \r\n      Gaul and Brittany. Martin   \r\n      Bishop of Tongre baptized   \r\n      Porus.   \r\n  \r\n49. Marcones (Merones) II             32             301- 333   \r\n  \r\n50. Anthenoir III                     10             333- 343   \r\n  \r\n51. Ector VII                          1             343- 344   \r\n  \r\n52. Prian III                         32             344- 376   \r\n  \r\n53. Marchones III               under regent 7       376- 383   \r\n                              joint with <a class=\"vcVerseLink\" href=\"http:\/\/av1611.com\/verseclick\/gobible.php?p=son_34.383\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">son 34      383<\/a>- 417   \r\n                                   sole (31)        (383- 414)<\/pre>\n<p><span class=\"font_text\"><strong>KINGS OF FRANCE<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n<pre>  \r\n  1. Pharamond                        11             417- 428   \r\n  \r\n  2. Clodius                          20             428- 448   \r\n  \r\n  3. Meroveux                         10             448- 458   \r\n  \r\n  4. Celdris                          23             458- 481   \r\n  \r\n  5. Cloveis                          30             481- 511<\/pre>\n<p><span class=\"font_text\">\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0These are kings after Marcomirus V (376-391). Compare this list with that from the &#8220;Chronicle of Hunibald.&#8221;<\/span><strong>IN RETROSPECT<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><span class=\"font_text\">\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Historians would have us believe that Western Europe was inhabited by wild and barbarian Celts and Germans while Rome flourished in power and glory. But, the evidence proves that civilized people migrated to Gaul and the Low Countries centuries before the founding of Rome.<br \/>\nIn 1181 Troy fell to the Greek invaders. Franco, a son of Hector, fled to Southern Gaul. His group was later known as Gauls. Caesar subdued them during campaigns in Aquitania and Provence.<br \/>\nBavo and his followers arrived in Belgica in 1179. They were known as Belgians or Batavians. Another migration leaving in 1181 was led by Francus. They ultimately reached Celtica. The Celts lost their independence to Ursus (Belgian king) in 766. In 52 Caesar conquered both Gaul and Belgium.<br \/>\nFrancio began a movement which eventually settled in Pannonia. One of their rulers, Brabon Silvius, was given Agrippina by Julius Caesar. In 378 A.D. Gratian drove the Sicambrians out of Pannonia. Maximus allowed them to migrate to Brabant. Clodius, king of the Franks, annexed Brabant. Thus, Brabon became a servant and Brabant a dukedom.<br \/>\nTrojans under Ascanius (1181) and Alexander (677) joined each other on the Danube. The trek across Europe began in 445. By 439 they reached the mouth of the Rhine. The Sicambrian and Frankish kings ruled the Trojans there. During the reign of Clodomirus V (317-335) the Franks split (East and West). Marcomirus V was the last king of the Franks until Pharamund.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td align=\"center\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/www.hwalibrary.com\/images\/redarrowleft.gif\" \/>\u00a0<a title=\"Return to previous Chapter\" href=\"https:\/\/www.hwalibrary.com\/cgi-bin\/get\/hwa.cgi?action=get_acthesis&amp;InfoID=1351867279&amp;InfoType=CompendiumVol2\"><span class=\"font1\">Previous<\/span><\/a>\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0<span class=\"font_blue1\"><b>Chapter XII A<\/b><\/span>\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0<a title=\"Chapter will NOT be saved\" href=\"https:\/\/www.hwalibrary.com\/cgi-bin\/get\/hwa.cgi?action=get_acthesis&amp;InfoID=1351939127&amp;InfoType=CompendiumVol2\"><span class=\"font1\">Next<\/span><\/a><span class=\"font1\">\u00a0<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/www.hwalibrary.com\/images\/redarrow.gif\" \/><\/span><\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/watchman.news\/uk\/2022\/03\/ukraine-royalty-dna-match-sicambria-capetian-french-kings\/\">DNA Match of the Royal Capetian Line of Nott-Brunswick<\/a><\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Ambassador College Thesis Compendium of World History &#8211; Volume 2 Chapter XII A: &nbsp; FURTHER MIGRATIONS TO FRANCE \u00a0\u00a0\u00a0The old Trojan House, of the line of Dardanus, was restored to power after the Greek defeat at Troy in 1149. The Greeks did not preserve the history of this restoration for two reasons. One, they did [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":6,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"seo_booster_metabox":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[2869,2718,2723,2726,2719,2721,2722,2720,2725,2724],"class_list":["post-10001","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-uncategorized","tag-british-israelism-studies","tag-dardanus-of-troy","tag-france-troy-sicambrian","tag-judean-trojan-house","tag-sicambrian-franks","tag-sicambrian-scythian","tag-sicambrian-sons-of-isaac","tag-sicambrian-ukraine","tag-trojan-genealogy","tag-trojan-royal-house"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.2 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Dardanus&#039; line (of Troy) to France, from Ambassador College Thesis of Herman L Hoeh - Watchman News<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/watchman.news\/uk\/2021\/10\/dardanus-of-troy-to-france-from-ambassador-college-thesis-of-herman-l-hoeh\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"uk_UA\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Dardanus&#039; line (of Troy) to France, from Ambassador College Thesis of Herman L Hoeh - Watchman News\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Ambassador College Thesis Compendium of World History &#8211; Volume 2 Chapter XII A: &nbsp; FURTHER MIGRATIONS TO FRANCE \u00a0\u00a0\u00a0The old Trojan House, of the line of Dardanus, was restored to power after the Greek defeat at Troy in 1149. 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